brecknock

navigate by keyword : 06m 12ft 28m 2ft 37m 9ft ancient beacon below brecknock brecon breconnearest circle conglomerate diamondshaped distance faint forties ground guiding has heol high inscriptions its junction large latin leading lies likely llia lliastanding maen maenllia magnificent managed mark marker massive mawr minor monolith moorland national ogam park powysnearest quarter road senni short slab some spot stand standingstones stands stone stones surface territorial thick third thousands trackway travellers two valleys village visibility welsh wide wild years ystradfellte

Vintage map of Brecknockshire. Royalty Free Stock Photo
Maen LliaStanding Stone Brecknock, PowysNearest town: BreconNearest village: Ystradfellte Royalty Free Stock Photo
St. Marys Church in Brecon, Wales Royalty Free Stock Photo
St. Marys Church in Brecon, Wales Royalty Free Stock Photo
Beautiful natural lanscape tree line archway public Royalty Free Stock Photo
   
   
Maen LliaStanding Stone Brecknock, PowysNearest town: BreconNearest village: Ystradfellte
Duke of Wellington Statue in Brecon, Wales Royalty Free Stock Photo
Duke of Wellington Statue in Brecon, Wales Royalty Free Stock Photo
   
1953 Coronation Plaque in Brecon, Wales Royalty Free Stock Photo
1953 Coronation Plaque in Brecon, Wales Royalty Free Stock Photo
Old Shire Hall Plaque in Brecon, Wales Royalty Free Stock Photo
Duke of Wellington Statue in Brecon, Wales Royalty Free Stock Photo
A short distance from the minor road leading from Ystradfellte to Heol Senni, the massive monolith of Maen Llia stands on the moorland in a magnificent and spot in the Brecon Beacon National Park. It is a large diamond-shaped slab of conglomerate, 3.7m & x28;12ft& x29; high and 2.8m & x28;9ft& x29; wide and only 0.6m & x28;2ft& x29; thick. It is likely that a quarter to a third of the stone is below ground, so it has managed to stand up to thousands of years of wild Welsh weather.     It lies at the junction of two valleys and its visibility from some distance suggests that it could possibly be a territorial marker or it could mark an ancient trackway, guiding travellers across the watershed, in a way similar to the stone north of Maen Mawr circle. In the Forties, some faint Latin and Ogam inscriptions were still visible on the stone& x27;s surface.


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