Llanyblodwel and Pant | |
---|---|
Shown within Oswestry | |
Population | 2,317 (2001) |
District | |
Ceremonial county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
52°47′56″N 3°07′37″W / 52.799°N 3.127°W
Llanyblodwel and Pant was a ward in the county of Shropshire.[1][2]
Abolition
With the re-organisation of local government in Shropshire in 2009 (i.e. the abolition of the borough of Oswestry and the creation of a unitary Shropshire Council) the ward was abolished and now forms part of a wider Llanymynech electoral division.
Geography
The ward covered the villages of Pant, Llynclys, Porth-y-waen and Llanyblodwel, as well as half of Nantmawr and the English half of Llanymynech, and contained the two parishes of Llanyblodwel and Llanymynech and Pant. Despite being in England, almost without exception the villages and other settlements are named in Welsh, a vestige of the area's history as part of neighbouring Wales.
The terrain varies from flat farming land at an elevation of roughly 60 metres (200 ft) to the east of Llanymynech in the south, to rugged hills in the west reaching an elevation of roughly 310 metres (1,020 ft) to the north of Bryn.
References
- ↑ QC, Philip Coppel; Coppel, Philip (28 April 2016). Cornerstone's Electoral Legislation 2016. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-1-78451-261-3.
- ↑ "STATUTORY INSTRUMENTS 2000 No. 1418 LOCAL GOVERNMENT, ENGLAND".