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Erwood
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Erwood () is a village and community lying beside the , on the A470 road some 6 miles south-east of in , Wales. The population of the community taken at the 2011 census was 429. It is in the historic county of () and the older of Cantref Selyf. The community includes the settlements of , and .

, flowing from west to east before turning north through the village to join the , divides Erwood between the two parishes of , to the northwest, and , to the southeast. The church of Saint in Gwenddwr was extensively rebuilt in the after a fire. In former times would ford the Wye at Erwood on their journey towards the and eventually , where they would sell their livestock.Roads and Trackways of Wales, 2002, Richard Moore-Colyer

Erwood is overlooked from across the Wye by the ancient of Twyn y Garth. On its 325-metre-high summit is a German field , a trophy from World War I. The fact that it is pointing towards Erwood from the neighbouring county of is part of a local running joke.

At the southern end of the community, on the , is Trericket Mill where Roderick Murchison recorded in the 1830s that he had identified "the first true " crossing the river at nearby Cavansham Ferry Hawley, D. (1997) ‘“The first true Silurian” : an evaluation of the site of Murchison’s discovery of the Silurian’, Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association, 108(2), pp. 131–140. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0016-7878(97)80035-1, now recognised as an internationally important IUGS geological heritage site.


Village name
The name Erwood is of uncertain origin and is recorded in numerous forms over the centuries. It may derive from the rare cerwyd meaning 'stag' with subsequent anglicization to '-wood'. It is known in Welsh as Erwyd which may be a cymricization of Erwood.Owen, H.W. and Morgan, R. 2007 Dictionary of the Place-names of Wales Gomer Press, Ceredigion


Village life
The Erwood Community consists of the village, the two ancient parishes of Gwenddwr and Crickadarn, and the former Forestry Commission hamlet of Llaneglwys.Brycheiniog, The Journal of the Brecknock Society. volume XLV, 2014, Forestry Commission Social Policy as illustrated by Brecon (later Brycheiniog) Forest, pp. 101-114 The village is the centre of a flourishing branch of the Young Farmers' Club. The village shop and post office no longer exists, and of the two pubs one, The , is now a family home.

Until 1962 Erwood railway station, about away, served the village. Now a renowned Centre for the Arts Erwood Station Gallery & Tea Rooms

The nearby Crickadarn was used as a location in the film An American Werewolf in London, for the portrayal of the fictional village of "East Proctor".

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