Llansteffan is an impressive, dramatically sited stronghold
crowning a hilltop overlooking the estuary of the
River
Tywi. Long before its construction an Iron Age
hill fort of the 6th century B.C. occupied the site, its
double ditch can still be seen on the west of the castle.
The first Norman castle was created between the prehistoric
defences: an earth bank surmounted by a timber palisade.
This happened in the first years of the 12th century, but
the castle was first mentioned in
1146
when it was captured by
Lord Rhys and his
brothers, princes of Deheubarth. The Norman recaptured Llansteffan
after a first failed attempt, Rhys came again in
1189
but was unable to hold on the castle.
In 1189 Llansteffan was in hand of
William the Camville
that started the transformation of the castle into a powerful
stone fortress. The first step was the walling of the early
Norman ring work but today only little part of this work
survives on the north-west walls of the upper ward, the
section facing the outer bailey was demolished. At the time
the outer ward was encircled by timber defences.
The castle fell again in Welsh hands when
Llywelyn
the Great conquered Deheubarth in
1215.
William Marshal started the campaign of
reconquest in
1223 and, after its victory,
Geoffrey de Camville regained Llansteffan
and strengthened the upper ward with the addition of the
still-prominent
square gatehouse [with
two storeys above the gate passage] and a
round
mural tower [only its foundations are today visible].
Llasteffan was still far to acquire its present form, it
happened only in the second half of the 13th century after
another Welsh victory [Coed Llathen - 1257] and a third
recovery in Norman hands.
William de Camville II
started the reconstruction of Llansteffan, then ended by
his son
Geoffrey. The timber defences
of the
lower ward were replaced with a
stone curtain, reinforced by two
U-shaped three-storeys towers [the
West
Tower, now ruinous, and the
North Tower,
today almost intact: this contained comfortable accommodation
and at the junction with the curtain is endowed with two
turrets, one housing latrines and the other
the spiral stair] with a
Great Gatehouse
between them, the vulnerable west side of the
upper
ward was heightened and strengthened to carry a
wider wall-walk. The south front of the curtain, overlooking
the crag, is tower-free but the
south-east angle
is projected outside to create a sort of
bastion.
The masterpiece of Llansteffan was the twin towered
Great
Outer Gatehouse. It resembles the Inner East Gatehouse
ar
Caerphilly [1270] and predate
the
King Edward I's Great Gatehouses of
North Wales castles. Guard chambers flank the main entrance
passage, which had
murder holes in the
vaults an
portcullis at each end. In
1495
[by
Jasper Tudor Earl of Pembroke, the
only later Lord to occupy the castle] both ends of the passage
have been walled up and a
new entrance
was built alongside to eliminate the inconvenience caused
by portcullis winding gear in the above hall, that fully
occupied the upper floor, and to provide extra accommodation.
Two
round stair turrets are at the inner
corners of the keep-gatehouse.
Once the outer curtain was complete it become the more formidable
defence of the castle and a portion of the inner curtain
facing the outer bailey was demolished to create a
single
large enclosure. In the
15th century
was erected a large barn between the north tower and the
bastion. When the military importance of the site declined
Llansteffan passed into obscurity and after a long period
of neglect in 1959 the castle was placed in State care and
is now maintained by
CADW. Free admission.