Llanymynech is a village and former civil parish straddling the border between Montgomeryshire/Powys, Wales, and Shropshire, England, about 9 miles (14 km) north of the Welsh town of Welshpool. The name is Welsh for "Church of the Monks". The village is on the banks of the River Vyrnwy, and the Montgomery Canal passes through it.
The border runs for the most part along the frontages of the buildings on the east (English) side of the village's main street, with the eastern half of the village in England and the western half in Wales. The Church of England parish church of St Agatha lies just in England, although the entire village lies in the same ecclesiastical parish. The border also passed right through the now closed Lion pub, which had two bars in Shropshire and one in Montgomeryshire. At one time Welsh counties were referred to as "wet" or "dry" depending on whether people could drink in pubs on Sundays. When Montgomeryshire was dry it was legal to drink on Sundays in the two English bars of the Lion but not the Welsh bar. Two of the remaining open pubs in the village are entirely in England and the third is entirely in Wales.
Just to the north of the village is Pant. Further north is the English market town of Oswestry. The community of Llanymynech and Pant had a population of 1,675 as of the 2011 census.
Llanymynech Hill is one of Wales' earliest mining sites. Evidence suggests that copper was mined and smelted here in the late Bronze Age, and that ores were used to make bronze weapons and other implements. The hill above Llanymynech is crowned with an extensive Iron Age hillfort, which extends over 57 hectares, and surrounds a cave opening known as the Ogof. The size of this hillfort is probably explained by the presence of the copper mines. The hillfort would have served as protection for the mine, and housed the labourers employed in the extraction of copper.
The Bronze Age British miners would have used fire-setting mining techniques, but with the arrival of the Romans the cavern was extended and more extensively mined.
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Shrewsbury est une ville britannique, située dans le Shropshire (Angleterre), aux abords du pays de Galles (son nom gallois est Amwythig). Shrewsbury est située dans un méandre de la Severn, son centre-ville historique entourant une colline au sommet de laquelle trône le château de Shrewsbury. Shrewsbury est située dans le comté du Shropshire, à la frontière du pays de Galles. Shrewsbury est la ville principale du comté de Shropshire et du district de Shrewsbury et Atcham (Shrewsbury and Atcham Borough).
Le Powys est un comté situé dans le centre du pays de Galles. La ville de Llandrindod Wells en est le centre administratif. Le Powys a une superficie de et recouvre les comtés traditionnels de Montgomeryshire, Radnorshire et Brecknockshire. Il fut créé lors de la réforme gouvernementale du pays de Galles de 1974 et comportait à l'origine les districts de Montgomery, Radnor et Brecknock. En 1996, il devint une autorité unitaire et subit une légère modification de frontières au nord-est.
Shropshire (aussi appelé Salop ou dans sa forme abrégée Shrops) est un comté anglais des West Midlands, région d’Angleterre. Il portait le nom anglo-normand de comté de Salopesberie d'où l’abréviation de Salop. Le chef-lieu est Shrewsbury, bien que la ville nouvelle de Telford soit la ville la plus peuplée. Le comté recense plusieurs sites industriels historiques importants dont la région de l'Ironbridge Gorge (littéralement « gorge du pont en fer »), connue comme le lieu de naissance de la révolution industrielle.