List of scheduled monuments in Swansea

Swansea
Longhole Cave
Paviland Cave
Cat Hole Cave
Cefn Bryn Burial Chamber
Parc le Breos Burial Chamber
Penmaen Burrows Burial Chamber
Sweyne's Howe Chambered Cairns
Two Burial Chambers on Graig Fawr
Bon y Maen Standing Stone
Cockett standing stone
Tooth Cave, Llethrid
Cave 36m W of Three Chimneys
Arthur's Stone, Cefn Bryn
Lower Greyhound Inn Standing Stones
Sampson's Jack
Standing Stone on Ty'r Coed Farm
Mynydd Pysgodlyn Round Barrow
Berry Ringwork
Burry Lesser Standing Stone
Burry Menhir
Burry Standing Stone
Newton henge, cropmark
Cave 40m SE of Deborah's Hole
Round Cairn with Cist on Mynydd Drumau
Cairns on Cefn Bryn
Cefn Bryn Burnt Mound
Burnt Mound on Rhossili Down
Llanmadoc Hill, cairn on E end of
Llanmadoc Hill, cairn on W end of
Round Cairn on Bessie's Meadow
Burnt Mound 300m SW of Arthur's Stone
Burnt Mound North of Arthur's Stone
Pen-y-Crug Round Barrow
Round Cairn W of Arthur's Stone
Cairn 250m SW of Banc Llyn-Mawr
Pant-y-Ffa Round Cairn
Ring Cairn on Tor Clawdd
Garn Goch Round Barrow
Rhossili Down Round Cairns
Bishopston Valley Camp
Caswell Cliff Fort
Burry Holms Camp
Enclosure on Rhossili Down
The Bulwark, Llanmadoc Hill
Three Camps on Harding's Down
Earthwork 108m NNW of Fforest Newydd
Dan-y-Lan Camp
Gron-Gaer
Pen-y-Gaer
Cil Ifor Promontory Fort
Stembridge Camp
Ring Cairn on Craig Fawr
High Pennard
Earthwork on Graig Fawr
Earthwork 450m SW of Llanddewi Church
Reynoldston Camp
Deborah's Hole Camp
Horse Cliff Camp
Lewes Castle Promontory Fort
Old Castle Camp
Paviland Camp
Promontory Fort on Worms Head
Thurba Camp
Earthwork on Kilvey Hill
Church Hill Romano-British Enclosure
Mynydd Carn-Goch Roman Earthworks
Roman Practice Camp on Stafford Common
Medieval Hermitage Site on Burry Holms
St Cennydd's Church Cross-shaft
St Madoc's Church Cross-incised Stones
Llangyfelach Cross-Base
Cross-Slab from Woodlands, Stout Hall (now in St George's Church, Reynoldston)
Chantry Acre medieval chapel
Old Castle Camp
Original Swansea Castle
Swansea Castle
St Michael's Chapel, Cwrt-y-Carne
Llandeilo Castle Mound
Penmaen Burrows Church
Penmaen Burrows Ringwork
Trinity Well and Remains of Chapel
Bovehill Castle
North Hill Tor Camp
Llanelen Chapel Site
Weobley Castle
Loughor Castle
Cae Castell (Rhyndwyclydach Medieval Earthwork)
Penlle'r Castell
Oystermouth Castle
Pennard Castle & Church
Norton Camp
Oxwich Castle
Penrice Castle
Penrice Ringwork
Tower NE of Oxwich Castle
Site of St Teilo's Old Parish Church, Llandeilo, Talybont (now removed to St Fagans)
St Maurice's Church
Remains of Medieval Building & Church at Rhossili
Scott's Pit Engine House & Traces of Ancillary Buildings
St Peter's Chapel & Well, Caswell Bay
Morfa Bridge and Quays
Clydach Upper Forge
Melin Mynach, Gorseinon
Parc le Breos Limekiln and Quarries
Hafod Copper Works Musgrave Engine and Rolls
Landore New Quay
Morris Castle
Iron Lighthouse at Whitford Point
Penclawdd Sea Dock and Canal
Gwernllwynchwyth Engine House
Townshend's Great Leat & Waggonway
Clyne Valley Shaft Mounds
Clyne Wood Arsenic & Copper Works
Clyne Wood Coal Level
Clyne Wood Colliery Steam Winding Machine
Ynys Pit & Leat
Limestone Quarry and Kiln at Oxwich
Culver Hole Dovecot
The Salthouse, Port Eynon
Foxhole River Staithes
White Rock Copper Works
Penllergaer Orchideous House
Remains of Astronomical Observatory at Penllergaer
Oxwich Bay Coast Defence/Chain Home Low Radar Station
Scheduled Monuments in Swansea, Wales.
=Prehistoric =Roman =Early Medieval
=Medieval =Post-Medieval/Modern

The city and county of Swansea covers, in addition to the port city of Swansea, areas of upland to the north, and the Gower peninsula to the west. It is on Gower that the earliest scheduled monuments are found. Three sites have evidence of habitation from the Paleolithic, a time before the last ice age. These include the oldest rock painting in Britain and the earliest known burial in Western Europe. There are in total 124 scheduled sites. Prehistoric sites of many sorts are found, particularly on Gower. 64 pre-historic sites are from Paleolithic to Iron Age dates, and include caves, burial mounds and tombs, cairns, defensive enclosures, hillforts and promentary forts. Roman and early medieval sites, by contrast are scarce. The post-Norman Medieval period, by contrast, has 26 sites, 17 of them castles or other defensive monuments. The other nine are all ecclesiastical monuments. The 26 post-medieval monuments are more diverse, including industrial and maritime sites, but also leats, quarries, a mill and even an observatory and an orchid house. All of the Swansea administrative area lies within the historic county of Glamorgan.

Scheduled monuments have statutory protection. It is illegal to disturb the ground surface or any standing remains. The compilation of the list is undertaken by Cadw Welsh Historic Monuments, which is an executive agency of the National Assembly of Wales.[1] The list of scheduled monuments below is supplied by Cadw[2] with additional material from RCAHMW and Glamorgan-Gwent Archaeological Trust.

  1. ^ Cadw: Ancient Monuments and Scheduling. Accessed 25 April 2013
  2. ^ Cadw will send their list as a spreadsheet, or other electronic formats, on request, as indicated at www.whatdotheyknow.com. This list uses information dated May 2012