This pretty town on the River Dee has been drawing visitors for centuries. It is set beside the river, with tall hills on both sides of the valley. To the north, the dramatic outline of Castle Dinas Bran, the 'Castle of the Crows', stands sentinel, while just up the valley stand the pretty ruins of Valle Crucis Abbey. A short stroll from the peaceful abbey ruins is Eliseg's Pillar, a carved cross dating to the early 9th century. To the east of the town is Thomas Telford's majestic aqueduct at Pontcysyllte.
You can take a canal boat cruise along the canal, or enjoy a horse-drawn boat trip from the dock just across Llangollen bridge, which was built in 1345 on the site of an ancient ford. The bridge was rebuilt in 1656 and widened in 1862 to make room for a new railway line to pass through its arches.
The bridge itself was famously labelled one of the Seven Wonders of Wales.
A short distance west from Llangollen brings you to the attractive beauty spot of Horseshoe Falls, a curving semi-circular weir where the canal joins the River Dee.
At the southeastern edge of the town is Plas Newydd, where the famed Ladies of Llangollen lived. Sarah Ponsonby and Lady Eleanor Butler escaped from unhappy family life in Ireland and set up house together here, and became celebrated as the embodiment of romantic friendship, a sort of intellectual retreat from the pressures of society life. Here they welcomed literary giants like Wordsworth and Southee, Sir Walter Scott and the like.
The Ladies are buried at St Collen's Church, founded by the 6th-century Irish saint, whose tomb once stood where the west tower now rises.