While Abbey Cottages are ideally situated for exploring the best of modern-day Carmarthenshire, we also invite our guests to experience a journey into Wales’ ancient past, to a time before the United Kingdom, when warlords vied for power and South Wales was ruled by a prince who was actually Welsh…

Step out of the door of your cottage and allow your eye to be pulled upwards by a monumental structure, a ruined and ancient edifice of stone that towers above the modern church beside it. Visible from every window in Abbey Cottages, this ancient and magical ruin invites you to forgo your planned itinerary and instead travel back more than a thousand years ago, to a time when the land around Talley formed part of the Kingdom of Deheubarth, which stretched from the holy city of St David’s on the West Coast (which still exists today and is Britain’s smallest city) all the way to what is now the English border. In 1185, the ruler of this kingdom, Rhys ap Gruffydd, known as the Prince of South Wales, sought to demonstrate his wealth and power by founding the largest abbey ever built in Wales… Talley Abbey.

Sadly for the Lord Rhys, and for the White Canons, the religious order that would make the abbey their home, his power waned and the abbey was never fully finished. Nevertheless it remained the religious centre for the area for more than three hundred years until its fate was finally sealed in the 16th century, when the King of England, Henry VIII, unable to obtain papal blessing for his divorce from Catherine of Aragon, declared himself Head of the Church and moved to seize the wealth of the monasteries.

Talley Abbey fell into ruin leaving only the outline of its tower as a reminder of what once was.Today the stones of Talley Abbey can still be found in the older buildings around the ruins, including Abbey Cottages themselves.