Presteigne is a community and also area in Radnorshire, Powys, Wales. It was the county town of the historic county of Radnorshire. Regardless of lying on a small B roadway the town has, in common with a number of various other communities near the Wales-England border, thought the motto, "Gateway to Wales". The community remains on the south bank of the River Lugg, which forms the England-- Wales border as it passes the town-- the border successfully wraps around 3 sides of the community (north, east and south). Nearby towns are Kington to the south and also Knighton to the north, and also surrounding towns include Norton and Stapleton. The town falls within the Diocese of Hereford. The town most likely started as a small negotiation around a Minster church dedicated to St Andrew and also at the time of the Domesday Book and created part of the estate of Humet. By the mid-12th century it was known as 'Presthemede' or 'the boundary field of the clergymans'. A century later, it entered the control of the Mortimers, effective Marcher lords, and on their autumn entered the hands of the Crown. At the end of the 13th century, most of the community's citizens, mostly English, enjoyed some prosperity but the Black Death as well as the Glyndwr disobedience had destroyed this and by the end of the 15th century, the currently largely Welsh, population stayed in a struggling village. A significant success in their disobedience was won by the forces of Owain Glyndwr close by at the Fight of Bryn Glas in 1402. The growth of a thriving fabric industry in the Tudor period brought temporary prosperity, finished by three new upsurges of plague in 3 successive generations. Thereafter it ended up being a market community and also, till the later 16th century, a centre for processing in your area expanded barley into malt. By the Acts of Union, Presteigne - at first jointly with New Radnor - became the county town of Radnorshire and also its management and also judicial centre, real estate the area gaol and the Shire Hall. By the end of the 19th century its more recent and also bigger neighbour, Llandrindod Wells, had taken over the duty of administrative centre, but Presteigne continued to be the venue for the Assizes until these were abolished in 1971. After a duration of stagnation in the first half of the 20th century, the community has established a diverse manufacturing base as well as has begun to manipulate its tourism potential while its atmosphere and the development of its social, cultural as well as recreation centers have assisted to attract people to work out.