Llanover is an
estate village associated with the Hall family. Augusta
Lady Llanover lived locally all her life and left her mark on the village and the surrounding Llanover House estate which remains privately owned. Her husband
Sir Benjamin Hall became Baron Llanover. Her sisters, diplomatic hostess and author
Frances Bunsen and Emily grew up there, educated by their mother Georgina Mary Ann, (née Port) (1771–1850), with Augusta and Frances surviving to become co-heiresses to the estate from their father Benjamin Waddington.
Llanover House was demolished in 1936 but the park survives relatively intact and is designated at Grade II* on the
Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.
St Bartholomew's Church, Llanover is a grade II* listed building. The
River Usk flows close by, and to the west lies the Brecon and Monmouthshire canal, a scenic recreational boating route. More recently, Llanover is the birthplace of
Penelope Fillon, the wife of
François Fillon, former
Prime Minister of France and candidate in the
2017 French presidential elections. ==See also==