Brecknockshire is located in the south
(October 27, 2025) Macalister reports that this stone was recorded in 1774. It was lying prostrate by the side of a ploughed field on the farm of Ty'n y Wlad , Crickhowel (Crug Hywel), and there overgrown with brambles.
Jones's Brecknockshire tells this story, for what it may be worth: Certain wayfarers persuaded the farmer to dig beneath it, then standing upright, in quest of gold, thereby keeping him out of the way while they looted his house. This, it is said, caused the fall of the stone. It was later removed to the garden of Glan Usk Park, close by, where it now stands.
Present visible dimensions are 6′ 6″ × 1′ 9″ × 0′ 7.″ Its length when prostrate has been recorded as 9'.
(October 27, 2025) Macalister reports that this stone is a block of red sandstone built in beneath a string-course, on the external face of the church tower at the S.W. angle 9' 6" from the ground. The stone has been trimmed by the masons and is so placed that the lettering of the Roman inscription is upside-down .
The top of the stone has the equilateral Druid cross meaning "astrology-magic." The text does indeed discuss astrology magic.
The stone's dimensions are 5′ 6″ x 0' 10" x 0' 6".
(October 27, 2025) Macalister reports that this stone as recorded in Jones (1847) was
"Placed as a pillar to support a gate or rails in a wall on the right - hand side of the road from Brecon to Merthyr, at the distance of about eleven miles from the former, and about fifty yards on the other side of the river Llyseuog."
Some time before 1847 it was destroyed, when about to be removed to a museum in Swansea - either intentionally, to prevent the removal as seems to be implied by Westwood (1853), or accidentally while being transported as stated in LW, p . 55.
The only record of the inscription is a wood-cut in Jones's Brecknockshire, which gives which is shown.
(October 27, 2025) Macalister reports that this stone was discovered by Iolo Morganwg, whose son Taliesin Williams directed Westwood's attention to it. It was then doing duty as a door-lintel in a cattle-shed on the farm of Abercar, on the west side of the road from Merthyr Tydfil to Brecon, and six miles from the former place. It was afterwards removed by Mr. C. Wilkins of Merthyr Tydfil to the lawn of his garden and it is now in the parish church of the same town, clamped to the wall, at the E. end of the N. aisle.
Its dimensions are 5' 10" x 0' 9" x 0′ 5 1/2″.
(October 28, 2025) Macalister reports that this stone is now embedded in a buttress on the south side of the church of St. Michael Cwmdu. Its history is recorded on a brass plate fixed beside it saying:
Its dimensions are 5′ 4″ × 1' 10"
(October 28, 2025) Macalister reports that this stone once served as a window-sill in the old church. It is now standing in the churchyard.
It dimensions are 4' 0" x 1' 2" x 1' 6".
The Christian cross seems to be a later addition.
(October 28, 2025) Macalister reports that this stone was found in digging a grave in a churchyard and is now lying inside the church vestry door.
It dimensions are 3′ 9″ × 1' 1" x 1' 3"
(October 28, 2025) Macalister reports that this stone was first brought to notice by Rev. Lewis Price, Vicar of Llywell; but its existence must have been known to certain persons previously, as there can be no doubt that it is the monument referred to in a note in AC 1875, p. 193, in which Rhys passes on some hearsay information about an inscribed stone at a place called "Y Castell." The monument stood on the side of the road from Trecastle to Glasfynydd, upon a heap of stones with which it seems at one time to have been covered. It was rescued from being converted to a gatepost just in time. Soon afterwards it was transferred to the British Museum, in circumstances described AC 1901, p. 243 .