Llangollen
The Dee Valley
 

Llangollen Enterprise
Anturieth Llangollen
Parade Street
Llangollen
Denbighshire
North Wales
LL20 8PW
United Kingdom

Llangollen Enterprise Office
telephone: +44 (0)1978 861345
fax: +44 (0)1978 861345
e-mail: le@llangollen.org.uk

Tourist Information Office
telephone: +44 (0)1978 860828
fax: +44 (0)1978 861563
e-mail: llangollen@nwtic.com

 
In the vicinity to the south of Llangollen there is also fynnon Arthur ( Arthur's Well ) and numerous other geographical references to this ancient hero, his knights and adventures. Steve Blake and Scott Lloyd, The Key to Avalon 2000
round table
Who was the real king Arthur? A question that has been asked for centuries, with many regions claiming this most enigmatic of heroes as their own. Fact or fiction, one thing cannot be denied, Llangollen and North East Wales has the greatest concentration of place names linked to Arthur and his extended family than anywhere else in the world. Sites such as in as Braen Castle, Craig Arthur (Arthur's Seat), Guinevere's Cross and Valle Crucis Abbey are all indelibly entwined, making Llangollen and the surrounding area a more than plausible location for Arthur and his extended family.
Roman Coin
. Even the River Dee itself could be the source of the Fisher King legends and the names that were etched onto the evocativeEliseg's Pillar simply add more substance to the areas claims. But Valle Crucis Abbey the real Glastonbury? Well, Llangollen takes its name from St Collen, who set up his church on the site of the present town structure in the 7th century, making his travelling 250 miles to set up a monastery in Somerset highly unlikely!
Valle Cusis Abbey
And what of the mystical 'Land of the Dead' that lies on the mountains high above Llangollen and the intriguing Offa's Dyke, which defines the beginning of this historically important region. This is the same Dyke that some scholars now believe the lost Roman wall constructed by the Emperor Severus in the second century AD - time will tell on that one! All this, allied to the many other myths and legends linked to the area, builds a picture as dramatic as the Dee Valley itself and leaves no doubt that the regions special atmosphere is steeped in Arthurian tradition. Whoever the real King Arthur was, considering all the evidence, there seems a fair chance visitors to Llangollen will discover the true home of this most evocative of heroes