TravelPOI
TravelPOI › Abergavenny Gateway Beacons

Abergavenny Gateway Beacons

Scenic Place • Monmouthshire • NP7 5UE

Abergavenny is the principal market town at the southern gateway to the Brecon Beacons National Park, a handsome town in the Usk Valley whose combination of the medieval castle, the excellent food market, the surrounding mountain landscape and the walking available on the hills above the town has made it the most rewarding base for exploring both the Beacons and the Black Mountains. The town's reputation as the food capital of Wales has developed since the 1980s and the annual Abergavenny Food Festival, held each September, is one of the most celebrated food events in Britain.

The castle at Abergavenny, though largely ruined, has one of the most dramatic histories of any Norman castle in Wales. It was here in 1175 that Sychtyd ap Iorwerth and several other Welsh chieftains were invited to a feast by the Norman lord Ranulf de Breos and then massacred in one of the most notorious acts of treachery in the violent history of the Norman-Welsh frontier. The castle museum within the restored tithe barn provides excellent local history.

The three mountains immediately above the town — the Sugar Loaf, Blorenge and Skirrid Fawr — are all accessible on foot from the town centre and provide summit walks with exceptional views that can be combined in a single day by energetic walkers. The Skirrid Fawr is perhaps the most atmospheric, its distinctive summit profile attributed in legend to the earthquake at the moment of the Crucifixion splitting the hilltop.

Open interactive map

Official / external link

Visit official website

Suggested places in the same area or type