Wales: Difference between revisions
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Within four years of the [[Battle of Hastings]] England had been [[Norman conquest of England|completely subjugated]] by the [[Normans]].<ref name="Wales Hist 100"/> [[William the Conqueror|William I of England]] established a series of lordships, allocated to his most powerful warriors along the Welsh border, the boundaries fixed only to the east.<ref>Davies (1994) p. 101</ref> This frontier region, and any English-held lordships in Wales, became known as ''Marchia Wallie'', the [[Welsh Marches]], in which the [[Marcher Lord]]s were subject to neither [[English law|English]] nor [[Welsh law]].<ref name="Lieberman 1">{{Cite book|title=The Medieval March of Wales: The Creation and Perception of a Frontier, 1066-1283 |author= Max Lieberman |url=http://books.google.com/?id=2nda0A3pVYAC&pg=PA19&dq=%22March+of+Wales%22+over+years#v=onepage&q=%22March%20of%20Wales%22%20over%20years&f=false|page= 6 |accessdate=4 October 2010 |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |year=2010 |location=Cambridge|isbn=052 176 978 7 }}</ref> The area of the March varied as the fortunes of the Marcher Lords and the Welsh princes ebbed and flowed.<ref name="BBC History March">{{cite web|title=Chapter 6: The Coming of the Normans |url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/history/sites/themes/guide/ch6_coming_of_the_normans.shtml|accessdate=4 October 2010 |publisher=[[BBC Cymru Wales]] |year=2008|work=[[BBC Cymru Wales]] website}}</ref> The March of Wales, which existed for over 450 years, was abolished under the [[Laws in Wales Acts 1535–1542|Acts of Union]] in 1536.<ref name="Lieberman 1">{{Cite book|title=The Medieval March of Wales: The Creation and Perception of a Frontier, 1066-1283 |author= Max Lieberman |url=http://books.google.com/?id=2nda0A3pVYAC&pg=PA19&dq=%22March+of+Wales%22+over+years#v=onepage&q=%22March%20of%20Wales%22%20over%20years&f=false|page= 4 |accessdate=4 October 2010 |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |year=2010 |location=Cambridge|isbn=052 176 978 7 }}</ref> |
Within four years of the [[Battle of Hastings]] England had been [[Norman conquest of England|completely subjugated]] by the [[Normans]].<ref name="Wales Hist 100"/> [[William the Conqueror|William I of England]] established a series of lordships, allocated to his most powerful warriors along the Welsh border, the boundaries fixed only to the east.<ref>Davies (1994) p. 101</ref> This frontier region, and any English-held lordships in Wales, became known as ''Marchia Wallie'', the [[Welsh Marches]], in which the [[Marcher Lord]]s were subject to neither [[English law|English]] nor [[Welsh law]].<ref name="Lieberman 1">{{Cite book|title=The Medieval March of Wales: The Creation and Perception of a Frontier, 1066-1283 |author= Max Lieberman |url=http://books.google.com/?id=2nda0A3pVYAC&pg=PA19&dq=%22March+of+Wales%22+over+years#v=onepage&q=%22March%20of%20Wales%22%20over%20years&f=false|page= 6 |accessdate=4 October 2010 |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |year=2010 |location=Cambridge|isbn=052 176 978 7 }}</ref> The area of the March varied as the fortunes of the Marcher Lords and the Welsh princes ebbed and flowed.<ref name="BBC History March">{{cite web|title=Chapter 6: The Coming of the Normans |url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/history/sites/themes/guide/ch6_coming_of_the_normans.shtml|accessdate=4 October 2010 |publisher=[[BBC Cymru Wales]] |year=2008|work=[[BBC Cymru Wales]] website}}</ref> The March of Wales, which existed for over 450 years, was abolished under the [[Laws in Wales Acts 1535–1542|Acts of Union]] in 1536.<ref name="Lieberman 1">{{Cite book|title=The Medieval March of Wales: The Creation and Perception of a Frontier, 1066-1283 |author= Max Lieberman |url=http://books.google.com/?id=2nda0A3pVYAC&pg=PA19&dq=%22March+of+Wales%22+over+years#v=onepage&q=%22March%20of%20Wales%22%20over%20years&f=false|page= 4 |accessdate=4 October 2010 |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |year=2010 |location=Cambridge|isbn=052 176 978 7 }}</ref> |
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Owain Gwynedd's grandson [[Llywelyn the Great|Llywelyn Fawr]] (the Great) (b.1173–1240), wrested concessions out of the [[Magna Carta]] in 1215 and receiving the [[fealty]] of other Welsh lords in 1216 at the council at [[Aberdyfi]], became the first [[Prince of Wales]].<ref>Davies (1994) pp. 133–134</ref> His grandson [[Llywelyn the Last|Llywelyn ap Gruffydd]] also secured the recognition of the title ''[[Prince of Wales]]'' from [[Henry III of England|Henry III]] with the [[Treaty of Montgomery]] in 1267. Later however, a succession of disputes, including the imprisonment of Llywelyn's wife [[Eleanor de Montfort|Eleanor]], daughter of [[Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester|Simon de Montfort]], culminated in the first invasion by [[Edward I of England|King Edward I of England]]. As a result of military defeat, the [[Treaty of Aberconwy]] exacted Llywelyn's fealty to England in 1277. Peace was short lived and, with the 1282 [[Llywelyn the Last#Last campaign and death|Edwardian conquest]], the rule of the Welsh princes permanently ended. With Llywelyn's death and his brother prince [[Dafydd ap Gruffydd|Dafydd]]'s execution, the few remaining [[Welsh Peers|Welsh lords]] did homage for their lands to [[Edward I]]. Llywelyn's head was then carried through London on a spear; his baby daughter [[Gwenllian ferch Llywelyn|Gwenllian]] was locked in the [[priory]] at [[Sempringham]], where she remained until her death 54 years later.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/wales/786625.stm |title=Tribute to lost Welsh princess |publisher=BBC News |date=12 June 2000|accessdate=5 March 2007}}</ref> |
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[[File:Caernarfon Castle 1994.jpg|thumb|left|<center>[[Caernarfon Castle]]</center>]] |
[[File:Caernarfon Castle 1994.jpg|thumb|left|<center>[[Caernarfon Castle]]</center>]] |
Revision as of 15:21, 23 November 2010
Wales Cymru | |
---|---|
Motto: Cymru am byth (Template:Lang-en) | |
Anthem: Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau (Template:Lang-en) | |
Capital and largest city | Cardiff (Caerdydd) |
National languages | Welsh, English |
Demonym(s) | Welsh (Cymry) |
Government | Devolved Government in a Constitutional monarchy |
• Monarch | Elizabeth II |
Carwyn Jones AM | |
Ieuan Wyn Jones AM | |
David Cameron MP | |
• Secretary of State (in the UK government) | Cheryl Gillan MP |
Legislature | UK Parliament National Assembly for Wales |
Unification | |
1056 | |
Area | |
• Total | 20,779 km2 (8,023 sq mi) |
Population | |
• 2009 estimate | 2,999,300 [2] |
• 2001 census | 2,903,085 |
• Density | 140/km2 (362.6/sq mi) |
GDP (PPP) | 2006 (for national statistics) estimate |
• Total | US$85.4 billion |
• Per capita | US$30,546 |
Currency | Pound sterling (GBP) |
Time zone | UTC0 (GMT) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+1 (BST) |
Date format | d/m/yy (AD) |
Calling code | 44 |
ISO 3166 code | GB-WLS |
Internet TLD | .uk[3] |
Wales (/ˈweɪlz/ , Template:Lang-cy;[4] pronounced [ˈkəmrɨ] ) is a country that is part of the United Kingdom,[5] bordered by England to its east and the Atlantic Ocean and Irish Sea to its west. It has an estimated population of three million and is officially bilingual with the Welsh and English languages having equal status. The Welsh language is an important element of Welsh culture. Its decline has reversed over recent years. Over 580,000 Welsh speakers live in Wales, more than 20% of the population.[6][7]
During the Iron Age and early medieval period, Wales was inhabited by the Celtic Britons. A distinct Welsh national identity emerged in the centuries after the Roman withdrawal from Britain in the 5th century and Wales is regarded as one of the modern Celtic nations today.[8][9] Llywelyn the Great founded the Principality of Wales in 1216. Owain Glyndŵr briefly restored independence to what was to become modern Wales, in the early 15th century.[10][11] Wales was subsequently annexed by England under the Laws in Wales Acts 1535–1542, creating the legal entity now known as England and Wales. Distinctive Welsh politics developed in the 19th century and, in 1881, the Welsh Sunday Closing Act became the first legislation applied exclusively to Wales. In 1999, the National Assembly for Wales was created, which holds responsibility for a range of devolved matters.
Traditionally, the British Royal Family have bestowed the title of "Prince of Wales" upon the male heir apparent of the reigning monarch. Wales is sometimes referred to as the "Principality of Wales" or just the "principality", although this has no modern geographical or constitutional basis.
In 1955, Cardiff (Template:Lang-cy) was proclaimed as the capital of Wales. It is the country's most populous city with a population of 317,500. For a period, it was the biggest coal port in the world. Two-thirds of the population of Wales live in South Wales, with another concentration in eastern North Wales. Tourists visiting Wales have been drawn to Wales' "wild ... and picturesque" landscapes.[12][13] From the late 19th century onwards, Wales acquired its popular image as the "land of song," attributable in part to the revival of the eisteddfod tradition.[14]
Etymology
Etymology of Wales
The Anglo-Saxon word for 'foreign' or 'foreigner' was Waelisc and a 'foreign(er's) land' was called Wēalas. The modern English forms of these words with respect to the modern country are Welsh (the people) and Wales (the land), respectively.
Historically in Britain the words were not restricted to modern Wales or to the Welsh but were used indiscriminately to refer to anything that the Anglo-Saxons associated with Celtic Britons, including other foreign lands (e.g., Cornwall), places once associated with Celtic Britons (e.g., Walworth in County Durham and Walton in West Yorkshire),[15] the surnames of people (e.g., Walsh and Wallace) and various other things that were once new and foreign to the Anglo-Saxons (e.g., the walnut). None of these historic usages is necessarily connected to Wales or the Welsh.
The Anglo-Saxon words are derived from the same Germanic root (singular Walh, plural Walha) that has provided modern names for Continental lands (e.g., Wallonia and Wallachia)[16] and peoples (e.g., the Vlachs via a borrowing into Old Church Slavonic),[17][18][19] none of which has any connection to Wales or the Welsh.
Etymology of Cymru
The modern Welsh name for themselves is Cymry, and Cymru is Welsh for "Land of the Cymry". The etymological origin of Cymry is from the Brythonic word combrogi, meaning "fellow-countrymen".[20] The use of the word Cymry as a self-designation derives from the post-Roman Era relationship of the Welsh with the Brythonic-speaking peoples of northern England and southern Scotland, the peoples of Yr Hen Ogledd (Template:Lang-en). In its original use, it amounted to a self-perception that the Welsh and the "Men of the North" were one people, exclusive of all others.[21] In particular, the term was not applied to the Cornish or the Breton peoples, who are of similar heritage, culture, and language to both the Welsh and the Men of the North. The word came into use as a self-description probably before the 7th century.[22] It is attested in a praise poem to Cadwallon ap Cadfan (Moliant Cadwallon, by Afan Ferddig) c. 633.[23] In Welsh literature, the word Cymry was used throughout the Middle Ages to describe the Welsh, though the older, more generic term Brythoniaid continued to be used to describe any of the Britonnic peoples (including the Welsh) and was the more common literary term until c. 1100. Thereafter Cymry prevailed as a reference to the Welsh. Until circa 1560 Cymry was used indiscriminately to mean either the people (Cymry) or their homeland (Cymru).[20]
The Latinised form of the name is Cambria. Outside of Wales this form survives as the name of Cumbria in North West England, which was once a part of Yr Hen Ogledd. This form also appears at times in literary references, perhaps most notably in the pseudohistorical Historia Regum Britanniae of Geoffrey of Monmouth, where the character of Camber is described as the eponymous King of Cymru. The word is used to represent a geological period (the Cambrian), because rocks from the this period were first identified in Wales.[24] In evolutionary studies the Cambrian is the period when most major groups of complex animals appeared (the Cambrian explosion).
History
Prehistoric origins
Wales has been inhabited by modern humans for at least 29,000 years.[25] Continuous human habitation dates from the end of the last ice age, between 12,000 and 10,000 years before present (BP), when Mesolithic hunter-gatherers from central Europe began to migrate to Great Britain. At that time sea levels were much lower than today, and the shallower parts of what is now the North Sea were dry land. The east coast of present day England and the coasts of present day Denmark, Germany and the Netherlands were connected by the former landmass known as Doggerland, forming the British Peninsula on the European mainland. Wales was free of glaciers by about 10,250 BP, the warmer climate allowing the area to become heavily wooded. The post-glacial rise in sea level separated Wales and Ireland, forming the Irish Sea. Doggerland was submerged by the North Sea and, by 8,000 BP, the British Peninsula had become an island.[26][27] By the beginning of the Neolithic (c. 6,000 BP) sea levels in the Bristol Channel were still about 33 feet (10 m) lower than today.[28][29][30] John Davies has theorised that the story of Cantre'r Gwaelod's drowning and tales in the Mabinogion, of the waters between Wales and Ireland being narrower and shallower, may be distant folk memories of this time.[31]
Neolithic colonists integrated with the indigenous people, gradually changing their lifestyles from a nomadic life of hunting and gathering, to become settled farmers about 6,000 BP – the Neolithic Revolution.[31][32] They cleared the forests to establish pasture and to cultivate the land, developed new technologies such as ceramics and textile production, and built cromlechs such as Pentre Ifan, Bryn Celli Ddu and Parc Cwm long cairn between about 5,500 BP and 5,800 BP.[33][34][35][36] In common with people living all over Great Britain, over the following centuries the people living in what was to become known as Wales assimilated immigrants and exchanged ideas of the Bronze Age and Iron Age Celtic cultures. According to John T. Koch and others, Wales in the Late Bronze Age was part of a maritime trading-networked culture that also included the other Celtic nations, England, France, Spain and Portugal where Celtic languages developed.[37][38][39][40][41][42] By the time of the Roman invasion of Britain the area of modern Wales had been divided among the tribes of the Deceangli, Ordovices, Cornovii, Demetae and Silures for centuries.[31]
Roman era
The Roman conquest of Wales began in AD 48 and took 30 years to complete. Roman rule lasted over 300 years. The campaigns of conquest are the most widely known feature of Wales during the Roman era, due to the spirited, but ultimately unsuccessful, defence of their homelands by two native tribes: the Silures; and the Ordovices. Roman rule in Wales was a military occupation, save for the southern coastal region of South Wales, east of the Gower Peninsula, where there is a legacy of Romanisation.[43] The only town in Wales founded by the Romans, Caerwent, is in South Wales. Both Caerwent and Carmarthen, also in southern Wales, became Roman civitates.[44] Wales had a rich mineral wealth. The Romans used their engineering technology to extract large amounts of gold, copper and lead, as well as modest amounts of some other metals such as zinc and silver.[45] Roman economic development was concentrated in south-eastern Britain, and no significant industries located in Wales.[45] This was largely a matter of circumstance, as Wales had none of the necessary materials in suitable combination, and the forested, mountainous countryside was not amenable to industrialisation. Although Latin became the official language of Wales, the people tended to continue to speak in Brythonic, and while Romanisation was far from complete the upper classes of Wales began to consider themselves Roman, particularly after the ruling of 212, that granted all free men throughout the Empire Roman citizenship.[46] Further Roman influence came through the spread of Christianity, which gained many followers after Christians were allowed to worship freely in 313.[46]
Early historians, notably the 6th century cleric Gildas, have noted 383 as a significant point in Welsh history,[47] as it is noted in literature as the foundation point of several medieval royal dynasties. In that year the Roman general Magnus Maximus, or Macsen Wledig, stripped all of western and northern Britain of troops and senior administrators, to launch a successful bid for imperial power; continuing to rule Britain from Gaul as Emperor.[48][49] Gildas, writing c. 540, says that Maximus left Britain not only with all of its Roman troops, but also with all of its armed bands, governors, and the flower of its youth, never to return. Having left with the troops and Roman administrators, and planning to continue as the ruler of Britain in the future, his practical course was to transfer local authority to local rulers. The earliest Welsh genealogies give Maximus the role of founding father for several royal dynasties, including those of Powys and Gwent.[50][51] It was this transfer of power that has given rise to the belief that he was the father of the Welsh Nation.[47] He is given as the ancestor of a Welsh king on the Pillar of Eliseg, erected nearly 500 years after he left Britain, and he figures in lists of the Fifteen Tribes of Wales.[52]
Post-Roman era
The 400 years following the collapse of Roman rule is the most difficult to interpret in the history of Wales.[46] After the Roman departure from Britain in 410, much of the lowlands of Britain to the east and south-east were overrun by various Germanic tribes.[53] However by 500 AD, the land that would become Wales had divided into number of kingdoms free from Anglo-Saxon rule.[46] The kingdoms of Gwynedd, Powys, Dyfed and Seisyllg, Morgannwg and Gwent emerged as independent Welsh successor states. These kingdoms endured, and the expansion of the Anglo-Saxons into Wales may have been halted by the victory of the British leader Arthur at Badon Hill, perhaps between 490 and 520, though no one date is generally agreed upon.[46] This tenacious survival by the Romano-Britons and their descendants in the western kingdoms was to become the foundation of what we now know as Wales. With the loss of the lowlands, England's kingdoms of Mercia and Northumbria, and later Wessex, wrestled with Powys, Gwent and Gwynedd to define the frontier between the two peoples.
Having lost much of what is now the West Midlands to Mercia in the 6th and early 7th centuries, a resurgent late-seventh-century Powys checked Mercian advancement. Aethelbald of Mercia, looking to defend recently acquired lands, had built Wat's Dyke. According to John Davies, this endeavour may have been with Powys king Elisedd ap Gwylog's own agreement, however, for this boundary, extending north from the valley of the River Severn to the Dee estuary, gave Oswestry to Powys.[54] Though another theory, after carbon-dating placed the dyke's existence 300 years earlier, is that it may have been built by the post-Roman rulers of Wroxeter.[55] King Offa of Mercia seems to have continued this consultative initiative when he created a larger earthwork, now known as Offa's Dyke ([Clawdd Offa] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)). Davies wrote of Cyril Fox's study of Offa's Dyke: "In the planning of it, there was a degree of consultation with the kings of Powys and Gwent. On the Long Mountain near Trelystan, the dyke veers to the east, leaving the fertile slopes in the hands of the Welsh; near Rhiwabon, it was designed to ensure that Cadell ap Brochwel retained possession of the Fortress of Penygadden." And for Gwent Offa had the dyke built "on the eastern crest of the gorge, clearly with the intention of recognizing that the River Wye and its traffic belonged to the kingdom of Gwent."[54] However, Fox's interpretations of both the length and purpose of the Dyke have been questioned by more recent research.[56] Offa's Dyke largely remained the frontier between the Welsh and English, though the Welsh would recover by the 12th century the area between the Dee ([Afon Dyfrdwy] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)), and the Conwy known then as Y Berfeddwlad. By the eighth century, the eastern borders with the Anglo-Saxons had broadly been set.
In 853 the Vikings raided Anglesey, but in 856 Rhodri Mawr defeated and killed their leader, Gorm.[57] The Britons of Wales later made their peace with the Vikings and Anarawd ap Rhodri allied with the Norsemen occupying Northumbria to conquer the north, though this alliance later broke down and Anarawd was forced to come to an agreement with Alfred the Great for protection.
Medieval Wales
The southern and eastern parts of Great Britain lost to English settlement became known in Welsh as Lloegyr (Modern Welsh Lloegr), which may have referred to the kingdom of Mercia originally, and which came to refer to England as a whole.[58] The Germanic tribes who now dominated these lands were invariably called Saeson, meaning "Saxons". The Anglo-Saxons called the Romano-British 'Walha', meaning 'Romanised foreigner' or 'stranger'.[59] The Welsh continued to call themselves Brythoniaid (Brythons or Britons) well into the Middle Ages, though the first written evidence of the use of Cymru and y Cymry is found in a praise poem to Cadwallon ap Cadfan (Moliant Cadwallon, by Afan Ferddig) c. 633.[17] In Armes Prydain, believed to be written around 930-942, the words Cymry and Cymro are used as often as 15 times.[60] However, from the Anglo-Saxon settlement onwards, the people gradually begin to adopt the name Cymry over Brythoniad.[61]
From 800 onwards, a series of dynastic marriages led to Rhodri Mawr's (r. 844–77) inheritance of Gwynedd and Powys. His sons in turn would found three principal dynasties (Aberffraw for Gwynedd, Dinefwr for Deheubarth, and Mathrafal for Powys). Rhodri's grandson Hywel Dda (r. 900–50) founded Deheubarth out of his maternal and paternal inheritances of Dyfed and Seisyllwg in 930, ousted the Aberffraw dynasty from Gwynedd and Powys, and then codified Welsh law in the 940s.[62] Maredudd ab Owain (r. 986–99) of Deheubarth (Hywel's grandson) would, (again) temporarily oust the Aberffraw line from control of Gwynedd and Powys.
Maredudd's great-grandson (through his daughter Princess Angharad) Gruffydd ap Llywelyn (r. 1039–63) would conquer his cousins' realms from his base in Powys, and even extend his authority into England. Historian John Davies states that Gruffydd was "the only Welsh king ever to rule over the entire territory of Wales... Thus, from about 1057 until his death in 1063, the whole of Wales recognised the kingship of Gruffudd ap Llywelyn. For about seven brief years, Wales was one, under one ruler, a feat with neither precedent nor successor." [1] Owain Gwynedd (1100–70) of the Aberffraw line was the first Welsh ruler to use the title princeps Wallensium (prince of the Welsh), a title of substance given his victory on the Berwyn Mountains, according to John Davies.[63]
Within four years of the Battle of Hastings England had been completely subjugated by the Normans.[1] William I of England established a series of lordships, allocated to his most powerful warriors along the Welsh border, the boundaries fixed only to the east.[64] This frontier region, and any English-held lordships in Wales, became known as Marchia Wallie, the Welsh Marches, in which the Marcher Lords were subject to neither English nor Welsh law.[65] The area of the March varied as the fortunes of the Marcher Lords and the Welsh princes ebbed and flowed.[66] The March of Wales, which existed for over 450 years, was abolished under the Acts of Union in 1536.[65]
Owain Gwynedd's grandson Llywelyn Fawr (the Great) (b.1173–1240), wrested concessions out of the Magna Carta in 1215 and receiving the fealty of other Welsh lords in 1216 at the council at Aberdyfi, became the first Prince of Wales.[67] His grandson Llywelyn ap Gruffydd also secured the recognition of the title Prince of Wales from Henry III with the Treaty of Montgomery in 1267. Later however, a succession of disputes, including the imprisonment of Llywelyn's wife Eleanor, daughter of Simon de Montfort, culminated in the first invasion by King Edward I of England. As a result of military defeat, the Treaty of Aberconwy exacted Llywelyn's fealty to England in 1277. Peace was short lived and, with the 1282 Edwardian conquest, the rule of the Welsh princes permanently ended. With Llywelyn's death and his brother prince Dafydd's execution, the few remaining Welsh lords did homage for their lands to Edward I. Llywelyn's head was then carried through London on a spear; his baby daughter Gwenllian was locked in the priory at Sempringham, where she remained until her death 54 years later.[68]
To help maintain his dominance, Edward constructed a series of great stone castles. Beaumaris, Caernarfon and Conwy. His son, the future King Edward II of England, was born at Edward's new castle at Caernarfon in 1284.[69] He became the first English Prince of Wales, not as an infant, but in 1301. The apocryphal story that Edward tricked the Welsh by offering them a Welsh-born Prince who could speak no English, was first recorded in 1584.[70] The title also provided an income from the north–west part of Wales known as the Principality of Wales, until the Act of Union (1536), after which the term principality, if used at all, was believed to be associated with the whole of Wales.[71][72][73] After the failed revolt in 1294–95 of Madog ap Llywelyn – who styled himself Prince of Wales in the so-called Penmachno Document – there was no major uprising until that led by Owain Glyndŵr a century later, against Henry IV of England. In 1404, Owain was reputedly crowned Prince of Wales in the presence of emissaries from France, Spain and Scotland.[74] Glyndŵr went on to hold parliamentary assemblies at several Welsh towns, including Machynlleth. The rebellion was ultimately to founder, however, and Owain went into hiding in 1412, with peace being essentially restored in Wales by 1415. Although the English conquest of Wales took place under the 1284 Statute of Rhuddlan, a formal Union did not occur until 1536,[72] shortly after which Welsh law, which continued to be used in Wales after the conquest, was fully replaced by English law, under what would become known as the Act of Union.[75]
Industrial Wales
Prior to the British Industrial Revolution, which saw a rapid economic expansion between 1750 and 1850, there were signs of small-scale industries scattered throughout Wales.[76] These ranged from industries connected to agriculture, such as milling and the manufacture of woollen textiles, through to mining and quarrying.[76] Until the Industrial Revolution, Wales had always been reliant on its agricultural output for its wealth and employment and the earliest industrial businesses were small scale and localised in manner.[76] The emerging industrial period commenced around the development of copper smelting in the Swansea area. With access to local coal deposits and a harbour that could take advantage of Cornwall's copper mines and the copper deposits being extracted from the then largest copper mine in the world at Parys Mountain on Anglesey, Swansea developed into the world's major centre for non-ferrous metal smelting in the 19th century.[76] The second metal industry to expand in Wales was iron smelting, and iron manufacturing became prevalent in both the north and the south of the country.[77] In the north of Wales, John Wilkinson's Ironworks at Bersham was a significant industry, while in the south, a second world centre of metallurgy was founded in Merthyr Tydfil, where the four ironworks of Dowlais, Cyfarthfa, Plymouth and Penydarren became the most significant hub of iron manufacture in Wales.[77] In the 1820s, south Wales alone accounted for 40% of all pig iron manufactured in Britain.[77]
In the late 18th century, slate quarrying began to expand rapidly, most notably in north Wales. The most notable site, opened in 1770 by Richard Pennant, is Penrhyn Quarry which, by the late 19th century, was employing 15,000 men;[78] and along with Dinorwic Quarry, dominated the Welsh slate trade. Although slate quarrying has been described as 'the most Welsh of Welsh industries',[79] it is coal mining which has become the single industry synonymous with Wales and its people. Initially, coal seams were exploited to provide energy for local metal industries but, with the opening of canal systems and later the railways, Welsh coal mining saw a boom in its demand. As the south Wales coalfield was exploited, mainly in the upland valleys around Aberdare and later the Rhondda, the ports of Swansea, Cardiff and later Penarth, grew into world exporters of coal and, with them, came a population boom. By its height in 1913, Wales was producing almost 61 million tons of coal.[80] As Wales was reliant on the production of capital goods rather than consumer goods, it possessed few of the skilled craftspeople and artisans found in the workshops of Birmingham or Sheffield in England and had few factories producing finished goods - a key feature of most regions associated with the Industrial Revolution.[77] However, there is increasing support that the industrial revolution was reliant on harnessing the energy and materials provided by Wales and, in that sense, Wales was of central importance.[77]
Modern Wales
Historian Kenneth Morgan described Wales on the eve of the First World War as a "relatively placid, self-confident, and successful nation". Output from the coalfields continued to increase, with the Rhondda Valley recording a peak of 9.6 million tons of coal extracted in 1913.[81] The outbreak of the First World War (1914–1918) saw Wales, as part of the United Kingdom, enter hostilities with Germany. A total of 272,924 Welshmen served in the war, representing 21.5% of the male population.[82] Of these, roughly 35,000 were killed.[82] The two most notable battles of the War to include Welsh forces were those at Mametz Wood on the Somme and Third Ypres.[83]
The first quarter of the 20th century also saw a shift in the political landscape of Wales. Since 1865, the Liberal Party had held a parliamentary majority in Wales and, following the general election of 1906, only one non-Liberal Member of Parliament, Keir Hardie of Merthyr Tydfil, represented a Welsh constituency in Westminster.[84] Yet by 1906, industrial dissension and political militancy had begun to undermine Liberal consensus in the Southern coalfields.[84] In 1916, David Lloyd George became the first Welshman to become Prime Minister of Britain when he was made head of the 1916 coalition government.[85] In December 1918, Lloyd George was re-elected at the head of a Conservative-dominated coalition government, and his poor handling of the 1919 coalminers' strike was a key factor in destroying support for the Liberal party in south Wales.[86] The industrial workers of Wales began shifting towards a new political organisation, established by Hardie and others to ensure an elected representation for the working class, and now called the Labour party.[87] When in 1908 the Miners' Federation of Great Britain became affiliated to the Labour Party the four Labour candidates sponsored by miners were all elected as MPs.[87] By 1922, half of the Welsh seats in Westminster were held by Labour politicians, which was the beginning of a Labour hegemony which would dominate Wales into the 21st century.[87]
Despite economic growth in the first two decades of the 20th century, from the early 1920s to the late 1930s, Wales' staple industries endured a prolonged slump, leading to widespread unemployment and poverty in the South Wales valleys.[88] For the first time in centuries, the population of Wales went into decline; the scourge of unemployment only relented with the production demands of the Second World War.[89] The Second World War (1939–1945) saw Welsh servicemen and women fight in all the major theatres of war, with some 15,000 of them killed.[90] Bombing raids brought major loss of life as the German Air Force targeted the docks at Swansea, Cardiff and Pembroke.[90] After 1943, 10% of Welsh conscripts aged 18 were sent to work in the coal mines to rectify labour shortages; they became known as Bevin Boys.[90] Pacifist numbers during both World Wars were fairly low, especially in the Second World War, which was seen as a fight against fascism.[90] Of the political parties active in Wales, only Plaid Cymru advocated a neutral stance, on the grounds that it was an 'imperialist war'.[90]
The 20th century saw a revival in Welsh national feeling. Plaid Cymru was formed in 1925, seeking greater autonomy or independence from the rest of the UK. In 1955, the term England and Wales became common for describing the area to which English law applied, and Cardiff was proclaimed as capital city of Wales. Cymdeithas yr Iaith Gymraeg (The Welsh Language Society) was formed in 1962, in response to fears that the language may soon die out. Nationalist sentiment grew following the flooding of the Tryweryn valley in 1965 to create a reservoir supplying water to the English city of Liverpool. Despite 35 of the 36 Welsh Members of Parliament voting against the bill, with the other abstaining, Parliament still passed the bill and the village of Capel Celyn was drowned, highlighting Wales's powerlessness in her own affairs in the face of the numerical superiority of English MPs in the Westminster Parliament.[92] Both the Free Wales Army and Mudiad Amddiffyn Cymru (Welsh Defence Movement, abbreviated as MAC) were formed as a direct result of the Tryweryn destruction, conducting campaigns from 1963.[93] In the years leading up to the investiture of Prince Charles as Prince of Wales in 1969, these groups were responsible for a number of bomb blasts—destroying water pipes, tax and other offices and part of a dam being built for a new English-backed project in Clywedog, Montgomeryshire.[94] In 1966 the Carmarthen Parliamentary seat was won by Gwynfor Evans at a by-election, Plaid Cymru's first Parliamentary seat.[95] In the following year, the Wales and Berwick Act 1746 was repealed and a legal definition of Wales and of the boundary with England was stated.
By the end of the 1960s, the regional policy of bringing firms into disadvantaged areas of Wales through financial incentives, had proven very successful in diversifying the once industrial landscape.[96] This policy, begun in 1934, was enhanced by the construction of industrial estates and improving transport communications,[96] most notably the M4 motorway linking Wales directly to London. There was a belief that the foundations for stable economic growth had been firmly established in Wales during this period; but these views were shown to be wildly optimistic after the recession of the early 1980s saw much of the manufacturing base built over the last forty years, collapse.[97]
The Wales referendum, 1979 in which the Welsh electorate voted on the creation of an assembly for Wales resulted in a large majority for the "no" vote.[98] However, in 1997, a referendum on the same issue secured a "yes", although by a very narrow majority.[98] The National Assembly for Wales (Cynulliad Cenedlaethol Cymru) was set up in 1999 (as a consequence of the Government of Wales Act 1998) and possesses the power to determine how the central government budget for Wales is spent and administered, although the UK parliament reserves the right to set limits on the powers of the Welsh Assembly.
The governments of the United Kingdom and of Wales almost invariably define Wales as a country.[99][100] The Welsh Assembly Government says: "Wales is not a Principality. Although we are joined with England by land, and we are part of Great Britain, Wales is a country in its own right." [101] The title Prince of Wales is still conferred on the heir apparent to the British throne, currently Prince Charles. However the Prince of Wales has no constitutional role in modern Wales.[102] According to the Welsh Assembly Government: "Our Prince of Wales at the moment is Prince Charles, who is the present heir to the throne. But he does not have a role in the governance of Wales, even though his title might suggest that he does." [101]
Government and politics
Wales is a country that is part of the United Kingdom (UK).[5] Constitutionally, the UK is a de jure, unitary state, its sovereign parliament and government in Westminster. In the House of Commons – the lower house of the UK government – Wales is represented by 40 MPs (of 646) from Welsh constituencies. Labour MPs hold 29 of the 40 seats, the Liberal Democrats hold four seats, Plaid Cymru, three and the Conservatives, three.[103] A Secretary of State for Wales sits in the UK cabinet and is responsible for representing matters pertaining to Wales. The Wales Office is a department of the United Kingdom government, responsible for Wales. Cheryl Gillan has been Secretary of State for Wales since 12 May 2010, replacing Peter Hain of the previous Labour administration. Gillan was appointed to the new Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition Westminster government following the United Kingdom general election of 2010.[104]
Referenda held in Wales and Scotland in 1997 chose to establish a limited form of self-government in both countries. In Wales, the consequent process of devolution began with the Government of Wales Act 1998, which created the National Assembly for Wales ([Cynulliad Cenedlaethol Cymru] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)).[105] Powers of the Secretary of State for Wales were transferred to the devolved government on 1 July 1999, granting the Assembly responsibility to decide how the Westminster government's budget for devolved areas is spent and administered.[106] The 1998 Act was amended by the Government of Wales Act 2006 which enhanced the Assembly's powers, giving it legislative powers akin to the Scottish Parliament and Northern Ireland Assembly. The Assembly consists of 60 members, known as Assembly Members ([Aelodau y Cynulliad] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)). Members (AMs ([ACau] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help))) are elected for four year terms under an additional member system. Forty of the AMs represent geographical constituencies, elected under the First Past the Post system. The remaining twenty AMs represent five electoral regions, each representing between seven and nine constituencies, using the d'Hondt method of proportional representation.[107] The Assembly must elect a First Minister of Wales, who selects ministers to form the Welsh Assembly Government.
Labour remained the largest Assembly party following the 2007 election, winning 26 of the 60 seats.[107] Having insufficient support to form a government, the Labour Party entered into the 'One Wales' agreement with Plaid Cymru, forming a coalition, the Labour leader as First Minister of Wales.[108] Carwyn Jones has been First Minister of Wales and leader of Welsh Labour since Rhodri Morgan retired from office in December 2009, after nine years and ten months as First Minister.[109] Ieuan Wyn Jones, Deputy First Minister of Wales in the coalition government, is leader of Plaid Cymru, the second-largest party in the Assembly with 14 of the 60 seats. The Presiding Officer of the Assembly is Lord Elis-Thomas of Plaid Cymru. Other Assembly parties are the Conservative Party, the loyal opposition with 13 seats, the Liberal Democrats with six seats, and one independent member.[107] The Lib-Dems had previously formed part of a coalition government with Labour in the first Assembly. Under the 'One Wales' agreement, a referendum on giving the Welsh assembly full law-making powers on devolved 'matters' is promised "as soon as practicable, at or before the end of the assembly term (in 2011)" and both parties have agreed "in good faith to campaign for a successful outcome to such a referendum".[110]
The twenty areas of responsibility devolved to the Welsh Assembly Government, known as 'matters', include agriculture, economic development, education, health, housing, local government, social services, tourism, transport and the Welsh language.[111][112] On its creation in 1999, the National Assembly for Wales had no primary legislative powers.[113] However, since the Government of Wales Act 2006 (GoWA 2006) came into effect in 2007, the Assembly has power to pass primary legislation as Assembly Measures on some specific matters within the areas of devolved responsibility. Further matters have been added subsequently, either directly by the UK Parliament or by the UK Parliament approving a Legislative Competence Order (LCO); a request from the National Assembly for additional powers. The GoWA 2006 allows for the Assembly to gain primary lawmaking powers on a more extensive range of matters within the same devolved areas if approved in a referendum and such legislation will then take the form of Acts of the Assembly.[114] Wales is also a distinct UK electoral region of the European Union represented by four Members of the European Parliament.
Local government
For the purposes of local government, Wales was divided into 22 council areas in 1996. These "unitary authorities" are responsible for the provision of all local government services.[115]
Map of unitary authority areas
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Areas are Counties, unless marked * (for Cities) or † (for County Boroughs). Welsh language forms are given in parentheses, where they differ from the English..
Note: Wales has five cities. In addition to Cardiff, Newport and Swansea, the communities of Bangor and St David's also have city status in the United Kingdom.
Law
By tradition, Welsh Law was compiled during an assembly held at Whitland around 930 CE by Hywel Dda, king of most of Wales between 942 and his death in 950. The 'law of Hywel Dda' ([Cyfraith Hywel] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)), as it became known, codified the previously existing folk laws and legal customs that had evolved in Wales over centuries. Welsh Law emphasised the payment of compensation for a crime to the victim, or the victim's kin, rather than on punishment by the ruler.[116][117][118] Other than in the Marches, where law was imposed by the Marcher Lords, Welsh Law remained in force in Wales until the Statute of Rhuddlan in 1284. Edward I of England annexed the Principality of Wales following the death of Llywelyn the Last and Welsh Law was replaced for criminal cases under the Statute. Marcher Law and Welsh Law (for civil cases) remained in force until Henry VIII of England annexed the whole of Wales under the Laws in Wales Acts 1535-1542 (often referred to as the Acts of Union of 1536 and 1543), after which English Law applied to the whole of Wales.[116][119] The Wales and Berwick Act 1746 provided that all laws that applied to England would automatically apply to Wales (and the Anglo-Scottish border town of Berwick) unless the law explicitly stated otherwise. This act, with regard to Wales, was repealed in 1967. However, excluding those matters devolved to Wales since 1999, English law has been the legal system of Wales and England since 1536.[120]
English law is regarded as a common law system, with no major codification of the law, and legal precedents are binding as opposed to persuasive. The court system is headed by the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom which is the highest court of appeal in the land for criminal and civil cases. The Supreme Court of Judicature of England and Wales is the highest court of first instance as well as an appellate court. The three divisions are the Court of Appeal; the High Court of Justice and the Crown Court. Minor cases are heard by the Magistrates' Courts or the County Court.
Since devolution in 2006, the Welsh Assembly has had the authority to draft and approve some laws outside of the UK Parliamentary system to meet the specific needs of Wales. Under powers conferred by Legislative Competency Orders agreed by all parliamentary stakeholders, it is able to pass laws known as Assembly Measures in relation to specific fields, such as health and education. As such, Assembly Measures are a subordinate form of primary legislation, lacking the scope of UK-wide acts of parliament, but able to be passed without the approval of the UK parliament or Royal Assent for each 'act'. Through this primary legislation, the Welsh Assembly Government can then also draft more specific secondary legislation. In 2007 the Wales and Cheshire Region (known as the Wales and Cheshire Circuit before 2005) came to an end when Cheshire was attached to the North-Western England Region. From that point Wales became a legal unit in its own right.[121]
Geography and natural history
Wales is a generally mountainous country on the western side of central southern Great Britain.[122] It is about 274 km (170 mi) north–south and 97 km (60 mi) east–west.[123] The oft-quoted 'size of Wales' is about 20,779 km2 (8,023 sq mi).[124][125] Wales is bordered by England to the east and by sea in all other directions: the Irish Sea ([Môr Iwerddon] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)) to the north and west, St George's Channel ([Sianel San Siôr] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)) and the Celtic Sea ([Y Môr Celtaidd] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)) to the southwest and the Bristol Channel ([Môr Hafren] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)) to the south.[126][127] Altogether, Wales has over 1,180 km (733 mi) of coastline.[128] Several islands lie off the Welsh mainland; the largest being Anglesey ([Ynys Môn] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)), in the northwest.
Much of Wales's diverse landscape is mountainous, particularly in the north and central regions. The mountains were shaped during the last ice age, the Devensian glaciation. The highest mountains in Wales are in Snowdonia (Eryri), of which five are over 1,000 m (3,281 ft); known as 'super-mountains'. The highest of these is Snowdon (Yr Wyddfa), at 1,085 m (3,560 ft).[129][130] The 14 (or 15 if including Garnedd Uchaf; often discounted due to its low topographic prominence) Welsh mountains over 3,000 feet (914 m) high are known collectively as the Welsh 3000s and are located in a small area in the north-west.[131]
The highest outside the 3000s is Aran Fawddwy, at 905 metres (2,969 ft), in the south of Snowdonia.[132] The Brecon Beacons (Template:Lang-cy) are in the south (highest point Pen-y-Fan, at 886 metres (2,907 ft)), and are joined by the Cambrian Mountains in Mid Wales, after which the earliest geological period of the Paleozoic era, the Cambrian, is named.[133]
In the mid-19th century, two prominent geologists, Roderick Murchison and Adam Sedgwick, independently used their studies of the geology of Wales to establish certain principles of stratigraphy and palaeontology. The next two periods of the Paleozoic era, the Ordovician and Silurian, were named after ancient Celtic tribes from this area based on the Murchison's and Sedgwick's work.[134][135] The older rocks underlying the Cambrian rocks were referred to as Pre-cambrian.
Wales has three national parks: Snowdonia, Brecon Beacons and Pembrokeshire Coast. It has five Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty.[136] These areas include Anglesey, the Clwydian Range, the Gower Peninsula and the Wye Valley. The Gower Peninsula was the first area in the United Kingdom to be designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, in 1956. Forty two percent of the coastline of South and West Wales is designated as Heritage Coast, with 13 specific designated strips of coastline maintained by the Countryside Council of Wales.[137] As from 2010 the coastline of Wales has 45 Blue Flag beaches and five Blue Flag marinas.[138] Despite its Heritage and award winning beaches; the south and west coasts of Wales, along with the Irish and Cornish coasts, are frequently blasted by Atlantic westerlies/south westerlies that, over the years, have sunk and wrecked many vessels. On the night of 25 October 1859, over 110 ships were destroyed off the coast of Wales when a hurricane blew in from the Atlantic.[139] More than 800 lives were lost across Britain due to the storm but the greatest tragedy was the sinking of the Royal Charter of the coast of Anglesey in which 459 people died.[140] The number of shipwrecks around the coast of Wales reached a peak in the 19th century with over 100 craft losses and an average loss of life of about 78 sailors per year.[141] Wartime action caused losses near Holyhead, Milford Haven and Swansea.[141] Due to offshore rocks and unlit islands, Anglesey and Pembrokeshire are still notorious for shipwrecks, most notably the Sea Empress Disaster in 1996.[142]
The first border between Wales and England was zonal, apart from around the River Wye, which was the first accepted boundary.[143] Offa's Dyke was supposed to form an early distinct line but this was thwarted by Gruffudd ap Llewellyn, who reclaimed swathes of land beyond the dyke.[143] The Act of Union of 1536 formed a linear border stretching from the mouth of the Dee to the mouth of the Wye.[143] Even after the Act of Union, many of the borders remained vague and moveable until the Welsh Sunday Closing act of 1881, which forced local businesses to decide which country they fell within to accept either the Welsh or English law.[143]
The Seven Wonders of Wales is a list in doggerel verse of seven geographic and cultural landmarks in Wales probably composed in the late 18th century under the influence of tourism from England.[144] All the "wonders" are in north Wales: Snowdon (the highest mountain), the Gresford bells (the peal of bells in the medieval church of All Saints at Gresford), the Llangollen bridge (built in 1347 over the River Dee, St Winefride's Well (a pilgrimage site at Holywell) in Flintshire, the Wrexham ([Wrecsam] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)) steeple (16th century tower of St. Giles Church in Wrexham), the Overton Yew trees (ancient yew trees in the churchyard of St. Mary's at Overton-on-Dee) and Pistyll Rhaeadr – a tall waterfall, at 240 ft (73 m). The wonders are part of the rhyme:
- Pistyll Rhaeadr and Wrexham steeple,
- Snowdon's mountain without its people,
- Overton yew trees, St Winefride's Wells,
- Llangollen bridge and Gresford bells.
Climate
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Wales lies within the north temperate zone. It has a changeable, maritime climate and is one of the wettest countries in Europe.[145][146] Welsh weather is often cloudy, wet and windy, with warm summers and mild winters.[145][147] The long summer days and short winter days are due to Wales' northerly latitudes (between 53° 43′ N and 51° 38′ N). Aberystwyth, at the mid point of the country's west coast, has nearly 17 hours of daylight at the summer solstice. Daylight at midwinter there falls to just over seven and a half hours.[148] The country's wide geographic variations cause localised differences in sunshine, rainfall and temperature. Average annual coastal temperatures are 10.5 °C (50.9 °F) and in low lying inland areas, 1 °C (34 °F) lower. It becomes cooler at higher altitudes; annual temperatures decrease on average approximately 0.5 °C (32.9 °F) each 100 metres (330 ft) of altitude. Consequently, the higher parts of Snowdonia experience average annual temperatures of 5 °C (41 °F).[145] Temperatures in Wales are kept higher than would otherwise be expected at its latitude by the North Atlantic Drift, a branch of the Gulf Stream. The ocean current, bringing warmer water to northerly latitudes, has a similar effect on most of north west Europe. As well as its influence on Wales' coastal areas, air warmed by the Gulf Stream is carried further inland by the prevailing winds.[149]
At low elevations, summers tend to be warm and sunny. Average maximum temperatures range between 19 °C (66 °F) and 22 °C (72 °F). Winters tend to be fairly wet, but rainfall is rarely excessive and the temperature usually stays above freezing. Spring and autumn feel quite similar and the temperatures tend to stay above 14 °C (57 °F) – also the average annual daytime temperature.[150]
The sunniest time of year tends to be between May and August. The south-western coast is the sunniest part of Wales, averaging over 1700 hours of sunshine annually. Wales' sunniest town is Tenby, Pembrokeshire. The dullest time of year tends to be between November and January. The least sunny areas are the mountains, some parts of which average less than 1200 hours of sunshine annually.[145][146] The prevailing wind is south-westerly. Coastal areas are the windiest, gales occur most often during winter, on average between 15 and 30 days each year, depending on location. Inland, gales average fewer than six days annually.[145]
Rainfall patterns show significant variation. The further west, the higher the expected rainfall; up to 40% more.[146] At low elevations, rain is unpredictable at any time of year, although the showers tend to be shorter in summer.[150] The uplands of Wales have most rain, normally more than 50 days of rain during the winter months (December to February), falling to around 35 rainy days during the summer months (June to August). Annual rainfall in Snowdonia averages between 3,000 millimetres (120 in) (Blaenau Ffestiniog) and 5,000 millimetres (200 in) (Snowdon's summit).[146] The likelihood is that it will fall as sleet or snow when the temperature falls below 5 °C (41 °F), and snow tends to be lying on the ground there for an average of 30 days a year. Snowfall is rare in southern coastal and eastern areas, and disruption to daily life exceptional. Average annual rainfall in those areas can be less than 1,000 millimetres (39 in). Met Office statistics show Swansea to be the wettest city in Great Britain, with an average annual rainfall of 1,360.8 millimetres (53.57 in).[147] This has led to the old adage "If you can see Mumbles Head it is going to rain - if you can't, it is raining".[147] Cardiff is Great Britain's fifth wettest city, with 908 millimetres (35.7 in).[147] Rhyl is Wales' driest town, its average annual rainfall 640 millimetres (25 in).[145][146]
- Highest maximum temperature: 35.2 °C (95.4 °F) at Hawarden Bridge, Flintshire on 2 August 1990.[151]
- Lowest minimum temperature: −23.3 °C (−9.9 °F) at Rhayader, Radnorshire (now Powys) on 21 January 1940.[151]
- Maximum number of hours of sunshine in a month: 354.3 hours at Dale Fort, Pembrokeshire in July 1955.[152]
- Minimum number of hours of sunshine in a month: 2.7 hours at Llwynon, Brecknockshire in January 1962.[152]
- Maximum rainfall in a day (0900 UTC – 0900 UTC): 211 millimetres (8 in) at Rhondda, Glamorgan, on 11 November 1929.[153]
- Wettest spot – an average of 4,473 millimetres (176 in) rain a year at Crib Goch in Snowdonia, Gwynedd (making it also the wettest spot in the United Kingdom).[154][155]
Flora and fauna
Wales’ wildlife is typical of Britain with several distinctions. Due to its long coastline and being a peninsular country, Wales hosts a variety of seabirds. The coasts and surrounding islands are home to colonies of gannets, Manx Shearwater, puffins, kittiwakes, shags and razorbills. In comparison, with 60% of Wales above the 150m contour, the country also supports a variety of upland habitat birds, including raven and ring ouzel.[156][157] Birds of prey include the merlin, hen harrier and the red kite, a national symbol of Welsh wildlife.[158] In total, more than 200 different species of bird have been seen at the RSPB reserve at Conwy, including seasonal visitors.[159]
The larger Welsh mammals died out during the Norman period, including the brown bear, wolf and the wildcat.[160] Today, mammals of note include shrews, voles, badgers, hedgehogs and fifteen species of bat.[160] Two species of small rodent, the yellow-necked mouse and the dormouse, are of special Welsh note being found at the historically undisturbed border area.[160] Other animals of note include, otter, stoat and weasel.
Like Cornwall, Brittany and Ireland, the waters of South-west Wales of Gower, Pembrokeshire and Cardigan Bay attract marine animals including basking sharks, Atlantic grey seals, leatherback turtles, dolphins, porpoises, jellyfish, crabs and lobsters. Pembrokeshire and Ceredigion in particular are recognised as an area of international importance for Bottlenose dolphins, and New Quay has the only summer residence of bottlenose dolphins in the whole of the UK. River fish of note include char, eel, salmon, shad, sparling and Arctic char, whilst the Gwyniad is unique to Wales, found only in Bala Lake.[161] Wales is also known for its shellfish, including cockles, limpet, mussels and periwinkles.[161] Herring, mackerel and hake are the more common of the country's seafish.[161]
The north facing high grounds of Snowdonia support a relic pre-glacial flora including the iconic Snowdon lily -Lloydia serotina - and other alpine species such as Saxifraga cespitosa, Saxifraga oppositifolia and Silene acaulis - an eco-system not found elsewhere in the UK. Wales also hosts a number of plant species not found elsewhere in the UK including the Spotted Rock-rose Tuberaria guttata on Anglesey and Draba aizoides [162] on the Gower.
Education
A distinct education system has developed in Wales.[163] Formal education before the 18th century was the preserve of the elite. The first grammar schools were established in Welsh towns such as Ruthin, Brecon and Cowbridge.[163] One of the first successful schooling systems was started by Griffiths Jones, who introduced the circulating schools in the 1730s; believed to have taught half the country's population to read.[164] In the 19th century, with increasing state involvement in education, Wales was forced to adopt an education system that was English in ethos even though the country was predominantly Non-conformist, Welsh speaking and demographically uneven due to the economic expansion in the south.[164] To ensure Welsh children spoke English at school, the Welsh Not was used; a policy seen as a hated symbol of English oppression. The "not", a piece of wood hung round the neck by string, was given to any child overheard speaking Welsh, who would pass it to a different child if overheard speaking Welsh. At the end of the day, the wearer of the "not" would be beaten.[165] State and local governmental edicts resulted in schooling in the English language which, following Brad y Llyfrau Gleision (the Treachery of the Blue Books), was seen as more academic and worthwhile for children.[166]
The University College of Wales opened in Aberystwyth in 1872. Cardiff and Bangor followed, and the three colleges came together in 1893 to form the University of Wales.[164] The Welsh Intermediate Education Act of 1889 created 95 secondary schools. The Welsh Department for the Board of Education followed in 1907, which gave Wales its first significant educational devolution.[164] A resurgence in Welsh language schools in the later half of the 20th century at nursery and primary level saw attitudes shift towards teaching in the medium of Welsh.[167] In schools where English is the first language, Welsh is a compulsory subject until the age of 16. However, there has never been a Welsh-language college, and in the University of Wales, at the start of the 21st century only 100 of its 5000 academic staff were teaching through the medium of Welsh.[167] In 2006 there were 33 nursery, 1555 primary, 244 secondary comprehensive and 43 special schools with 56 independent schools in Wales. In 2004 the country had 505,208 pupils taught by 27,378 teachers.[168]
Economy
Over the last 250 years, Wales has been transformed first from a predominantly agricultural country to an industrial, and now a post-industrial economy.[170][171] Since the Second World War, the service sector has come to account for the majority of jobs, a feature typifying most advanced economies.[172] In 2008, Gross Value Added (GVA) for Wales was £45.6 billion or £15,237 per head of population; 74.3 per cent of the UK average. In the three months to July 2010, the employment rate for working-age adults in Wales was 67 per cent, compared to 70.7 per cent across the UK as a whole.[173]
From the middle of the 19th century until the post-war era, the mining and export of coal was a dominant industry. At its peak of production in 1913, nearly 233,000 men and women were employed in the South Wales coalfield, mining 56 million tons of coal.[174] Cardiff was once the largest coal-exporting port in the world and, for a few years before the First World War, handled a greater tonnage of cargo than either London or Liverpool.[175][176] From the mid 1970s, the Welsh economy faced massive restructuring with large numbers of jobs in traditional heavy industry disappearing and being replaced eventually by new ones in light industry and in services. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Wales was successful in attracting an above average share of foreign direct investment in the UK.[177] However, much of the new industry was essentially of a "branch factory" ("screwdriver factory") type where a manufacturing plant or call centre is located in Wales but the most highly-paid jobs in the company are retained elsewhere.[178][179]
Due to poor-quality soil, much of Wales is unsuitable for crop-growing and livestock farming has traditionally been the focus of agriculture. The Welsh landscape (protected by three national parks) and 45 Blue Flag beaches, as well as the unique culture of Wales, attract large numbers of tourists, who play an especially vital role in the economy of rural areas.[180][181] Wales has struggled to develop or attract high value-added employment in sectors such as finance and research and development, attributable in part to a comparative lack of 'economic mass' (i.e. population) – Wales lacks a large metropolitan centre.[179] The lack of high value-added employment is reflected in lower economic output per head relative to other regions of the UK – in 2002 it stood at 90% of the EU25 average and around 80% of the UK average. However, care is needed in interpreting this data, which does not take account of regional differences in the cost of living. When this is taken into account, the gap in real living standards between Wales and more prosperous parts of the UK is not pronounced.[179] In June 2008, Wales made history by becoming the first nation in the world to be awarded Fairtrade Status.[182]
The pound sterling is the currency used in Wales. Numerous Welsh banks issued their own banknotes in the 19th century. The last bank to do so closed in 1908, since when, although banks in Scotland and Northern Ireland continue to have the right to issue banknotes in their own countries, the Bank of England has a monopoly on the issue of banknotes in Wales.[183][184][185][186] The Commercial Bank of Wales, established in Cardiff by Sir Julian Hodge in 1971, was taken over by the Bank of Scotland in 1988 and absorbed into its parent company in 2002.[187] The Royal Mint, who issue the coinage circulated through the whole of the UK, have been based at a single site in Llantrisant since 1980.[188] Since decimalisation, in 1971, at least one of the coins in UK circulation has depicted a Welsh design, e.g. the 1995 and 2000 one Pound coin (shown left). However, Wales has not been represented on any coin minted from 2008.[189]
Healthcare
Public healthcare in Wales is provided by NHS Wales (GIG Cymru), which was originally formed as part of the NHS structure for England and Wales created by the National Health Service Act 1946, but with powers over the NHS in Wales coming under the Secretary of State for Wales in 1969.[190] In turn, responsibility for NHS Wales was passed to the Welsh Assembly and Executive under devolution in 1999. Historically, Wales was served by smaller 'cottage' hospitals, built as voluntary institutions.[191] As newer more expensive diagnostic techniques and treatments became available through medical advancement, much of the clinical work of the country has been concentrated in newer, larger district hospitals.[191] As of 2006, there were seventeen district hospitals in Wales, although none situated in Powys.[191] NHS Wales provides public healthcare in Wales and employs some 90,000 staff, making it Wales’ biggest employer.[192] The Minister for Health and Social Services is the person within the Welsh Assembly Government who holds cabinet responsibilities for both health and social care in Wales.[193]
A 2009 Welsh health survey, conducted by the Welsh Assembly, reported that 51% of adults reported their health good or excellent, while 21% described their health as fair or poor.[194] The survey also recorded that 27% of Welsh adults had a long-term chronic illness, such as arthritis, asthma, diabetes and heart disease.[193][195] Enquiries into health related lifestyle choices report 27% of the adult population are smokers, 45% admit drinking alcohol above recommended guidelines at least once a week, while 29% undertake the recommended weekly physical activity.[193]
Demographics
The population of Wales in the United Kingdom Census 2001 was 2,903,085, which has risen to 2,958,876 according to 2005 estimates.[196] The main population and industrial areas are in South Wales, consisting of the cities of Cardiff, Swansea and Newport and surrounding areas, with another significant population in the north-east around Wrexham. According to the 2001 census, 96% of the population was White British, and 2.1% non-white (mainly of British Asian origin).[197] Most non-white groups were concentrated in the southern port cities of Cardiff, Newport and Swansea. Welsh Asian communities developed mainly through immigration since the Second World War. More recently, parts of Wales have seen an increased number of immigrants settle from recent EU accession countries such as Poland – although some Poles also settled in Wales in the immediate aftermath of the Second World War.
In the 2001 Labour Force Survey, 72% of adults in Wales considered their national identity as wholly Welsh and another 7% considered themselves to be partly Welsh (Welsh and British were the most common combination). A recent study estimated that 35% of the Welsh population have surnames of Welsh origin (5.4% of the English and 1.6% of the Scottish population also bore 'Welsh' names).[198] However, many modern surnames derived from old Welsh personal names actually arose in England.[199] In 2001, a quarter of the Welsh population were born outside Wales, mainly in England; about 3% were born outside the UK. The proportion of people who were born in Wales differs across the country, with the highest percentages in the South Wales Valleys and the lowest in Mid Wales and parts of the north-east. In both Blaenau Gwent and Merthyr Tydfil, 92% were Welsh-born, compared to only 51% in Flintshire and 56% in Powys.[200] Just over 1.75 million Americans report themselves to have Welsh ancestry, as did 440,965 Canadians in Canada's 2006 census.[201][202]
Languages
The Welsh Language Act 1993 and the Government of Wales Act 1998 provide that the English and Welsh languages be treated on a basis of equality. English is spoken by almost all people in Wales and is the de facto main language. Code-switching is common in all parts of Wales and is known by various terms, though none is recognised by professional linguists.[203] "Wenglish" is the Welsh English language dialect. It has been influenced significantly by Welsh grammar and includes words derived from Welsh. According to John Davies, Wenglish has "been the object of far greater prejudice than anything suffered by Welsh".[204][205] Northern and western Wales retain many areas where Welsh is spoken as a first language by the majority of the population, and English learnt as a second language. The 2001 census showed 582,400 people, 20.8% of the Welsh population, were able to speak Welsh, an increase from the 19.0% shown in the 1981 census.[6] According to language surveys conducted in 2004 and 2006, that number has dropped slightly to 20.5%, and the number of fluent speakers dropped by 3% between 1992 and 2006.[7][206] Although monoglotism in young children continues, life-long monoglotism in Welsh is recognised to be a thing of the past.[207]
Road signs in Wales are generally in both English and Welsh; where place names differ in the two languages, both versions are used (e.g. "Cardiff" and "Caerdydd"). The decision as to which is placed first being that of the local authority. During the 20th century, a number of small communities of speakers of languages other than Welsh or English, such as Bengali or Cantonese, established themselves in Wales as a result of immigration.
Religion
The largest religion in Wales is Christianity, with 71.9% of the population describing themselves as Christian in the 2001 census.[208] The Church in Wales with 56,000 adherents has the largest attendance of the denominations.[209] It is a province of the Anglican Communion, and was part of the Church of England until disestablishment in 1920 under the Welsh Church Act 1914. The Presbyterian Church of Wales was born out of the Welsh Methodist revival in the 18th century and seceded from the Church of England in 1811.[210]
The second largest attending faith in Wales is Roman Catholic, with an estimated 43,000 members.[209] Non-Christian religions are small in Wales, making up approximately 1.5% of the population.[208] The 2001 census recorded 18.5% of people declaring no religion, while 8% did not reply to the question.[208] The patron saint of Wales is Saint David (Dewi Sant), with St David's Day (Dydd Gŵyl Dewi Sant) celebrated annually on 1 March.
In 1904, there was a religious revival (known by some as the 1904-1905 Welsh Revival or simply The 1904 Revival) which started through the evangelism of Evan Roberts and saw large numbers of people converting to nonconformist and Anglican Christianity, sometimes whole communities.[211] Robert's style of preaching became the blueprint for new religious bodies such as Pentacostalism and the Apostolic Church.[212] The Apostolic Church holds its annual Apostolic Conference in Swansea each year, usually in August.
Islam is the largest non-Christian religion in Wales, with more than 30,000 reported Muslims in the 2001 census. There are also communities of Hindus and Sikhs mainly in the South Wales cities of Newport, Cardiff and Swansea, while the largest concentration of Buddhists is in the western rural county of Ceredigion.[213] Judaism was the first non-Christian faith (excluding pre-Roman animism) to be established in Wales however, as of the year 2001, the community has declined to approximately 2,000.[214] Paganism and Wicca are also growing in Wales. According to the 2001 Census, there are 7,000-recorded Wiccans in England and Wales, with 31,000 Pagans.[215]
Culture
Part of a series on the |
Culture of Wales |
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People |
Art |
Wales has a distinctive culture including its own language, customs, holidays and music.
Wales has three UNESCO World Heritage Sites: The Castles and Town walls of King Edward I in Gwynedd; Pontcysyllte Aqueduct; and the Blaenavon Industrial Landscape.[216]
Mythology
The remnants of the mythology of the pre-Christian Britons, was passed down in much altered form in medieval Welsh manuscripts such as the Red Book of Hergest, the White Book of Rhydderch, the Book of Aneirin and the Book of Taliesin. The prose stories from the White and Red Books are known as the Mabinogion, a title given to them by their first translator, Lady Charlotte Guest, and also used by subsequent translators.[217] Poems such as Cad Goddeu (The Battle of the Trees) and mnemonic list-texts like the Welsh Triads and the Thirteen Treasures of the Island of Britain, also contain mythological material. These texts also include the earliest forms of the Arthurian legend and the traditional history of post-Roman Britain.
Other sources of Welsh folklore include the 9th century Latin historical compilation Historia Britonum (the History of the Britons) and Geoffrey of Monmouth's 12th century Latin chronicle Historia Regum Britanniae (the History of the Kings of Britain), as well as later folklore, such as The Welsh Fairy Book by W. Jenkyn Thomas.
Visual arts
Many works of Celtic art have been found in Wales.[218] In the Early Medieval period, the Celtic Christianity of Wales was part of the Insular art of the British Isles. A number of illuminated manuscripts from Wales survive, of which the 8th century Hereford Gospels and Lichfield Gospels are the most notable. The 11th century Ricemarch Psalter (now in Dublin) is certainly Welsh, made in St David's, and shows a late Insular style with unusual Viking influence.[219][220]
The best of the few Welsh artists of the 16th–18th centuries tended to leave the country to work, many of them moving to London and Italy. Richard Wilson (1714–82) is arguably the first major British landscapist. Although more notable for his Italian scenes, he painted several Welsh scenes on visits from London. By the late 18th century, the popularity of landscape art grew and clients were found in the larger Welsh towns, allowing more Welsh artists to stay in their homeland. Artists from outside Wales were also drawn to paint Welsh scenery, at first due to the Celtic Revival. Then in the early 19th century, the Napoleonic Wars preventing the Grand Tour to continental Europe, travel through Wales came to be considered more accessible.[221][222]
An Act of Parliament in 1857 provided for the establishment of a number of art schools throughout the United Kingdom and the Cardiff School of Art opened in 1865. Graduates still very often had to leave Wales to work but Betws-y-Coed became a popular centre for artists and its artist's colony helped form the Royal Cambrian Academy of Art in 1881.[223] The sculptor Sir William Goscombe John made many works for Welsh commissions, although he had settled in London. Christopher Williams, whose subjects were mostly resolutely Welsh, was also based in London. Thomas E. Stephens and Andrew Vicari had very successful careers as portraitists based respectively in the United States and France.[224][225] Sir Frank Brangwyn was Welsh by origin but spent little time in Wales.
Many Welsh painters gravitated towards the art capitals of Europe. Augustus John and his sister Gwen John, lived mostly in London and Paris. However the landscapists Sir Kyffin Williams and Peter Prendergast lived in Wales for most of their lives, though remaining in touch with the wider art world. Ceri Richards was very engaged in the Welsh art scene; as a teacher in Cardiff and even after moving to London. He was a figurative painter in international styles including Surrealism. Various artists have moved to Wales, including Eric Gill, the London-Welshman David Jones and the sculptor Jonah Jones. The Kardomah Gang was a intellectual circle centred on the poet Dylan Thomas and poet and artist Vernon Watkins in Swansea, which also included the painter Alfred Janes.[226]
South Wales had several notable potteries, one of the first important sites being the Ewenny Pottery in Bridgend, which began producing earthenware in the 17th century.[227] In the 18th and 19th centuries, with more scientific methods becoming available more refined ceramics were produced led by the Cambrian Pottery (1764–1870, also known as "Swansea pottery") and later Nantgarw Pottery near Cardiff, which was in operation from 1813 to 1822 making fine porcelain and then utilitarian pottery until 1920.[227] Portmeirion Pottery (from 1961) has never in fact been made in Wales.
Literature in Wales
Wales can claim one of the oldest unbroken literary traditions in Europe.[228] The literary tradition of Wales stretches back to the sixth century and, with the inclusion of Geoffrey of Monmouth and Gerald of Wales, boasts two of the finest Latin authors of the Middle Ages.[228] The earliest body of Welsh verse, by poets Taliesin and Aneirin, survive not in their original form, but in medieval versions and have undergone significant linguistic changes.[228] Welsh poetry and native lore and learning survived the Dark Ages, through the era of the Poets of the Princes (c1100 - 1280) and then the Poets of the Gentry (c1350-1650). The Poets of the Princes were professional poets who composed eulogies and elegies to the Welsh princes while the Poets of the Gentry where a school of poets that favoured the cywydd metre.[229] The period is notable for producing one of Wales' greatest poets, Dafydd ap Gwilym.[230] After the Anglicization of the gentry the tradition declined.[229]
Despite the extinction of the professional poet, the integration of the native elite into a wider cultural world did bring other literary benefits.[231] Humanists such as William Salesbury and John Davies brought Renaissance ideals from English universities when they returned to Wales.[231] While in 1588 William Morgan became the first person to translate the Bible into Welsh.[231] From the 16th Century onwards the proliferation of the 'free-metre' verse became the most important development in Welsh poetry, but from the middle of the 17th century a host of imported accentual metres from England became very popular.[231] By the 19th century the creation of a Welsh epic, fuelled by the eisteddfod, became an obsession with Welsh language writers.[232] The output of this period was prolific in quantity but unequal in quality.[233] Initially the eisteddfod was askance with the religious denominations, but in time these bodies came to dominate the competitions, with the bardic themes becoming increasingly scriptural and didactic.[233] The period is notable for the adoption by Welsh poets of bardic names, made popular by the eisteddfod movement.
Major developments in 19th century Welsh literature include Lady Charlotte Guest's translation of the Mabinogion, one of the most important medieval Welsh prose tales of Celtic mythology, into English. 1885 saw the publication of Rhys Lewis by Daniel Owen, credited as the first novel written in the Welsh language. The 20th century experienced an important shift away from the stilted and long-winded Victorian Welsh prose, with Thomas Gwynn Jones leading the way with his 1902 work Ymadawiad Arthur.[232] The slaughter in the trenches of the First World War, had a profound effect on Welsh literature with a more pessimistic style of prose championed by T. H. Parry-Williams and R. Williams Parry.[232] The industrialisation of south Wales saw a further shift with the likes of Rhydwen Williams who used the poetry and metre of a bygone rural Wales but in the context of an industrial landscape. Though the inter-war period is dominated by Saunders Lewis, for his political and reactionary views as much as his plays, poetry and criticism.[232]
After the end of the Second World War, several Welsh poets and writers in the English language came to note. These included Alexander Cordell, whose novels are often set within a historic Wales, while Gwyn Thomas became the voice of the English speaking Welsh valleys with his humorous take on grim lives. At the same time the post war period saw the emergence of one of the most notable and popular Welsh writers of the 20th century; Dylan Thomas one of the most innovative poets of his time.[234] Other important authors born in Wales, but not writing in the Welsh language or with a 'Welsh' style, include Nobel Prize winner Bertrand Russell and children's writer Roald Dahl.
Sport
Over fifty national governing bodies regulate and organise their sports in Wales. Most of those involved in competitive sports select, organise and manage individuals or teams to represent their country at international events or fixtures against other countries. Wales is represented at major world sporting events such as the FIFA World Cup, Rugby World Cup and the Commonwealth Games. At the Olympics Games, Welsh athletes compete alongside those of Scotland, England and Northern Ireland as part of a Great Britain team.
Although football has traditionally been the more popular sport in North Wales, rugby union is seen as a symbol of Welsh identity and an expression of national consciousness.[235] The Welsh national rugby union team takes part in the annual Six Nations Championship and has also competed in every Rugby World Cup, hosting the tournament in 1999. The five professional sides that replaced the traditional club sides in major competitions in 2003 were replaced in 2004 by the four regions: Scarlets; Cardiff Blues; Newport Gwent Dragons; and the Ospreys.[236][237] The Welsh regional teams play in the Magners League, the Anglo-Welsh Cup (LV Cup), the European Heineken Cup and the European (Amlin) Challenge Cup.
Wales has had its own football league since 1992 although, for historical reasons, two Welsh clubs (Cardiff City, and Swansea City) play in the English Football League. Another four Welsh clubs play in English football's feeder leagues: Wrexham; Newport County; Merthyr Town; and Colwyn Bay.
In international cricket, Wales and England field a single representative team, administered by the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB), called the England cricket team, or simply 'England'. Occasionally, a separate Wales team play limited-overs competitions. Glamorgan County Cricket Club is the only Welsh participant in the England and Wales County Championship.
Wales has produced several world-class participants of individual sports including snooker players Ray Reardon, Terry Griffiths, Mark Williams and Matthew Stevens. Track athletes who have made a mark on the world stage, including the 110-metre hurdler Colin Jackson who is a former world record holder and the winner of numerous Olympic, World and European medals as well as Tanni Grey-Thompson who has won Paralympic gold medals and marathon victories. Wales also has a tradition of producing world-class boxers. Joe Calzaghe was WBO World Super-Middleweight Champion who then won the WBA, WBC and Ring Magazine super middleweight and Ring Magazine Light-Heavy Weight titles. Other former boxing World champions include Enzo Maccarinelli, Freddie Welsh, Howard Winstone, Percy Jones, Jimmy Wilde, Steve Robinson and Robbie Regan.
Media
Cardiff is home to the television output of Wales. BBC Cymru Wales is the national broadcaster. Based in Llandaff, Cardiff, it produces Welsh-oriented English and Welsh language television for BBC ONE Wales, BBC TWO Wales and S4C channels. BBC Cymru Wales has also produced programmes, such as Life on Mars, Dr Who and Torchwood, shown worldwide.[238][239] ITV the UK's main commercial broadcaster has a Welsh-oriented service branded as ITV Wales, whose studios are in Culverhouse Cross, Cardiff. S4C, based in Llanishen, Cardiff, broadcasts mostly Welsh-language programming at peak hours, but shares English-language content with Channel 4 at other times. S4C Digidol (S4C Digital) broadcasts mostly in Welsh. BBC Radio Wales is Wales' only national English-language radio station, while BBC Radio Cymru broadcasts throughout Wales in Welsh. There are also a number of independent radio stations across Wales.
Most of the newspapers sold and read in Wales are national newspapers available throughout Britain, unlike in Scotland where many newspapers have rebranded into Scottish based titles. Wales-based newspapers include: South Wales Echo, South Wales Argus, South Wales Evening Post, Liverpool Daily Post (Welsh edition) and Y Cymro, a Welsh language publication. The Western Mail is the main regional daily newspaper in South Wales. In addition to English-language magazines, a number of weekly and monthly Welsh-language magazines are published. Wales has some 20 publishing companies, publishing mostly English titles. However, there are several publishing houses that produce texts in Welsh including Gomer Press, Seren and Y Lolfa.
Cuisine
About 78% of the land surface of Wales is given over to agricultural use.[240] However, very little of this is arable land; the vast majority consists of permanent grass pasture or rough grazing for herd animals such as sheep and cows. Although both beef and dairy cattle are raised widely, especially in Carmarthenshire and Pembrokeshire, Wales is more well-known for its sheep farming and thus lamb is the meat traditionally associated with Welsh cooking.
Traditional dishes include laverbread (made from seaweed); bara brith (fruit bread); Cawl (a lamb stew); cawl cennin (leek soup); Welsh cakes; and Welsh lamb. Cockles are sometimes served as a traditional breakfast with bacon.
Although Wales has its own traditional food, and has absorbed much of the cuisine of England, Welsh diets now owe more to the countries of India, China and the United States.[241] Chicken Tikka Masala is the country's favourite dish while hamburgers and Chinese food outsell fish and chips as a takeaway.[241]
Performing arts
Music
Wales is often referred to as "the land of song",[242] and is notable for its harpists, male choirs, and solo artists including Sir Geraint Evans, Dame Gwyneth Jones, Dame Anne Evans, Dame Margaret Price, Ivor Novello, John Cale, Sir Tom Jones, Bonnie Tyler, Bryn Terfel, Mary Hopkin, Charlotte Church, Katherine Jenkins, Meic Stevens, Dame Shirley Bassey and Duffy.
The principal Welsh festival of music and poetry is the annual National Eisteddfod. The Llangollen International Eisteddfod echoes the National Eisteddfod but provides an opportunity for the singers and musicians of the world to perform.
Popular bands to have emerged from Wales have included the Beatles-nurtured power pop group Badfinger in the 1960s, Man and Budgie in the 1970s and The Alarm in the 1980s. Wales experienced a strong emergence of groups during the 1990s led by Manic Street Preachers, followed by the likes of the Stereophonics and Feeder; notable during this period were Catatonia, Super Furry Animals, and Gorky's Zygotic Mynci who gained popular success as dual-language artists. Recently successful Welsh bands include Lostprophets, Bullet for My Valentine, Funeral for a Friend and Kids in Glass Houses. The Welsh traditional and folk music scene is in resurgence with performers and bands such as Crasdant, Carreg Lafar, Fernhill, Siân James and The Hennessys. Traditional music and dance in Wales is supported by a myriad of societies. The Welsh Folk Song Society has published a number of collections of songs and tunes.
Traditional instruments of Wales include telyn deires (triple harp), fiddle, crwth, pibgorn (hornpipe) and other instruments.[243][244][245][246] The Cerdd Dant Society promotes its specific singing art primarily through an annual one-day festival.
The BBC National Orchestra of Wales performs in Wales and internationally. The Welsh National Opera is based at the Wales Millennium Centre in Cardiff Bay, while the National Youth Orchestra of Wales was the first of its type in the world.[247]
Drama
The earliest surviving Welsh plays are two medieval miracle plays, Y Tri Brenin o Gwlen and Y Dioddefaint a'r Atgyfodiad.[248] Although England entered a golden age of theatre during the 16th and 17th century, little work of note remains in Wales from the same period.[249] A recognised Welsh tradition of theatre emerged on the 18th century, in the form of an interlude, a metrical play performed at fairs and markets.[249] The larger Welsh towns began building theatres during the 19th century, and drew in the likes of James Sheridan Knowles and William Charles Macready to Wales. Along with the playhouses, there existed mobile companies at visiting fairs, though from 1912, most of these travelling theatres settled, purchasing theatres to perform in.
Drama in the early 20th century thrived, but the country failed to produce a Welsh National Theatre company. After the Second World War the substantial number of amateur companies that existed before the outbreak of hostilities, reduced by two thirds.[250] Though the increasing competition of television in the 1950s and 1960s, saw a need for greater professionalism in the theatre.[250] The result of which saw the plays of the likes of Emlyn Williams and Alun Owen staged, while Welsh actors, including Richard Burton, Rachel Roberts, Donald Houston and Stanley Baker were establishing themselves as artistic talents.[250]
Comedians from Wales include Tommy Cooper, Paul Whitehouse and Lee Evans.
Dance
Although dancing as a past time is a popular hobby in Wales, the roots of dance in Welsh tradition are folk dancing and clog dancing. The first mention of dancing in Wales was recorded in a 12th Century account by Giraldus Cambrensis, but by the 19th Century traditional dance had all but died out, attributed to the influence of Nonconformists and their belief that any physical diversion was worthless and satanic, especially mixed dancing.[251] These ancient dances, orally passed down, were almost single-handedly rescued by Lois Blake (1890–1974) who recorded them in numerous instruction pamphlets, recording both steps and music.[251] In a similar vein, clog dancing was preserved and developed by the likes of Howel Wood (1882–1967) who perpetuated the art at local and national stages.[252] Clog dancing, traditionally a male dominated art, is now a common part of eisteddfodau.[252] In 2010, a 30 year traditional dance festival held in Caernarvon came to an end after a lack of attending participants,[253] though clog dancing has seen a revival during the early part of the 21st century.[254]
The Welsh Folk Dance Society was founded in 1949,[252] and it supports a network of national amateur dance teams and publishes support material. Contemporary dance grew out of the capital in the 1970s, one of the earliest companies, Moving Being, came from London to Cardiff in 1973.[252] Jumpers Dance Company was formed in 1978, eventually becoming The Dance Company of Wales. Conversely, Wales does not have its own national ballet company.[251]
Museums and libraries
The National Museum [of] Wales was founded by royal charter in 1907 and is now an Assembly sponsored public body. The National Museum is made up of seven sites across the country, including the National Museum Cardiff, St Fagans National History Museum and Big Pit National Coal Museum. In April 2001, the attractions attached to the National Museum were granted free entry by the Assembly, and this action saw the visitor numbers to the sites increase during 2001-2002 by 87.8% to 1,430,428.[255]
Aberystwyth is home to the National Library of Wales, which houses some of the most important collections in Wales, including the John William's Library and the Shirburn Castle collection.[256] As well as its printed collection the Library holds important Welsh art collections including portraits and photographs, ephemera such as postcards, posters and Ordnance Survey maps.[256]
Festivals
As well as celebrating many of the traditional holidays and festivals of Great Britain, such as May Day or Christmas, Wales has its own celebratory days unique to the country. An early festivity was Mabsant where local parishes would celebrate the patron saint of their local church.[257] This celebration died out in the 19th century and was eventually replaced by Saint David's Day. Dydd Santes Dwynwen, celebrated on 25 January is the Welsh equivalent of St Valentine's Day,[258] while Calan Gaeaf, observed on 1 November, and is associated with the supernatural and the dead, which has mainly been replaced by Hallowe'en. Other festivities include Calan Mai, celebrating the beginning of summer,[259] Calan Awst and Gŵyl Fair y Canhwyllau. Most of the Welsh festivals have little modern notability and none are recognised by a bank holiday.
Transport
The main road artery linking cities and other settlements along the South Wales coast is the M4 motorway which also provides a link with England and eventually London. The Welsh section of the motorway, managed by the Welsh Assembly Government, runs from the Second Severn Crossing to Pont Abraham, Carmarthenshire, connecting the cities of Cardiff, Newport and Swansea. In North Wales the A55 expressway performs a similar role along the north Wales coast providing connections for places such as Holyhead and Bangor with Wrexham and Flintshire and also with England, principally Chester. The main north-south Wales link is the A470 which runs from Cardiff to Llandudno.
Cardiff International Airport is the only large and international airport in Wales, offering links domestically and to European and North American destinations, located some 12 miles (19 km) south-west of Cardiff city centre, in the Vale of Glamorgan. Highland Airways ran internal flights between Anglesey (Valley) and Cardiff, from May 2007 until March 2010, when the company went into administration.[260] The service, dubbed "Ieaun Air" after Deputy First Minister for Wales Ieuan Wyn Jones, AM for Ynys Môn (Anglesey), resumed on 10 May 2010 with Isle of Man airline Manx2 the carrier.[261]
The country also has a significant railway network managed by the Welsh Assembly Government which has a programme of reopening old railway lines and extending rail usage. Cardiff Central and Cardiff Queen Street are the busiest and the major hubs on the internal and national network. Beeching cuts in the 1960s mean that most of the remaining network is geared toward east-west travel to or from England. Services between North and South Wales operate through the English towns of Chester and Shrewsbury. Valley Lines services operate in Cardiff, the South Wales Valleys and surrounding area and are heavily used as commuter lines. Arriva Trains Wales is the major operator of rail services within Wales. It also operates routes from within Wales to Crewe, Manchester, Birmingham and Cheltenham. Virgin Trains operate services from North Wales to London as part of the West Coast Main Line. First Great Western operate services from London to Cardiff and Newport every half hour with an hourly continuation to Swansea. It also runs services from Cardiff and Newport to southern England. CrossCountry offer services from Cardiff to Nottingham and Newcastle upon Tyne via the West Midlands, East Midlands and Yorkshire.
Wales is served by four commercial ferry ports. Regular ferry services to Ireland operate from Holyhead, Pembroke and Fishguard, and the Swansea to Cork, cancelled in 2006, was reinstated in March 2010.[262]
National symbols
The Flag of Wales incorporates the red dragon (Template:Lang-cy) of Prince Cadwalader along with the Tudor colours of green and white.[263] It was used by Henry VII at the Battle of Bosworth in 1485 after which it was carried in state to St. Paul's Cathedral.[263] The red dragon was then included in the Tudor royal arms to signify their Welsh descent. It was officially recognised as the Welsh national flag in 1959.[264] The British Union Flag incorporates the flags of Scotland, Ireland and England but does not have any Welsh representation. Technically it is represented by the flag of England, as the Laws in Wales act of 1535 annexed Wales following the 13th-century conquest.
The daffodil and the leek are also symbols of Wales. The origins of the leek can be traced to the 16th century, while the daffodil became popular in the 19th century, encouraged by David Lloyd-George.[265] This is attributed to confusion of the Welsh for leek, cenhinen, and that for daffodil, cenhinen Bedr or St. Peter's leek.[122] A report in 1916 gave preference to the leek, which has appeared on British pound coins.[265]
The Prince of Wales' heraldic badge is sometimes used to symbolise Wales. The badge, known as the Prince of Wales's feathers, consist of three white feathers emerging from a gold coronet. A ribbon below the coronet bears the German motto Ich dien(I serve). Several Welsh representative teams, including the Welsh rugby union, and Welsh regiments in the British Army, the Royal Welsh for example, use the badge, or a stylised version of it. However, its use is controversial and rejected by some as a symbol of the British monarchy, rather than of Wales.[266]
"Hen Wlad fy Nhadau" (Template:Lang-eng) is the National Anthem of Wales, and is played at events such as football or rugby matches involving the Wales national team as well as the opening of the Welsh Assembly and other official occasions.[267][268]
See also
References
- ^ a b c Davies (1994) p. 100
- ^ "Population estimates for UK, England and Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland - current datasets". ONS website. Office for National Statistics. 24 June 2010. Retrieved 26 September 2010.
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and|date=
(help) - ^ Also .eu, as part of the European Union. ISO 3166-1 is GB, but .gb is unused.
- ^ Also spelled "Gymru", "Nghymru" or "Chymru" in certain contexts, as Welsh is a language with initial mutations – see Welsh morphology.
- ^ a b "The Countries of the UK". statistics.gov.uk. Retrieved 10 October 2008.
- ^ a b "Census 2001: Main statistics about Welsh". Welsh Language Board. Retrieved 30 September 2010.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|accessdate=
(help) - ^ a b "2004 Welsh Language Survey" (PDF). Welsh Language Board. 2004. Retrieved 30 September 2010.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|accessdate=
(help) - ^ Davies (1994) p. 54
- ^ "Who were the Celts? ... Rhagor". Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales website. Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales. 4 May 2007. Retrieved 14 October 2009.
- ^ Evans, Gwynfor (1974). Land of my Fathers. Talybont: Y Lolfa Cyf. pp. 240 & 241. ISBN 0 86243 265 0.
- ^ Evans, Gwynfor (2000). The Fight for Welsh Freedom. Talybont: Y Lolfa Cyf. p. 87. ISBN 0 86243 515 32.
{{cite book}}
: Check|isbn=
value: length (help) - ^ Davies (2008) p. 448
- ^ "Landscape and Countryside". Visit Wales website. Retrieved 3 October 2010.
- ^ Davies (2008) p. 445
- ^ Rollason, David (2003). "Origins of a People". Northumbria, 500–1100. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 60. ISBN 978-0-521-04102-7.
- ^ (French) Albert Henry, Histoire des mots Wallons et Wallonie, Institut Jules Destrée, Coll. «Notre histoire», Mont-sur-Marchienne, 1990, 3rd ed. (1st ed. 1965), footnote 13 p. 86. Henry wrote the same about Wallachia
- ^ a b Davies (1994) p. 71
- ^ Tolkien, John Ronald Reuel (1963). Angles and Britons: O'Donnell Lectures. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. English and Welsh, an O'Donnell Lecture delivered at Oxford on Oct. 21, 1955.
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suggested) (help) - ^ Gilleland, Michael (12 December 2007). "Laudator Temporis Acti: More on the Etymology of Walden". Laudator Temporis Acti website. Michael Gilleland. Retrieved 29 October 2008.
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(help) - ^ a b Davies (1994) p. 69
- ^ Lloyd, John Edward (1911). "A History of Wales from the Earliest Times to the Edwardian Conquest" (Document). Longmans, Green, and Co. pp. 191–192.
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ignored (help) - ^ Phillimore, Egerton (1891). "Note (a) to The Settlement of Brittany". In Phillimore, Egerton (ed.). Y Cymmrodor. Vol. XI. London: Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion (published 1892). pp. 97–101.
- ^ Davies (1994) p. 71, The poem contains the line: 'Ar wynep Kymry Cadwallawn was'.
- ^ Sedgwick, A. (1852). "On the classification and nomenclature of the Lower Paleozoic rocks of England and Wales". Q. J. Geol. Soc. Land. 8: 136–138. doi:10.1144/GSL.JGS.1852.008.01-02.20.
- ^ "Welsh skeleton re-dated: even older!". archaeology.co.uk website. Current Archaeology. 6 November 2007. Retrieved 28 September 2010 : see Red Lady of Paviland.
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(help) - ^ Pollard, Joshua (2001). "Wales' Hidden History, Hunter-Gatherer Communities in Wales: The Neolithic". In Morgan, Prys; Aldhouse-Green, Stephen (eds.). History of Wales, 25,000 BC AD 2000. Stroud, Gloucestershire: Tempus Publishing. pp. 13–25. ISBN 0 7524 1983 8.
- ^ Davies (2008) pp. 647–648
- ^ Evans, Edith; Lewis, Richard (2003). "The Prehistoric Funerary and Ritual Monument Survey of Glamorgan and Gwent: Overviews. A Report for Cadw by Edith Evans BA PhD MIFA and Richard Lewis BA" (PDF). Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. Glamorgan-Gwent Archaeological Trust. p. 4. Retrieved 30 September 2009.
- ^ Davies (1994) p. 17
- ^ "Overview: From Neolithic to Bronze Age, 8000–800 BC (Page 1 of 6)". BBC History website. BBC. 5 September 2006. Retrieved 5 August 2008.
- ^ a b c Davies (1994) pp. 4-6
- ^ "GGAT 72 Overviews" (PDF). A Report for Cadw by Edith Evans BA PhD MIFA and Richard Lewis BA. Glamorgan-Gwent Archaeological Trust. 2003. p. 47. Retrieved 30 December 2008.
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(help) - ^ "Stones of Wales - Pentre Ifan Dolmen". Stone Pages website. Paola Arosio/Diego Meozzi. 2003. Retrieved 17 November 2008.
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(help) - ^ "Stones of Wales - Bryn Celli Ddu Burial chamber". Stone Pages website. Paola Arosio/Diego Meozzi. 2003. Retrieved 17 November 2008.
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(help) - ^ "Parc le Breos Burial Chamber; Parc CWM Long Cairn". The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales website. Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales. 2006. Retrieved 24 October 2008.
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(help) - ^ "BBC Wales - History - Themes Prehistoric Wales: The Stone Age". BBC Wales website. BBC. 2008. Retrieved 24 October 2008.
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(help) - ^ "O'Donnell Lecture 2008 Appendix" (PDF). 2008. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
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(help) - ^ Koch, John (2009). Tartessian: Celtic from the Southwest at the Dawn of History in Acta Palaeohispanica X Palaeohispanica 9 (2009) (PDF). Palaeohispanica. pp. 339–351. ISSN 1578-5386. Retrieved 17 May 2010.
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(help) - ^ Koch, John. "New research suggests Welsh Celtic roots lie in Spain and Portugal". Retrieved 10 May 2010.
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(help) - ^ Cunliffe, Karl, Guerra, McEvoy, Bradley; Oppenheimer, Rrvik, Isaac, Parsons, Koch, Freeman and Wodtko (2010). Celtic from the West: Alternative Perspectives from Archaeology, Genetics, Language and Literature. Oxbow Books and Celtic Studies Publications. p. 384. ISBN 978-1-84217-410-4.
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(help) - ^ Cunliffe, Barry (2008). A Race Apart: Insularity and Connectivity in Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 75, 2009, pp. 55–64 (PDF). The Prehistoric Society. p. 61.
- ^ Jones, Barri; Mattingly, David (1990). "The Development of the Provinces". An Atlas of Roman Britain. Cambridge: Blackwell Publishers (published 2007). p. 151. ISBN 9781842170670.
- ^ Jones, Barri; Mattingly, David (1990). "The Development of the Provinces". An Atlas of Roman Britain. Cambridge: Blackwell Publishers (published 2007). p. 154. ISBN 9781842170670.
- ^ a b Jones, Barri; Mattingly, David (1990). "The Economy". An Atlas of Roman Britain. Cambridge: Blackwell Publishers (published 2007). pp. 179–196. ISBN 9781842170670.
- ^ a b c d e Davies (2008) p.915
- ^ a b Davies (2008) p.531
- ^ Frere, Sheppard Sunderland (1987). "The End of Roman Britain". Britannia: A History of Roman Britain (3rd, revised ed.). London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. p. 354. ISBN 0-7102-1215-1.
- ^ Giles, John Allen, ed. (1841). "The Works of Gildas, The History, Ch. 14". The Works of Gildas and Nennius. London: James Bohn. p. 13.
- ^ Phillimore, Egerton, ed. (1887). "Pedigrees from Jesus College MS. 20". Y Cymmrodor. Vol. VIII. Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion. pp. 83–92.
- ^ Phillimore, Egerton (1888). "The Annales Cambriae and Old Welsh Genealogies, from Harleian MS. 3859". In Phillimore, Egerton (ed.). Y Cymmrodor. Vol. IX. Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion. pp. 141–183.
- ^ Rachel Bromwich, editor and translator. Trioedd Ynys Prydein: The Welsh Triads. Cardiff: University of Wales Press, Third Edition, 2006. 441-444
- ^ Kate Ravilious (21 July 2006). "Ancient Britain Had Apartheid-Like Society, Study Suggests". National Geographic News. Retrieved 9 September 2010.
- ^ a b Davies (1994) pp. 65-66
- ^ Davies (2008) p. 926
- ^ David Hill and Margaret Worthington, Offa's Dyke: history and guide, Tempus, 2003, ISBN 0-7524-1958-7
- ^ Davies (2008) p. 911
- ^ The earliest instance of Lloegyr occurs in the early 10th century prophetic poem Armes Prydein. It seems comparatively late as a place name, the nominative plural Lloegrwys, "men of Lloegr", being earlier and more common. The English were sometimes referred to as an entity in early poetry (Saeson, as today) but just as often as Eingl (Angles), Iwys (Wessex-men), etc. Lloegr and Sacson became the norm later when England emerged as a kingdom. As for its origins, some scholars have suggested that it originally referred only to Mercia – at that time a powerful kingdom and for centuries the main foe of the Welsh. It was then applied to the new kingdom of England as a whole (see for instance Rachel Bromwich (ed.), Trioedd Ynys Prydein, University of Wales Press, 1987). "The lost land" and other fanciful meanings, such as Geoffrey of Monmouth's monarch Locrinus, have no etymological basis. (See also Discussion, article 40)
- ^ Davies (1994) p. 2
- ^ Davies (2008) p. 714
- ^ Davies (2008) p. 186
- ^ Davies (2008) p. 388
- ^ Davies (1994) p. 128
- ^ Davies (1994) p. 101
- ^ a b Max Lieberman (2010). The Medieval March of Wales: The Creation and Perception of a Frontier, 1066-1283. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 6. ISBN 052 176 978 7. Retrieved 4 October 2010.
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(help) - ^ Davies (1994) pp. 133–134
- ^ "Tribute to lost Welsh princess". BBC News. 12 June 2000. Retrieved 5 March 2007.
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(help) - ^ Davies (1994) p. 162
- ^ Davies (1994) p. 175
- ^ Davies (2008) p. 711
- ^ a b Illustrated Encyclopedia of Britain. London: Reader's Digest. 1999. p. 459. ISBN 0-276-42412-3.
A country and principality within the mainland of Britain ... about half a million
- ^ The Oxford Illustrated Dictionary. Great Britain: Oxford University Press. 1976 [1975]. p. 949.
Wales (-lz). Principality occupying extreme W. of central southern portion of Gt Britain
- ^ Davies (1994) p. 194
- ^ "BBC - History - British History in Depth - Wales under the Tudors". BBC website. BBC. 5 November 2009. Retrieved 21 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ a b c d Davies (2008) p. 392
- ^ a b c d e Davies (2008) p. 393
- ^ Davies (2008) p. 818
- ^ 'the most Welsh of Welsh industries' attributed to historian A. H. Dodd. Davies (2008) p. 819
- ^ "Wales - the first industrial nation of the World". Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales. 5 October 2008. Retrieved 9 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ John, Arthur H. (1980). Glamorgan County History, Volume V, Industrial Glamorgan from 1700 to 1970. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. p. 183.
- ^ a b Davies (2008) p. 284
- ^ Davies (2008) p. 285
- ^ a b Davies (2008) p. 461
- ^ "David Lloyd George (1863-1945)". BBC Cymru Wales website. BBC Cymru Wales. Retrieved 26 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ Davies (2008) p. 515
- ^ a b c Davies (2008) p. 439
- ^ Morgan, Kenneth O. (1982). Rebirth of a Nation: Wales 1880-1980. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 208–210. ISBN 0198217609.
- ^ Davies (2008), p.918)
- ^ a b c d e Davies (2008) p. 807
- ^ "Dam graffiti wall set to be saved". BBC News website. BBC. 17 October 2006. Retrieved 21 June 2009.
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(help) - ^ "Flooding Apology". BBC website. BBC. 19 October 2005. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
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(help) - ^ Clews, Roy (1980). To Dream of Freedom - The story of MAC and the Free Wales Army. Y Lolfa Cyf., Talybont. pp. 15, 21 & 26–31. ISBN 0 86243 586 2.
- ^ Clews, Roy (1980). To Dream of Freedom - The story of MAC and the Free Wales Army. Y Lolfa Cyf., Talybont. pp. 22, 59, 60 & 216. ISBN 0 86243 586 2.
- ^ Gwynfor, Evans (2000). The Fight for Welsh Freedom. Y Lolfa Cyf., Talybont. p. 152. ISBN 0 86243 515 32.
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value: length (help) - ^ a b Davies (2008) p. 236
- ^ Davies (2008) p. 237
- ^ a b Powys, Betsan (12 January 2010). "The long Welsh walk to devolution". BBC News website. BBC. Retrieved 26 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ "countries within a country:number10.gov.uk". 10 Downing Street website. 10 Downing Street. 10 January 2003. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
The United Kingdom is made up of four countries: England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
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(help) - ^ "UN report causes stir with Wales dubbed 'Principality'". WalesOnline website. Media Wales Ltd. 3 July 2010. Retrieved 25 July 2010.
... the Assembly's Counsel General, John Griffiths, [said]: "I agree that, in relation to Wales, Principality is a misnomer and that Wales should properly be referred to as a country.
- ^ a b "Wales.com FAQs". Wales.com website. Welsh Assembly Government. 2008. Retrieved 15 October 2010.
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(help) - ^ Bogdanor, Vernon (1995). The Monarchy and the Constitution. London: Oxford University Press. p. 52. ISBN 0 1982 7769 5. Retrieved 05 November 2010.
In his autobiography, the Duke of Windsor complained that, as Prince of Wales, there was 'no specific routine job in the sense, for example, that a vice-president has a job … Though I was next in line to the Throne, with all that position implied, I actually possessed no formal state duties or responsibilities.' 'This constitutional vacuum' Jonathon Dimbleby, biographer of the Prince of Wales, has noted, 'was not an oversight, but documentary evidence of the peculiar position that the heir apparent occupies; there is no formal "role", except to wait.'
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(help) - ^ "Election 2005, Results: Wales". BBC News website. BBC. 1 June 2005. Retrieved 9 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ "David Cameron appoints Cheryl Gillan as Welsh Secretary". BBC News website. BBC. 12 May 2010. Retrieved 12 May 2010.
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(help) - ^ "UK Parliament -Parliament's role". United Kingdom Parliament website. United Kingdom Parliament. 29 June 2009. Retrieved 1 September 2009.
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(help) - ^ "The role of the Secretary of State for Wales" (PDF). Welsh Assembly Government website. Welsh Assembly Government. 2005. Retrieved 28 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ a b c "How the Assembly is elected". National Assembly for Wales website. National Assembly for Wales. 2010. Retrieved 6 October 2010.
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(help) - ^ "Carwyn Jones officially nominated as First Minister". WalesOnline website. Media Wales Ltd. 9 December 2009. Retrieved 9 December 2009.
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(help) - ^ "Making laws for Wales". National Assembly for Wales website. National Assembly for Wales. 2010. Retrieved 6 October 2010.
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(help) - ^ "Schedule 5 to the Government of Wales Act 2006 (as amended)". National Assembly for Wales website. National Assembly for Wales. 2006. Retrieved 6 October 2010.
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(help) - ^ "Government of Wales Act 1998". The National Archives website. HM Government. 2010. Retrieved 6 October 2010.
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(help) - ^ "Local Authorities". Welsh Assembly Government. Retrieved 9 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ a b "History and Development of the Welsh Language in the Courts". Her Majesty's Courts Service website. Her Majesty's Courts Service. 11 June 2007. Retrieved 7 October 2010.
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(help) - ^ Davies (2008) p. 450
- ^ Davies (1994) p. 86
- ^ Davies (1994) p. 225
- ^ Davies (1994) p. 263
- ^ Davies (2008) p. 453
- ^ a b UK 2005 - The Official Yearbook of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (PDF). Office for National Statistics. pp. 2 & 30. ISBN 0 11 621738 3. Retrieved 12 November 2010.
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ignored (help) - ^ "Geography: About Wales". Visit Wales website. Welsh Assembly Government. 2010. Retrieved 3 October 2010.
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(help) - ^ "Size of Wales project". WWF Cymru website. World Wide Fund for Nature. 2010. Retrieved 12 November 2010.
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(help) - ^ "England and Wales". European Land Information Service. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
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(help) - ^ http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/written_answers/1974/dec/16/celtic-sea#S5CV0883P0-06989. Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Vol. 883. House of Commons. 16 December 1974. col. 317W.
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(help) - ^ "The Official Yearbook of Great Britain and Northern Ireland" (PDF). Office for National Statistics. The Stationary Office. 30 April 2010.
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(help) - ^ "The Welsh 3000s Challenge". welsh3000s.co.uk. Retrieved 28 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ "Aran Fawddwy". snowdoniaguide.com. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
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ignored (help) - ^ "Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty". Welsh Assembly Government website. Welsh Assembly Government. Retrieved 6 October 2010.
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(help) - ^ "Heritage Coasts". britainexpress.com. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ "Tourism hope over record 45 beach flags in Wales". BBC News website. BBC. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
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ignored (help) - ^ Davies (2008) p.778
- ^ "Stormy Weather". BBC North West Wales website. BBC. Retrieved 26 September 2010.
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ignored (help) - ^ a b Davies (2008) p.814
- ^ "In detail: The Sea Empress disaster". BBC News website. BBC. Retrieved 26 September 2010.
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ignored (help) - ^ a b c d Davies (2008) p. 75
- ^ See Meic Stephens (ed.), Companion to Welsh Literature. The doggerel verse was composed in English, probably for the benefit of visitors from across Offa's Dyke.
- ^ a b c d e f "Met Office: Regional Climate: Wales". Met Office website. Met Office. 2010. Retrieved 26 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ a b c d e Davies (2008) pp. 148-150
- ^ a b c d Turner, Robert (26 July 2010). "Soggiest city in Britain pays high price for rain". Media Wales Ltd. Retrieved 26 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ "Met Office: Climate: change glossary". Met Office website. Met Office. 2010. Retrieved 8 October 2010.
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(help) - ^ a b "Weather at Cardiff Airport (CWL):Weather and Climate in Cardiff Area, Wales, U". Airports guides website. TravelSmart Ltd. 2010. Retrieved 26 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ a b "Wales: climate". Met Office. Retrieved 9 September 2010.
- ^ a b "Met Office:Regional Climate: Wales". Met Office website. Met Office. 2009. Retrieved 6 October 2009.
- ^ "Digital Archive of Extreme UK Rainfall Events" (PDF). Hydro-GIS Ltd. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
- ^ Clark, Ross (28 October 2006). "The wetter, the better". London: The Independent. Retrieved 2 September 2009.
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(help) - ^ Philip, Catherine (28 July 2005). "40 die as one year's rain falls in a day". London: The Times. Retrieved 2 September 2009.
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(help) - ^ Green, Mick (2007). "Wales Ring Ouzel Survey 2006" (PDF). Ecology Matters Ltd. Retrieved 6 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ "Black ravens return to the roost". BBC. 24 January 2006. Retrieved 6 September 2010.
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(help); Text "BBC News website" ignored (help) - ^ "Red kite voted Wales' Favourite Bird". Royal Society for the Protection of Birds. 11 October 2007. Retrieved 6 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ "About Conwy". RSPB.org.uk. 16 April 2010. Retrieved 6 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ a b c Davies (2008) p. 533
- ^ a b c Davies (1994) pp. 286-288
- ^ Atlas of the British Flora. Melksham, Great Britain: BSBI. 1990. p. 43. ISBN 0-90115-8194.
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- ^ "The Welsh language in 19th century education". BBC Cymru Wales history website. BBC Cymru Wales. 2010. Retrieved 18 November 2010.
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- ^ a b Davies (2008) p. 240
- ^ Davies (2008) p. 241
- ^ Davies (2008), p.697
- ^ Davies (2008), p.233
- ^ Day, Graham (2002). Making sense of Wales. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. p. 87. ISBN 0708317715.
- ^ Davies (2008), p.233–4
- ^ "Key Economic Statistics – September 2010" (PDF). Welsh Assembly Government website. Welsh Assembly Government. Retrieved 28 September 2010.
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- ^ "Coal Exchange to 'stock exchange'". BBC News website. BBC. 26 April 2007. Retrieved 11 October 2008.
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(help) - ^ "A Review of Local Economic and Employment Development Policy Approaches in OECD Countries" (PDF). OECD Local Economic and Employment Development (LEED) Programme. OECD. p. 8. Retrieved 11 September 2010.
- ^ a b c "Wales A Vibrant Economy" (PDF). Welsh Assembly Government. 2005. pp. 12, 22, 40, 42. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
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(help) - ^ "Tourism hope over record 45 beach flags in Wales". BBC News website. BBC. 11 May 2010. Retrieved 7 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ Carradice, Phil. "The collapse of the Welsh banks". BBC Cymru Wales website. BBC. Retrieved 30 September 2010.
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(help) - ^ a b Davies (2008) pp. 701-702
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(help) - ^ "Area of agricultural land, by type of crop and grass (Thousand Hectares)". StatsWales. Retrieved 2 October 2010. Total agricultural area 2004, 1633.5 thousand hectares (16,335,000,000 m2), Wales area 20779km2 (20,779,000,000m2)
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specified (help) - ^ "Welsh National Anthem: History: About Wales". Visit Wales website. Welsh Assembly Government. 2010. Retrieved 21 October 2010.
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(help)
Bibliography
- Davies, John (1994). A History of Wales. London: Penguin. ISBN 0-14-01-4581-8.
- Davies, John (2008). The Welsh Academy Encyclopaedia of Wales. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. ISBN 978-0-7083-1953-6.
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External links
- National Assembly for Wales
- BBC Wales
- Template:Dmoz
- VisitWales.com The official international guide to places to stay and things to do in Wales.
- VisitWales.co.uk The official UK guide to places to stay and things to do in Wales.
- Wales - Official Gateway to Wales
- Gathering the Jewels - Welsh Heritage and Culture