Whittington appears to have inhabited since prehistoric times and may have been a
Dark Age fortress of some eminence, with an extensive settlement recorded in the
Domesday Book of 1086. Whittington has been identified with
Trefwen (white-town), the famous stronghold of
Cynddylan king of
Pengwern. Whittington was granted to William Peverel probably in the summer of 1114 when King
Henry I of England invaded
Powys. William probably founded
Whittington Castle which was taken from his descendants by the
Welsh under
Madog ap Maredudd of
Powys and later granted to
Roger Powys by
King Henry II. It remained in the Powys family until
King John granted it to the FitzWarin family, namely
Fulk III FitzWarin (d.1258), whose life is recorded in a medieval romance. In 1221,
Henry III gave grudging permission for the
castle to be re-built in stone after it had fallen to
Llywelyn the Great. It was recaptured by Llywelyn in 1223 but was handed back the same year. It remained in the hands of the FitzWarins until 1420. The castle ruins still exist today and were recently renovated. They are open to the public. A small silver decorative brooch dating back to between 1115 and 1400 AD was discovered in a field outside Whittington in 2019. The redbrick church of St Michael dates from 1894, and is on the site of a much older church. ==Governance==