Pen y Bryn

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pen_y_Bryn an entity of type: Thing

Pen y Bryn is a two-storey manor house, in Abergwyngregyn, Gwynedd, in north-west Wales, adjacent to the A55, five miles east of Bangor and eight miles west of Conwy. It is constructed mainly of broken stone, with roughly dressed quoins and a slate roof. The house is situated within Garth Celyn, a double bank and ditch, overlooking the Menai Strait to Anglesey. A smaller house was immediately adjacent in 1811 when Sir Richard Colt-Hoare recorded it; this was demolished by 1815. The present structure incorporates a four-storey stone tower. The present roof timbers were dated by dendrochronology to 1624, when the house was refurbished. There is evidence of long use with multiple rebuildings before 1624, but there is disagreement on the duration and nature of its mediaeval use. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Pen y Bryn
rdf:langString Pen y Bryn
rdf:langString Pen y Bryn
xsd:float 53.23467636108398
xsd:float -4.011712074279785
xsd:integer 18015797
xsd:integer 1072077777
xsd:integer 300
rdf:langString Abergwyngregyn, Aber, in Gwynedd, north Wales
<second> 1600.0
xsd:string 53.234676 -4.011712
rdf:langString Pen y Bryn is a two-storey manor house, in Abergwyngregyn, Gwynedd, in north-west Wales, adjacent to the A55, five miles east of Bangor and eight miles west of Conwy. It is constructed mainly of broken stone, with roughly dressed quoins and a slate roof. The house is situated within Garth Celyn, a double bank and ditch, overlooking the Menai Strait to Anglesey. A smaller house was immediately adjacent in 1811 when Sir Richard Colt-Hoare recorded it; this was demolished by 1815. The present structure incorporates a four-storey stone tower. The present roof timbers were dated by dendrochronology to 1624, when the house was refurbished. There is evidence of long use with multiple rebuildings before 1624, but there is disagreement on the duration and nature of its mediaeval use.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 10377
xsd:string before the early 1600s
<Geometry> POINT(-4.0117120742798 53.234676361084)

data from the linked data cloud