Offa’s Tavern, High Street

Link to French translationOffa’s Tavern, High Street

This pub is named after King Offa (c.740-796). He was the first ruler to be known as the king of the English, a title which reflected his successful acquisition of territory.

He became King of Mercia in 757, when he grabbed the throne after a civil war. He extended his authority through battles and by marrying his daughters to the kings of Northumbria and Wessex. He introduced the English penny and organised the first coronation in England for which records exist. The ceremony was part of his campaign to pass his kingdom to his son, Ecgfrith, who died, childless, just a few months after Offa.

King Offa added chunks of Wales to his territory after success in battle. To protect his kingdom from Welsh attacks, King Offa ordered construction of a ditch and parallel bank along its western boundary. This became known as Offa’s Dyke. It was the first attempt to mark a fixed border between England and Wales.

The dyke ran for 240km “from sea to sea”, between Treuddyn, near Wrexham, and Sedbury, Gloucestershire. Many remnants of it can still be seen. In places the dyke is far away from the modern England-Wales border, which changed many times after Offa’s reign.

The Clwyd-Powys Archaeological Trust describes the dyke as “the most impressive monument of its kind anywhere in Europe, and a construction project of comparable landscape scale was not again to be undertaken for 1,000 years, until the great canal schemes of the 18th century”. It is also “the most dramatic built structure to survive from Anglo-Saxon times”.

The dyke inspired the creation in 1971 of the Offa’s Dyke Path, between Prestatyn and Sedbury, which is on the opposite bank of the river Wye from Chepstow. The path runs past Offa’s Tavern.

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Postcode: LL19 9BB

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