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Extract from the Knighton Travel Guides:
A town that straddles King Offa's eighth-century border as well as the modern Wales-England divide,
KNIGHTON
(Tref-y-clawdd, the "Town on the Dyke"), twenty miles northeast of Llandrindod, has come into its own as the most obvious centre for those walking the
Offa's Dyke Path
. Located almost exactly halfway along the route, it's a lively, attractive place that easily warrants a stopoff, although has few specific sights. The town is so close to the border that its
train station
is actually in England. From here, Station Road crosses the River Teme into Wales and climbs a couple of hundred... read the whole Knighton Travel Guides...
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