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Llansteffan Green Llansteffan Green on a crowded Mayday Bank holiday Monday 2013 This picture appears in the following picture tour: |
Llansteffan view The village of Llansteffan as seen from the slipway at Ferryside, on the opposite shore of the Towy estuary. This picture appears in the following picture tour: Camera Make: Panasonic Model: DMC-FZ48 |
Llansteffan Castle gate-tower. Llansteffan Castle stands on a headland overlooking the sand-flats of the mouth of the river Tywi. The natural strength and strategic importance of this stunning location was recognised by the Norman invaders of Wales who established an earth-and-timber enclosure, or 'ringwork', within the ancient defences of an Iron Age fort. This picture appears in the following picture tours: |
Scott's Bay, Llansteffan This picture appears in the following picture tour: |
The beach at The Green, Llansteffan Llansteffan was one of two villages in the UK involved in a digital television switchover experiment: it underwent the analogue switch-off in 2005 This picture appears in the following picture tour: |
The beach near The Green at Llansteffan This picture appears in the following picture tour: |
The Green, Llansteffan, from the Castle. This picture appears in the following picture tour: |
The Plas, Llansteffan This picture appears in the following picture tour: |
Llansteffan Green from Llansteffan Castle Llansteffan (English: church of Stephen) (formerly sometimes Llanstephan) is situated on the coast of Carmarthenshire, in South Wales. Llansteffan is one of three settlements positioned on the Tywi (Towy) river, other settlements include Ferryside and Carmarthen (Caerfyrddin). This picture appears in the following picture tours: |