Long Mountain (Powys)
Long Mountain is a hill straddling the boundary between Powys and Shropshire to the east of Welshpool though the summit at 408 metres at Beacon Ring is within Wales. Long Mountain is a Marilyn, having a prominence of 305 metres.
Geology
Long Mountain is formed from a succession of sedimentary rocks dating from the Silurian period. In stratigraphic order i.e. youngest/uppermost first, these are:- Raglan Mudstone Formation
- Temeside Mudstone Formation
- Tilestones Formation
- Cefn Einion Formation
- Knucklas Castle Formation
- Bailey Hill Formation
- Irfon Formation
- Gyfenni Wood Shale Formation
- Trewern Brook Mudstone Formation
- Tarannon Mudstone Formation
- Cefn Formation
Geography
Long Mountain extends from Forden, Powys, in the southwest to Vennington near Westbury in Shropshire to the northeast. It is sometimes considered to include the Breidden Hills to the north although the latter are separated from Long Mountain's main body by a valley through which run a railway line and a major trunk road which both connect Welshpool with Shrewsbury.History
There was possibly a Roman road along Long Mountain, part of a route from Uriconium to Lavobrinta. At the southern end of the hill and along its western flanks are traces of Offa's Dyke.There is a hillfort at Beacon Ring, at the southern end of the Long Mountain. This was probably built in the Iron Age and may have been re-used in medieval times. It has been owned by the Clwyd-Powys Archaeological Trust since 2008, who have in recent years conducted archaeological investigations on the site. Beacon Ring is also famous for the 'EIIR' monogram of the tree plantation which covers the site.
In 630 the hill was the scene of the Battle of Cefn Digoll, between Northumbria and an alliance of Gwynedd and Mercia. Towards the eastern end of the Long Mountain are the remains of Caus Castle, which was built in Norman times upon an earlier, Iron Age, hillfort.
In 1485, when Henry Tudor invaded via South Wales and travelled north towards the battlefield at Bosworth, it was at the Long Mountain, near Trelystan, on 13 August that he arranged a rendezvous with his Lancastrian supporters, including Sir Rhys ap Thomas.