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Prehistoric Wales
The
earliest known human remain discovered in modern-day Wales is a human tooth,
found in a cave in the valley of the River
Elwy in North
Wales, whose owner lived about 250,000 years ago in the Lower
Palaeolithic period.
The Red
Lady of Paviland, a human skeleton dyed in red
ochre, was discovered in 1826
in one of the Paviland limestone
caves of the Gower
Peninsula in south Wales.
Despite the name, the skeleton is that of a young man who lived about 26,000
years ago at the end of the Upper Paleolithic
Period (old stone age). He is considered to be the oldest known ceremonial burial in Western
Europe. The skeleton was found along with jewellery made from ivory
and seashells,
and a mammoth's
skulL
Following
the last Ice age,
Wales became roughly the shape it is today by about 8000 BC and was inhabited by
Mesolithic hunter-gatherers.
The earliest farming communities are now believed to date from about 4000 BC,
marking the beginning of the Neolithic
period. This period saw the construction of many chambered
tombs, the most notable including Bryn
Celli Ddu and Barclodiad
y Gawres on Anglesey
Metal
tools first appeared in Wales about 2500 BC, initially copper
followed by bronze.
The climate during the Early
Bronze Age (c. 2500-1400 BC) is thought to have been warmer than at present,
as there are many remains from this period in what are now bleak uplands. The
Late Bronze Age (c. 1400-750 BC) saw the development of more advanced bronze
implements. Much of the copper for the production of bronze probably came from
the copper mine on the Great
Orme, where prehistoric mining on a very large scale dates largely from the
middle Bronze Age
The
earliest iron implement found in Wales is a sword from Llyn
Fawr at the head of the Rhondda
Valley, which is thought to date to about 600 BC. The Iron
Age saw the building of hillforts
which are particularly numerous in Wales, examples being Pen
Dinas near Aberystwyth
and Tre'r
Ceiri on the Lleyn
peninsula. A particularly significant find from this period was made in 1943
at Llyn
Cerrig Bach on Anglesey, when the ground was being prepared for the
construction of a Royal
Air Force base. The cache included weapons, shields, chariots
along with their fittings and harnesses, and slave chains and tools. Many had
been deliberately broken and seem to have been votive
offerings
Traditionally,
historians have believed that successive waves of immigrants brought different
cultures into the area, largely replacing the previous inhabitants, with the
last wave of immigrants being the Celts.
However, some studies of population genetics now suggest that this may not be
true, and that the introduction of Celtic
language in the Bronze Age may have been a result of immigration on a
smaller scale.
Colonisation
Bryn Celli Ddu, a late Neolithic chambered tomb on Anglesey
The
first documented history was recorded during the Roman
occupation of Britain. At that time the area of modern Wales was divided into
many tribes, of which the Silures
in the south-east and the Ordovices
in the central and north-west areas were the largest and most powerful. The
Romans established a string of forts across what is now Southern Wales, as far
west as Carmarthen
(Caerfyrddin; Latin: Maridunum), and mined gold at Dolaucothi
in Carmarthenshire. There is evidence that they progressed even farther west.
They also built the legionary fortress at Caerleon
(Latin: Isca
Silurum), whose magnificent amphitheatre
is the best preserved in Britain. The Romans were also busy in Northern Wales,
and the mediaeval Welsh tale Breuddwyd Macsen Wledig claims that Magnus
Maximus (Macsen Wledig), one of the last western Roman emperors,
married Elen or Helen, the daughter of a Welsh chieftain from Segontium,
present-day Caernarfon. It was in the 4th century during the Roman occupation that
Christianity
was introduced to Wales.
After
the Roman
withdrawal from Britain in 410, much of the lowlands
were overrun by various Germanic
tribes. However, Gwynedd, Powys, Dyfed
and Seisyllg, Morgannwg, and Gwent
emerged as independent Welsh successor
states. They endured, in part because of favourable geographical features
such as uplands, mountains, and rivers and a resilient society that did not
collapse with the end of the Roman civitas.
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 restled with Powys, Gwent, and Gwynedd to define the frontier between the two
peoples.
Having
lost much of the West
Midlands to Mercia in the 6th and early 7th century, a resurgent late 7th
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 Severn valley to the Dee estuary, gave Oswestry (Welsh: Croesoswallt)
to Powys King Offa
of Mercia seems to have continued this consultative initiative when he
created a larger earth work, now known as Offa's Dyke (Welsh: Clawdd Offa).
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 slops in the hands of the Welsh; near Rhiwabod, 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.
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
and the Conwy known then as the Perfeddwlad.
By the eighth century the eastern borders with the Anglo-Saxons had broadly been
set.
Following
the successful examples of Cornwall in 722 and Brittany in 865, the Britons of
Wales made their peace with the Vikings
and asked the Norsemen to help the Britons fight the Anglo-Saxons
of Mercia to
prevent an Anglo-Saxon conquest of Wales. In 878 AD the Britons of Wales unified
with the Vikings of Denmark to destroy an Anglo-Saxon army of Mercians. Like
Cornwall in 722, this decisive defeating of the Saxons gave Wales some decades
of peace from Anglo-Saxon attack. In 1063, the Welsh prince Gruffydd
ap Llywelyn made an alliance with Norwegian Vikings against Mercia which, as
in 878 AD was successful, and the Saxons of Mercia defeated. As with Cornwall
and Brittany,
Viking aggression towards the Saxons/Franks ended any chance of the
Anglo-Saxons/Franks conquering their Celtic neighbours.
Medieval Wales
The
southern and eastern lands 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. The Germanic tribes who now dominated these lands were invariably called
Saeson,
meaning "Saxons". The Anglo-Saxons, in turn, labelled the
Romano-British as Walha,
meaning 'foreigner' or 'stranger'. The Welsh continued to call themselves Brythoniaid
(Brythons or Britons) well into the Middle
Ages, though the first use of Cymru and y Cymry is found as
early as 633 in the Gododdin
of Aneirin.
In Armes
Prydain, written in about 930, the words Cymry and Cymro are
used as often as 15 times. It was not until about the 12th century however, that
Cymry began to overtake Brythoniaid in their writings.
Dolwyddelan
Castle, built by Llywelyn
ab Iorwerth in the early 13th century to watch over one of the valley routes
into Gwynedd
From
the year 800 onwards, a series of dynastic marriages led to Rhodri
Mawr's (r. 844-877) inheritance of Gwynedd
and Powys. His
sons in turn would found three principal dynasties (Aberffraw
for Gwynedd, Dinefwr
for Deheubarth,
and Mathrafal
for Powys), each competing for hegemony over the others. Rhodri's grandson Hywel
Dda (r.900-950) founded Deheubarth out of his maternal and paternal
inheritances of Dyfed
and Seisyllwg,
oust the Aberffraw
dynasty from Gwynedd and Powys, and codify Welsh
law in 930, finally going on a pilgrimage to Rome (and allegedly having the
Law Codes blessed by the pope). Maredudd
ab Owain (r.986-999) of Deheubarth (Hywel's grandson) would, (again)
temporarily oust the Aberffraw line for control of Gwynedd and Powys. Maredudd's
great-grandson (through his daughter Princess Angharad) Gruffydd
ap Llywelyn (r.1039-1063) would conquer his cousins' realms from his base in
Powys, and even extend his authority into England. Owain
Gwynedd (1100-1170) 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 historian John Davies. The Aberffraw dynasty would surge to pre-eminence with
Owain Gwynedd's grandson Llywelyn
Fawr (the Great) (b.1173-1240), wrestling concessions out of the Magna
Carta in 1215 and receiving the fealty
of other Welsh lords in 1216 at the council at Aberdyfi, becoming the first Prince
of Wales. His grandson Llywelyn
II 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 Edward
I. As a result of military defeat, the Treaty
of Aberconwy imposed English fealty over Llywelyn 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. 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
fifty four years later.
To
help maintain his dominance, Edward constructed a series of great stone castles.
Beaumaris, Caernarfon,
and Conwy
were built mainly to overshadow the Welsh royal home and headquarters Garth
Celyn, Aber
Garth Celyn, on the north coast of Gwynedd.
There
was no major uprising except 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;
he 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 more or less restored in Wales by 1415.
Although
English conquest of Wales took place under the 1284 Statute
of Rhuddlan, a formal Union did not occur until 1536, shortly after which
Welsh law, which continued to be used in Wales after the conquest, was fully
replaced by English law under the Laws in Wales Acts 1535-1542. Wales remains
the largest principality in the world.
Caerphilly
Castle. The construction of this castle between 1268 and 1271 by Gilbert
de Clare led to a dispute between Llywelyn
the Last and the English crown, one of the issues which led to the wars of
1277 and 1282 and the end of Welsh independence
The
area now known as Wales
has been inhabited by modern humans for at least 29,000 years, though continuous
human habitation dates from the period after the last Ice
age. Wales has many remains from the Neolithic
period (mainly chambered
tombs), as well as from the Bronze
Age and Iron
Age. The written history of Wales begins with the arrival of the Romans,
who launched their first campaign against the Deceangli
in what is now North-East Wales in 48. Two of the larger tribes, the Silures
and the Ordovices,
resisted Roman rule for some years, with the Ordovices only being finally
subdued in 79. The area of Wales we know today became part of the Roman province
of Britannia, and remained under Roman rule until the legions were withdrawn in
about 400. During the next few centuries kingdoms such as Gwynedd
and Powys were
formed and the area we now call Wales became Christian
During
the early mediaeval
period Wales was divided into a number of kingdoms, but the ruler of Gwynedd
was usually acknowledged as King
of the Britons. Some such rulers were able to combine several kingdoms to
extend their rule to much of Wales and Gruffydd
ap Llywelyn in the mid 11th century controlled all of Wales and some areas
in England for a period. These centuries were marked by struggles against
English kingdoms such as Mercia,
then against the united English kingdom and finally against the Normans,
who arrived on the borders of Wales around 1067. Warfare continued for over two
centuries until the death of Llywelyn
the Last in 1282 led to the annexation of Wales to the kingdom of England. Owain
Glyndŵr led a rebellion in the early 15th century and kept control of
Wales for a few years before the English crown reimposed its authority. In the
16th century legislation was passed aimed at fully incorporating Wales into
England.
The
eighteenth century saw the beginnings of two changes which would greatly affect
Wales, the Industrial
Revolution and the Methodist
Revival. During the 19th century south-east Wales in particular experienced
rapid industrialization and a dramatic rise in population. These areas were Welsh-speaking
initially but became increasingly anglicized in speech later in the century. The
19th century also saw Wales become predominantly Nonconformist
in religion. In the 20th century the period after the Second
World War saw the beginnings of a long decline in the coal
and iron industries
and in politics saw the Labour party replace the Liberal party as the dominant
force. In the second half of the century Plaid
Cymru won its first seat at Westminster
in 1966 and devolution
became an item on the political agenda. A referendum on devolution in 1979
resulted in a "no" vote, but the issue reappeared towards the end of
the century. A second referendum in 1997 resulted in a "yes" vote by a
narrow margin and led to the Welsh
Assembly being established in Cardiff.
Wales under the Romans: 48410
Tribes within the boundaries of present day Wales at the time of the Roman
invasion. Exact boundaries are conjectural
Up
to and during the Roman
occupation of Britain, Wales was not a separate country; all the native
inhabitants of Roman Britain spoke Brythonic
languages (a sub-family of the Celtic
languages) and were regarded as Britons (or Brythons).
The area was divided among a number of tribes, of which the Silures
in modern south-east Wales and the Ordovices
in central and northwest Wales were the largest and most powerful. These two tribes were the ones who put up the strongest resistance to the Roman
invasion
The
first attack on the Celtic
tribes of what is now Wales was made under the legate Publius
Ostorius Scapula about 48 AD. Ostorius first attacked the Deceangli
in the north-east, who appear to have surrendered with little resistance
He then spent several years campaigning against the Silures
and the Ordovices.
Their resistance was led by Caratacus,
who had fled what is now southeast England when it was conquered by the Romans.
He first led the Silures, then moved to the territory of the Ordovices, where he
was defeated by Ostorius in 51 AD
Caratacus fled to the Brigantes,
whose queen handed him over to the Romans
The Silures were
not subdued, however, and waged effective guerilla warfare against the Roman
forces. Ostorius died with this tribe still unconquered; after his death they
won a victory over the Roman Second
Augusta Legion. There were no further attempts to extend Roman control in
Wales until the governorship of Caius
Suetonius Paulinus, who attacked further north and captured the island of Anglesey
in 60 or 61 AD. However he was forced to abandon the offensive to meet the threat from the
rebellion of Boadicea.
The Silures were eventually subdued by Sextus
Julius Frontinus in a series of campaigns ending about 78 AD.
His successor Gnaeus
Julius Agricola subdued the Ordovices and recaptured Anglesey by the
beginning of 79 AD
The
Romans occupied the whole of the area now known as Wales, where they built Roman
roads and Roman
forts, mined gold
and conducted commerce, but their interest in the area was limited because of
the difficult geography and shortage of flat agricultural land. Most of the
Roman remains in Wales are military in nature. The area was controlled by
legionary bases at Deva
(Chester) and Isca
(Caerleon),
with roads linking these bases to auxiliary forts such as Segontium
(Caernarfon)
and Moridunum
(Carmarthen).
Romans are only known to have founded one town in Wales, Venta
Silurum (Caerwent),
although the fort at Moridunum (Carmarthen) was later superseded by a civilian settlement. The
modern day country of Wales is thought to have been part of the Roman
province of Britannia
Superior and later of the province of Britannia
Prima, which also included the West
Country of England.
Sub-Roman Wales and the Age of the Saints: 411700
When
the Roman garrison
of Britain was withdrawn in 410,
the various Brythonic
states within Wales were left self-governing, as was the rest of Roman
Britain. Evidence for a continuing Roman influence after the departure of
the Roman
legions is provided by an inscribed stone from Gwynedd
dated between the late 5th
century and mid 6th
century commemorating a certain Cantiorix who was described as a citizen (cives)
of Gwynedd and a cousin of Maglos the magistrate (magistratus).There was considerable Irish
colonization in Dyfed in south-west Wales, where there are many stones with Ogham
inscriptions Wales had become Christian,
and the "age of the saints" (approximately 500700)
was marked by the establishment of monastic settlements throughout the country,
by religious leaders such as Saint
David, Illtud
and Teilo
One
of the reasons for the Roman withdrawal was the pressure put upon the empire's
military resources by the incursion of barbarian tribes from the east. These
tribes, including the Angles
and Saxons, who
later became the English, were unable to make inroads into Wales except possibly
along the Severn Valley as far as Llanidloes
However they gradually conquered eastern and southern Britain (which then became
England). At the Battle
of Chester in 613
or 616, the forces of
Powys and other Brythonic
kingdoms were defeated by the Northumbrians under Ζthelfrith,
with king Selyf
ap Cynan among the dead. It has been suggested
that this battle finally severed the land connection between Wales
and the northern Brythonic
kingdoms including Rheged, Strathclyde, Elmet and Gododdin
where Old
Welsh was also spoken. From the 8th
century on, Wales was by far the largest of the three remnant Brythonic
areas in Britain, the other two being Cornwall
and Strathclyde
Gravestone of King Cadfan
ap Iago of Gwynedd (died c. 625) in Llangadwaladr church
Wales
was divided into a number of separate kingdoms, the largest of these being Gwynedd
in northwest Wales and Powys
in east Wales. Gwynedd was the most powerful of these kingdoms in the 6th
century and 7th
century, under rulers such as Maelgwn
Gwynedd (died 547)and Cadwallon
ap Cadfan (died 634/5)who in alliance with Penda
of Mercia was able to lead his armies as far as Northumbria
and control it for a period. Following Cadwallon's death in battle the following
year, his successor Cadafael
ap Cynfeddw also allied himself with Penda against Northumbria but
thereafter Gwynedd, like the other Welsh kingdoms, was mainly engaged in
defensive warfare against the growing power of Mercia.
Early Medieval Wales: 7001066
Powys
as the easternmost of the major kingdoms of Wales came under the most pressure
from the English in Cheshire, Shropshire
and Herefordshire.
This kingdom originally extended east into areas now in England,
and its ancient capital, Pengwern,
has been variously identified as modern Shrewsbury
or a site north of Baschurch.
These areas were lost to the kingdom of Mercia.
The construction of the earthwork known as Offa's
Dyke (usually attributed to Offa,
King of Mercia
in the 8th
century) may have marked an agreed border
For
a single man to rule the whole country during this period was rare. This is
often ascribed to the inheritance system practised in Wales. All sons received
an equal share of their father's property (including illegitimate sons),
resulting in the division of territories. However, the Welsh
laws prescribe this system of division for land in general, not for
kingdoms, where there is provision for an edling (or heir) to the kingdom
to be chosen, usually by the king. Any son, legitimate or illegitimate, could be
chosen as edling and there were frequently disappointed candidates prepared to
challenge the chosen heir
The
first to rule a considerable part of Wales was Rhodri
Mawr (Rhodri The Great), originally king of Gwynedd
during the 9th
century, who was able to extend his rule to Powys
and Ceredigion
On his death his realms were divided between his sons. Rhodri's grandson, Hywel
Dda (Hywel the Good), formed the kingdom of Deheubarth
by joining smaller kingdoms in the southwest and had extended his rule to most
of Wales by 942.He is traditionally associated with the codification of Welsh
law at a council which he called at Whitland,
the laws from then on usually being called the "Laws of Hywel". Hywel
followed a policy of peace with the English. On his death in 950
his sons were able to keep control of Deheubarth
but lost Gwynedd
to the traditional dynasty of this kingdom
Wales
was now coming under increasing attack by Viking
raiders, particularly Danish raids in the period between 950
and 1000. Godfrey Haroldson is said to have carried off two thousand captives
from Anglesey
in 987, and the king
of Gwynedd, Maredudd
ab Owain is reported to have redeemed many of his subjects from slavery by
paying the Danes a large ransom
Gruffydd
ap Llywelyn was the next ruler to be able to unite most of the Welsh
kingdoms under his rule. Originally king of Gwynedd, by 1055
he was ruler of almost all of Wales and had annexed parts of England around the
border. However, he was defeated by Harold
Godwinson in 1063
and killed by his own men. His territories were again divided into the
traditional kingdoms.
Wales and the Normans: 10671283
At
the time of the Norman
conquest of England
in 1066, the
dominant ruler in Wales was Bleddyn
ap Cynfyn, who was king of Gwynedd
and Powys. The
initial Norman successes were in the south, where William
Fitz Osbern overran Gwent
before 1070. By 1074
the forces of the Earl
of Shrewsbury were ravaging Deheubarth
The
killing of Bleddyn
ap Cynfyn in 1075
led to civil war and gave the Normans
an opportunity to seize lands in North
Wales. In 1081 Gruffydd
ap Cynan, who had just won the throne of Gwynedd from Trahaearn
ap Caradog at the Battle
of Mynydd Carn was enticed to a meeting with the Earl
of Chester and Earl
of Shrewsbury and promptly seized and imprisoned, leading to the seizure of
much of Gwynedd by the Normans.
In the south, Iestyn
ab Gwrgant, the last ruler of the kingdom of Morgannwg,
was deposed about 1090
by Robert
Fitzhamon, lord of Gloucester,
who established a lordship based in Cardiff
and subsequently conquered the lowland part of Glamorgan. Rhys
ap Tewdwr of Deheubarth was killed in 1093
while resisting Norman encroachment in Brycheiniog,
and his kingdom was seized and divided between various Norman lordships.
The Norman conquest of Wales appeared virtually complete
Effigy of Rhys ap Gruffydd in St
David's Cathedral
In 1094 however there
was a general Welsh revolt against Norman rule, and gradually territories were
won back. Gruffydd
ap Cynan was eventually able to build a strong kingdom in Gwynedd.
His son, Owain
Gwynedd, allied with Gruffydd
ap Rhys of Deheubarth won a crushing victory over the Normans at the Battle
of Crug Mawr in 1136
and annexed Ceredigion.
Owain followed his father on the throne of Gwynedd the following year and ruled
until his death in 1170He was able to profit from disunity in England, where Stephen
of Blois and the Empress
Matilda were engaged in a struggle for the throne, to extend the borders of
Gwynedd further east than ever before
Powys
also had a strong ruler at this time in Madog
ap Maredudd, but when his death in 1160
was quickly followed by the death of his heir, Llywelyn
ap Madog, Powys was split into two parts and never subsequently
reunited.
In the south, Gruffydd
ap Rhys was killed in 1137,
but his four sons, who all ruled Deheubarth in turn, were eventually able to win
back most of their grandfather's kingdom from the Normans. The youngest of the
four, Rhys
ap Gruffydd (The Lord Rhys) ruled from 1155
to 1193. In 1171
Rhys met King
Henry II and came to an agreement with him whereby Rhys had to pay a tribute
but was confirmed in all his conquests and was later named Justiciar of South
Wales. Rhys held a festival of poetry and song at his court at Cardigan
over Christmas 1176 which is
generally regarded as the first recorded Eisteddfod.
After Owain Gwynedd's death led to the splitting of Gwynedd between his sons,
Rhys made Deheubarth dominant in Wales for a time
The Llywelyn Monument at Cilmeri
Out
of the power struggle in Gwynedd eventually arose one of the greatest of Welsh
leaders, Llywelyn
ab Iorwerth, also known as Llywelyn Fawr (the Great), who was
sole ruler of Gwynedd by 1200and by his death in 1240
was effectively ruler of much of Wales.
Llywelyn made his 'capital' and headquarters at Garth
Celyn on the north coast, overlooking the Menai
Strait. *His son Dafydd
ap Llywelyn followed him as ruler of Gwynedd, but the king would not allow
him to inherit his father's position elsewhere in Wales.
War broke out in 1245,
and the issue was still in the balance when Dafydd died suddenly at the royal
home Garth
Celyn, Aber Garth Celyn, Gwynedd without leaving an heir in early 1246.
Llywelyn the Great's other son, Gruffudd
had been killed trying to escape from the Tower
of London in 1244.
Gruffudd had left four sons, and a period of internal conflict between three of
these ended in the rise to power of Llywelyn
ap Gruffydd (also known as Llywelyn the Last Leader). The Treaty
of Montgomery in 1267
gave Llywelyn control, directly or indirectly, over a large part of Wales
However, Llywelyn's ambition in uniting Wales under his leadership conflicted
with Edward
I of England's ambitions in Wales, and war followed in 1277.
Llywelyn was obliged to seek terms, and the Treaty
of Aberconwy greatly restricted his authority. War broke out again when
Llywelyn's brother Dafydd
ap Gruffudd attacked Hawarden
Castle on Palm
Sunday 1282.
Llywelyn appears to have hesitated before joining the rising, but eventually
supported his brother. On 11 December 1282, Llywelyn was lured into a meeting in
Builth
Wells castle
with the Mortimer
brothers, captured and executed. His brother Dafydd ap Gruffudd continued the
resistance, but was no match for the expensively equipped English army. He was
captured at Bera Mountain, in the uplands above Aber Garth
Celyn in June 1283
and was hanged,
drawn and quartered at Shrewsbury.
In effect Wales became England's first colony until it was finally annexed
through the Laws
in Wales Acts 1535-1542.
Annexation: from the Statute of Rhuddlan to the Laws
in Wales Acts 12831542
Harlech
Castle was one of a series built by Edward
I to consolidate his conquest.
After
passing the Statute
of Rhuddlan which restricted Welsh laws, King Edward's ring of impressive
stone castles
assisted the domination of Wales, and he crowned his conquest by giving the
title Prince
of Wales to his son and heir in 1301Wales became, effectively, part of England, even though its people spoke a
different language and had a different culture. English kings paid lip service
to their responsibilities by appointing a Council of Wales, sometimes presided
over by the heir to the throne. This Council normally sat in Ludlow,
now in England but at that time still part of the disputed border area in the Welsh
Marches. Welsh literature, particularly poetry,
continued to flourish however, with the lesser nobility now taking over from the
princes as the patrons of the poets. Dafydd
ap Gwilym who flourished in the middle of the 14th
century is considered by many to be the greatest of the Welsh poetS
There
were a number of rebellions including ones led by Madog
ap Llywelyn in 12941295
and by Llywelyn Bren, Lord of Senghenydd, in 13161318.
In the 1370s the
last representative in the male line of the ruling house of Gwynedd, Owain
Lawgoch, twice planned an invasion of Wales with French support. The English
government responded to the threat by sending an agent to assassinate Owain in Poitou
in 1378
In 1400, a Welsh
nobleman, Owain
Glyndŵr (or Owen Glendower), revolted against King Henry
IV of England. Owain inflicted a number of defeats on the English forces and
for a few years controlled most of Wales. Some of his achievements included
holding the first ever Welsh Parliament at Machynlleth
and plans for two universities. Eventually the king's forces were able to regain
control of Wales and the rebellion died out, but Owain himself was never
captured. His rebellion caused a great upsurge in Welsh identity and he was
widely supported by Welsh people throughout the country.
As
a response to Glyndŵr's rebellion, the English parliament passed the Penal
Laws in 1402. These
prohibited the Welsh from carrying arms, from holding office and from dwelling
in fortified towns. These prohibitions also applied to Englishmen who married
Welsh women. These laws remained in force after the rebellion, although in
practice they were gradually relaxed
Henry Tudor, later King Henry VII
In
the Wars
of the Roses which began in 1455
both sides made considerable use of Welsh troops. The main figures in Wales were
the two Earls
of Pembroke, the Yorkist Earl William
Herbert and the Lancastrian Jasper
Tudor. In 1485
Jasper's nephew, Henry Tudor, landed in Wales with a small force to launch his
bid for the throne of England. Henry was of Welsh descent, counting princes such
as Rhys ap Gruffydd (The Lord Rhys) among his ancestors, and his cause gained
much support in Wales. Henry defeated King Richard
III of England at the Battle
of Bosworth with an army containing many Welsh soldiers and gained the
throne as King Henry
VII of England
Under
his son, Henry
VIII of England, the Laws
in Wales Acts 1535-1542 were passed, annexing Wales to England in legal
terms, abolishing the Welsh legal system, and banning the Welsh
language from any official role or status, but it did for the first time
define the England-Wales border and allowed members representing constituencies
in Wales to be elected to the English Parliament.
They also abolished any legal distinction between the Welsh and the English,
thereby effectively ending the Penal Code although this was not formally
repealed.
From the Union to the Industrial Revolution 1543 -
1800
Following Henry VIII's
break with Rome and
the Pope, Wales for
the most part followed England in accepting Anglicanism,
although a number of Catholics
were active in attempting to counteract this and produced some of the earliest
books printed in Welsh. In 1588 William
Morgan produced the first complete Welsh translation of the Bible
Wales
was overwhelmingly Royalist
in the Wars
of the Three Kingdoms in the early 17th
century though there were some notable exceptions such as John
Jones Maesygarnedd and the Puritan
writer Morgan Llwyd. Wales was an important source of men for the armies of King Charles
I of England,
though no major battles took place in Wales. The Second
English Civil War began when unpaid Parliamentarian troops in Pembrokeshire
changed sides in early 1648.
Colonel Thomas
Horton defeated the Royalist rebels at the battle
of St. Fagans in May and the rebel leaders surrendered to Cromwell on July
11 after the protracted two month siege
of Pembroke
Education in Wales was at a very low ebb in this period, with the only education
available being in English while the majority of the population spoke only
Welsh. In 1731 Griffith
Jones (Llanddowror) started circulating schools in Carmarthenshire,
held in one location for about three months before moving (or 'circulating') to
another location. The language of instruction in these schools was Welsh. By
Griffith Jones' death, in 1761, it is estimated that up to 250,000 people had
learnt to read in schools throughout Wales
The 18th
century also saw the Welsh
Methodist revival, led by Daniel
Rowland, Howell
Harris and William
Williams Pantycelyn.
In the early 19th
century the Welsh Methodists broke away from the Anglican
church and established their own denomination, now the Presbyterian
Church of Wales. This also led to the strengthening of other nonconformist
denominations, and by the middle of the 19th
century Wales was largely nonconformist in religion. This had considerable
implications for the Welsh language as it was the main language of the
nonconformist churches in Wales. The Sunday
schools which became an important feature of Welsh life made a large part of
the population literate in Welsh, which was important for the survival of the
language as it was not taught in the schools
The
end of the 18th
century saw the beginnings of the Industrial
Revolution, and the presence of iron
ore, limestone
and large coal
deposits in south-east Wales meant that this area soon saw the establishment of ironworks
and coal mines, notably the Cyfarthfa
Ironworks and the Dowlais
Ironworks at Merthyr Tydfil.
The Nineteenth Century
In
the early 19th
century parts of Wales became heavily industrialised. Ironworks
were set up in the valleys running south from the Brecon
Beacons particularly around the new
town of Merthyr
Tydfil, with iron
production later spreading westwards to the hinterlands of Neath
and Swansea
where anthracite coal was already
being mined. From the 1840s coal
mining spread to the Aberdare
and Rhondda valleys
This led to a rapid increase in the population of these areas
The
social effects of industrialisation
led to bitter social conflict between the Welsh workers and the English factory
owners. During the 1830s
there were two armed uprisings, in Merthyr
Tydfil in 1831and the Chartist
uprising in Newport
in 1839, led by John Frost. The Rebecca
Riots, which took place between 1839 and 1844
in South
Wales and Mid
Wales were rural in origin. They were a protest not only against the high tolls
which had to be paid on the local Turnpike
roads but against rural deprivation
Partly
as a result of these disturbances, a government enquiry was carried out into the
state of education in Wales. The enquiry was carried out by three English
commissioners who spoke no Welsh
and relied on information from witnesses, many of them Anglican
clergymen. Their report, published in 1847
as Reports of the commissioners of enquiry into the state of education in
Wales concluded that the Welsh were ignorant, lazy and immoral, and that
this was caused by the Welsh language and nonconformity.
This resulted in a furious reaction in Wales, where the affair was named the Treachery
of the Blue Books
Socialism
gained ground rapidly in the industrial areas of South Wales in the latter part
of the century, accompanied by the increasing politicisation of religious Nonconformism.
The first Labour
MP, Keir
Hardie, was elected as junior member for the Welsh constituency of Merthyr
Tydfil and Aberdare
in 1900.
In common with many European nations, the first movements for national
autonomy began in the 1880s
and 1890s with
the formation of Cymru
Fydd, led by Liberal Party politicians such as T.
E. Ellis and David
Lloyd George
Another
movement which gained strength during the 1880s
was the campaign for disestablishment.
Many felt that since Wales was now largely nonconformist in religion, it was
inappropriate that the Church
of England should be the established church in Wales. The campaign continued
until the end of the century and beyond, with the passing of the Welsh
Church Act 1914, which did not come into operation until 1920,
after the end of the First
World War
The 19th
century brought about a large increase in population as Wales, like the rest
of the UK, largely
attributable to high birth rates. In 1801
just over 587,000 people lived in Wales; by 1901,
this had increased to over 2,012,000The most significant rises in population occurred in industrial counties -
Denbighshire, Flintshire, Monmouthshire
and Glamorganshire.
The century witnessed a transition from a society that was predominantly rural
(around 80% lived outside urban settlements in 1800) to a largely urbanised,
industrial society (in 1911, only 20% lived in non-urban areas).
The Twentieth Century
In
the early part of the century Wales still largely supported the Liberal
Party, particularly when David
Lloyd George became Prime
Minister during the First
World War. However the Labour
party was steadily gaining ground, and in the years after the Great
War replaced the Liberals as the dominant party in Wales, particularly in
the industrial valleys of South
Wales
Plaid
Cymru was formed in 1925
but initially its growth was slow and it gained few votes at parliamentary
elections
In 1936 an RAF
training camp and aerodrome at Penyberth
near Pwllheli
was burnt by three members of Plaid
Cymru Saunders
Lewis, Lewis
Valentine, and D.
J. Williams. This was a protest not only against the construction of the
training camp, known as "the bombing school" but also against the
destruction of the historic house of Penyberth to make room for it. This action
and the subsequent imprisonment of the three perpetrators considerably raised
the profile of Plaid Cymru, at least in the Welsh-speaking areaS
The Aberfan Disaster 21
October 1966
The
period following the Second
World War saw a decline in several of the traditional industries, in
particular the coal
industry. The numbers employed in the South
Wales coalfield, which at its peak around 1913
employed over 250,000 men, fell to around 75,000 in the mid 1960s
and 30,000 in 1979
This period also saw the Aberfan
disaster in 1966,
when a tip of coal slurry slid down to engulf a school with 144 dead, most of
them children. By the early 1990s
there was only one deep pit still working in Wales. There was a similar decline
in the steel
industry, and the Welsh economy, like that of other developed societies, became
increasingly based on the expanding service sector
Wales
was officially de-annexed from England within the United
Kingdom in 1955,
with the term "England" being replaced with "England
and Wales" and Cardiff
was proclaimed as the capital
city of Wales
Nationalism only became a major issue during the second half of the twentieth
century. In 1962
Saunders Lewis gave a radio
talk entitled Tynged
yr iaith (The fate of the language) in which he predicted the extinction
of the Welsh language unless action was taken. This led to the formation of Cymdeithas
yr Iaith Gymraeg (the Welsh Language Society) the same year
Nationalism grew particularly following the flooding of the Tryweryn valley in
1965, drowning the village of Capel
Celyn to create a reservoir supplying water to Liverpool.
In 1966 Gwynfor
Evans won the Carmarthen seat for Plaid
Cymru at a by-election, their first Parliamentary seat
Another
response to the flooding of Capel Celyn was the formation of groups such as the Free
Wales Army and Mudiad
Amddiffyn Cymru (MAC - Welsh Defence Movement). 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 and tax and other offices. Two members of MAC, George
Taylor and Alwyn Jones, the "Abergele Martyrs", were killed by a home
made bomb at Abergele
the day before the investiture ceremony.
Plaid
Cymru made gains in the two General Elections held in 1974,
winning three seats. There was increased support for devolution
within the Labour party and a Devolution Bill was introduced in late 1976.
However a referendum on the creation of an assembly for Wales in 1979
led to a large majority for the "no" vote. The new Conservative government elected in the 1979 General Election had pledged
to establish a Welsh-language television channel, but announced in September
1979 that it would not honour this pledge. This led to a campaign of non-payment
of television licences by members of Plaid Cymru and an announcement by Gwynfor
Evans in 1980
that he would fast unto death if a Welsh
language channel was not established. In September 1980 the government
announced that the channel would after all be set up, and S4C
was launched in November 1982
The Welsh
Language Act 1993 gave the Welsh
language equal status with English in Wales with regard to the public sector
In
May 1997, a Labour
government was elected with a promise of creating devolved institutions in Scotland
and Wales. In
late 1997 a
referendum was held on the issue which resulted a "yes" vote, albeit
by a narrow majority.
The Welsh
Assembly was set up in 1999 (as a consequence of the Government
of Wales Act 1998) and possesses the power to determine how the government
budget for Wales is spent and administereD
Over
the course of the 20th
century, the population of Wales increased from just over 2,012,000 in 1901
to 2.9 million in 2001, but the process was not linear - 430,000 people left
Wales between 1921 and 1940 largely owing to the economic depression of the 1930s.
English in-migration became a major factor from the first decade of the 20th
century, when there was net gain of 100,000 people from England. In this era,
most incomers settled in the expanding industrial areas, contributing to a
partial Anglicisation
of some parts of south and east Wales. The proportion of the Welsh population
able to speak the Welsh language fell from just under 50% in 1901 to 43.5% in
1911, and continued to fall to a low of 18.9% in 1981. Over the century there
has also been a marked increase in the proportion of the population born outside
Wales; at the time of the 2001 Census
20% of Welsh residents were born in England,
2% were born in Scotland
or Ireland,
and 3% were born outside the U.K.Whereas most incomers settled in industrial districts in the early 1900s, by the
1990s the highest proportions of people born outside Wales were found in Ceredigion,
Powys, Conwy, Denbighshire
and Flintshire.
The Twenty-first Century
The Wales
Millennium Centre, Cardiff
Bay
The
results of the 2001 Census showed
an increase in the number of Welsh speakers to 21% of the population aged 3 and
over, compared with 18.7% in 1991 and 19.0% in 1981. This compares with a
pattern of steady decline indicated by census results during the 20th century
In
Cardiff the Millennium
Stadium, opened in 1999was followed by the Wales
Millennium Centre opened in 2004 as a centre for cultural events, notably
opera. The new Welsh
Assembly building, to be known as the Senedd, was completed in
February 2006 and officially opened on St.
David's Day that year
In 2006 the Government of Wales Act gained Royal
Assent meaning that from May 2007 the Queen would have the new legal
identity of 'Her Majesty in Right of Wales' and would for the first time appoint
Welsh Ministers and sign Welsh Orders in Council. It also made provision for a
future referendum to ask the Welsh people if they would like the Welsh Assembly
to gain the power to pass primary legislation e.g. to make true Welsh laws.
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