Llawhaden Bridge
Llawhaden Bridge is a Grade II* listed arch bridge spanning the Eastern Cleddau river near Llawhaden village in Pembrokeshire, Wales. The present structure dates from the mid-18th century. A 1740 engraving of Llawhaden Castle shows the bridge with five arches and another in 1769 shows the bridge with possibly more than seven. The bridge fell into decay over the rest of the century and John Rees of Nevern was contracted to repair it in 1809. Subsequent rebuilding reduced the arches to three.
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Llawhaden Bridge
Llawhaden Bridge is a Grade II* listed arch bridge spanning the Eastern Cleddau river near Llawhaden village in Pembrokeshire, Wales. The present structure dates from the mid-18th century. A 1740 engraving of Llawhaden Castle shows the bridge with five arches and another in 1769 shows the bridge with possibly more than seven. The bridge fell into decay over the rest of the century and John Rees of Nevern was contracted to repair it in 1809. Subsequent rebuilding reduced the arches to three.
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Llawhaden Bridge is a Grade II ...... g reduced the arches to three.
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crosses
Wikipage page ID
49,975,764
Wikipage revision ID
712,380,258
Caption
Llawhaden Bridge in 1998
heritage
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5.18202e+1
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-4.7938e+0
name
Llawhaden Bridge
comment
Llawhaden Bridge is a Grade II ...... g reduced the arches to three.
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label
Llawhaden Bridge
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