Brief History of Wales
The Emergence
of Wales from Dark Age
8th - 9th century CE
The digging
of Offa's dyke in the 8th century, as the effective border between Anglo-Saxon England
and Celtic Wales, formalizes a situation which has existed for a century and a
half. Victories near Bath (in 577) and near Chester (in 613) have brought the
Anglo-Saxons to the Bristol Channel and the Irish Sea, restricting the Celtic
tribes to the great western peninsula protected by the Welsh mountains.
In this
enforced seclusion lies the beginning of the Welsh identity. The region is
called Wales from an Anglo-Saxon word wealas, meaning 'foreigners'. Similarly
the beleaguered Celts begin to call themselves cymry ('fellow-countrymen'),
naming their shared territory Cymru.
Like their
Celtic neighbours over the water in Ireland, the Welsh have a strong early
tradition of Christianity. But St David, the patron saint of Wales, is a more
shadowy figure than Ireland's St Patrick. Little is known of him except that he
founds several monasteries in the late 6th century and makes his own
ecclesiastical base at Mynyw, now known after him as St David's.
The Welsh
retain their Celtic version of Christianity much longer than the English. The
Roman calculation of Easter is not accepted in Wales until 768, more than a
century after the synod of Whitby.
By the middle
of the 9th century the Welsh tribes are beginning to merge into something
resembling a nation, through the usual combination of warfare and marriage
between the ruling families. Rhodri Mawr (mawr meaning 'the Great') is widely
accepted as king of almost the entire region by the time of his death in 878.
But centralized power is dissipated by the Celtic custom of sharing an
inheritance between all the sons of a royal house.
Rulers in
Wales are also, like their neighbours in Anglo-Saxon England, under constant
threat from Viking invasions. The Welsh are particularly vulnerable from 838,
when the Vikings settle across the Irish Sea in Dublin. But it is Vikings in
another form, as Normans, who have a lasting effect in Wales.
Viking
influence is shown in Cardiff by names of Dumballs Road and Womanby Street.
Swansea is also a Viking name.
Wales and
England: 1066-1267 CE
The most
prolonged threat to the independent Welsh tribes begins with the arrival of the
Normans in England. By this time Wales has settled down as four reasonably
stable principalities. In the north is Gwynedd; south of that is Powys; in the
southwest of the peninsula is Deheubarth; and in the southeast Morgannwg (or
Glamorgan).
William I
makes no serious attempt to conquer Wales himself, but he gives the border
regions of Chester, Shrewsbury and Hereford as earldoms to his feudal vassals.
Armed sorties against Wales are among their responsibilities. Given such a task
and considerable power, the Marcher Lords (from 'march' meaning border) become
notorious for their anarchy and violence.
Some English speaking
colonies or Marcher Towns are established in Wales to administer some areas.
New Radnor is an example and is established by the Earl of Hereford to
administer the old county of Radnorshire. The Marcher Lord system continued
until 1536 and at one stage a large area of North Wales is administered from
Chester. There is no precise border between England and Wales
Meanwhile the
Welsh principalities are in almost constant warfare among themselves. From time
to time a leader acquires enough power to be accepted as paramount over a broad
region. One such is Rhys ap Gruffudd in the south of the country. In a series
of encounters with English armies in the 1160s, he is sufficiently successful
for an accomodation to be reached between himself and the English king.
On his way to
Ireland in 1171 Henry II meets and acknowledges Rhys, accepting him as the lord
of South Wales and as his feudal vassal.
For a while
such compromises bring peace to the region, until signs of weakness in the
opposing side prompt the Welsh to claim greater independence or the English to
attempt stricter control.
During the
13th century rulers from three successive generations of the royal family of
Gwynedd unify the peninsula so effectively that they are accepted as rulers of
all Wales. The first is Llywelyn ab Iorwerth. On his death, in 1240, a
chronicler describes him as the prince of Wales. His son, David II, is the
first man actually to claim that resonant title - in 1244. David's nephew,
Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, even gets the English king to acknowledge him as prince
of Wales. In 1258 Llywelyn receives the homage of all the other Welsh princes.
His status is
formalized in 1267 in a treaty agreed at Shrewsbury (also sometimes called the
treaty of Montgomery) between himself and the English king, Henry III. Henry
acknowledges Llywelyn as overlord of all the Welsh fiefs, and accepts his
homage to the English throne as prince of Wales on behalf of the entire region.
This is the
peak of national dignity for medieval Wales. The status of the principality
changes dramatically with the accession of Henry III's eldest son, Edward I. He
proves himself a far more aggressive monarch than his father.
Edward I and
Wales: 1277-1301 CE
Llywelyn ap
Gruffudd, acknowledged prince of Wales by Henry III in 1267, seems almost to go
out of his way to affront Henry's successor, Edward I, after his accession in
1272. He fails to attend the coronation in 1274, declines a summons to do
homage, and refuses to discharge a large debt to the English king.
In 1277
Edward moves decisively against his recalcitrant vassal. Three English armies
march into Wales, from Chester, Shrewsbury and Hereford. Llywelyn and his
forces are soon isolated in the mountainous region of Snowdon. By early
November lack of food compels them to surrender.
Llywelyn is
forced to sign a treaty on November 9 at Conwy. It strips him of nearly all his
territories, reducing the principality to the area of Snowdon. Anglesey is
allowed him on lease from the king of England, but the rest of Wales is now to
be administered by English agents - a role which they fulfil with such
brutality that there is a widespread uprising, headed by Llywelyn, in 1282.
Edward reacts
as forcefully as before, with another invasion of Wales during which Llywelyn
is killed. But this time the English king takes the whole of Wales into his own
hands.
By the
statute issued at Rhuddlan in 1284 the principality of Wales is transformed
into counties, on the English principle, to be governed by officials on behalf
of the crown.
In 1301
Edward adds the final symbolic touch to this suppression of Wales. He revives
the much cherished title of 'prince of Wales', bestowing it on his heir, the
future Edward II. Ironically Wales now has what it has been fighting for. It is
a principality, but an English one. The title has remained, through the
centuries, the highest honour granted to the eldest son and heir apparent of
the English monarch.
The Welsh,
predictably, are unhappy with these arrangements (a further uprising in 1294-5
is ruthlessly crushed by Edward's armies). But the king has a powerful answer.
The very year
after the death of Llywelyn, Edward begins the construction of the great
castles which are still the glory of the northwest coast of Wales. Each is completed
within a few years. Like the clench of a stone fist, these fortresses grip the
final Welsh refuge - the region of Snowdonia - from Harlech (1283-9) in the
south, to Caernarfon (1283-92) and Beaumaris (1295-8) on either side of the
Menai Strait, and on to Conwy (1283-8) in the north. Overawed by these
strongholds, Wales remains quiet for a century - till the time of Owain Glyn
Dwr.
Owain Glyn
Dwr: CE 1399-1416
Richard II,
reigning in England from 1377 to 1399, has no son. There is therefore, during
this period, no prince of Wales. But Henry IV, seizing the throne in 1399,
immediately creates his son Henry prince of Wales. In the following year, 1400,
the Welsh proclaim a prince of Wales of their own - Owain Glyn Dwr. It is an
act of deliberate rebellion. (Glyn Dwr is also known to the Welsh as Owain ap
Gruffudd, and is traditionally spelt Owen Glendower in English.)
Wales in
general has supported Richard II, but Glyn Dwr has been closer to the party of
Henry IV. At first he seems an unlikely leader, swept up almost accidentally in
a minor rebellion.
Under Glyn
Dwr's leadership the uprising grows in strength, in spite of an early defeat at
Welshpool in 1400. A breakthrough in the power of the rebels comes with the
capture in 1402 of Edmund Mortimer, member of an Anglo-Norman family with great
estates on the Welsh borders. Mortimer is related by descent to the English
throne and by marriage to the Percy family, earls of Northumberland. Glyn Dwr
persuades Mortimer to change sides. Mortimer marries Glyn Dwr's daughter.
Henry IV is
now confronted by a potentially fatal alliance, with Northumberland able to
raise the north of England against him, and Mortimer and Glyn Dwr much of the
west and Wales.
The death of
the glamorous young Henry Percy ('Harry Hotspur'), defeated by Henry IV in
battle at Shrewsbury in 1403, is a setback for the rebels. But in 1404 Glyn Dwr
captures the important English strongholds of Aberystwyth and Harlech. He
begins now to rule as the prince of Wales, establishing an administration,
holding parliaments, negotiating with the pope about Welsh bishops. In 1405 an
alliance is even drawn up between himself, Mortimer and Northumberland as to
how they will divide England and Wales between them.
But from that
year of high hopes the tide begins to turn against Glyn Dwr, largely due to the
persistent campaigning of the other prince of Wales, the future Henry V.
In 1408 Glyn
Dwr loses Aberystwyth and Harlech. By 1410 he is reduced to the status of an
outlaw. After 1412 no more is heard of him. He is believed to have died
somewhere in hiding in about 1416.
The
long-standing dream of establishing an independent Welsh principality has
crumbled yet again. But ironically, before the end of the century, Wales
achieves something known in modern times as a reverse takeover (in which a
smaller unit takes control of a larger). Instead of a Welsh prince of Wales,
there is from 1485 a Welsh king of England and Wales - in the form of Henry
Tudor, or Henry VII.
Wales Becomes
a Unified Administrative Entity
1536-1800 CE
Acession to
the English throne of the Tudor dynasty, with its Welsh origins, transforms
Wales from a conquered territory to an integral part of the English kingdom.
The change is acknowledged in an act of parliament passed in 1536, with
modifications added in 1543. A precise Welsh border is also established in 1536
which has been retained with a couple of small changes. The status of Monmouth
was however disputed until 1970 when a court ruling placed it in Wales and the
new county of Gwent was created in 1972 which roughly corresponded to it.
The practical
purpose of these acts is to give Wales an adminstrative system, based on
counties, which is compatible with that of England. It replaces the earlier
feudal territories, granted to marcher lords for the purpose of subduing the
hostile Welsh. Wales becomes, as a result of these changes, a principality
within the English kingdom. From the Reformation onwards, its political story
merges with that of England.
Welsh
language and literature: from the 16th c. AD
The
Reformation, with its emphasis on receiving the word of God in one's own
language, brings great benefit to Wales. In the mid-16th there are fewer than
250,000 inhabitants of the principality, yet the Protestant government of
Elizabeth I is persuaded to pass an act providing for a Welsh translation of
the Anglican liturgy and of the Bible.
The Book of
Common Prayer and the New Testament are published in Welsh in 1567. The complete
Bible follows in 1588. Both provide an invaluable focus for the Welsh language
- the only version of Celtic to remain a living tongue for a large community
within the British isles, in an unbroken tradition surviving to the present
day.
At the same
period as the Reformation, the attitudes of the Renaissance have a beneficial
effect on Welsh literature. The Renaissance passion for rediscovering classical
texts becomes, in the Welsh context, a scholarly interest in the region's great
bardic tradition of oral poetry. Important works are published in the 16th
century, analyzing the grammar of the Welsh language and the rules of bardic
poetry.
There are
periods when the interest in these traditions slackens. And inevitably
immigration and other pressures (such as the use of English in schools)
gradually reduce the percentage of the population for whom Welsh is the first
language.
Nevertheless
the figures remain amazingly high. From a Welsh-speaking 54% of the population
in 1891, the proportion reduces to 37% in 1921, 26% in 1961 and 20% in 1991.
This present-day 20% amounts to about half a million people - more than have
spoken Welsh at most periods in the past, and sufficient in number to be
provided with radio and television in their own language.
The
rediscovery of the bardic past gathers new vigour during the 19th century,
answering the twin needs of Welsh nationalism and the contemporary fascination
with everything medieval. Soon after Scott popularizes medieval Scotland,
Charlotte Guest does something similar for Wales with her translation in
1839-49 of the Mabinogion.
The
Mabinogion is a collection of eleven tales, based on the ancient oral tradition
but written in prose between the 11th and 13th century for recital at the
courts of Welsh princes. The tales survive in two manuscripts of the 14th-15th
century, the White Book of Rhydderch and the Red Book of Hergest.
The
expression of the Welsh identity through language, literature and music is seen
above all in the tradition of the Eisteddfod. Competitions between bards were
common in the Middle Ages. The first assembly (the meaning of eisteddfod) to
combine both musical and literary contests is generally considered to be a
Christmas gathering held in Cardigan castle in 1176 by Rhys ap Gruffudd.
The interest
in Eisteddfods (or in Welsh eisteddfodau) declines during the 16th and 17th
centuries but is revived in the late 18th century - spurred on by the
Cymmrodorion Society, a group of homesick Welshmen living in London. Their
enthusiasm leads to regional eisteddfods being held throughout Wales, followed
by the decision taken, in Denbigh in 1860, to establish a national body to be
known as The Eisteddfod. As a result the first official National Eisteddfod was
held in Aberdare in 1861. Now an annual event, it ends each year with the
chairing of the bard, the poet whose work in the traditional bardic form has
won the top prize.
But the 18th
century does more than revive the eisteddfod. It provides a magnficent new
outlet for Welsh musical talent with the arrival of Methodism.
Methodism and
the chapel choir: from the 18th century
Wales is one
of the earliest centres of the evangelical revival in Britain. While the Wesley
brothers are still at Oxford, a Welsh layman, Howel Harris, experiences a sudden
revelation in 1735 which sends him on the road as an itinerant preacher. From
1737 he teams up with a like-minded curate, Daniel Rowlands. The two are
already making a stir in Wales when the Methodist George Whitefield joins them
for a few months during 1739.
Methodism,
with its richly emotional appeal, suits the Welsh - though the influence of
Whitefield means that they adopt the harsher Calvinist variety, emphasizing
predestination (an issue on which Whitefield differs from the Wesleys).
Just as Charles
Wesley provides the English Methodists with an abundance of satisfying hymns
and tunes, so an early Methodist minister, William Williams, does the same for
the Welsh (he is the author of more than 800 hymns).
Within this
new communal tradition the all-male chapel choir becomes one of the most
characteristic of Welsh institutions. The chapel itself is the centre of social
and cultural life - particularly in the isolated valleys which acquire a new
prosperity during the 19th century on account of their coal.
Coal and
iron: 19th - 20th century CE
Wales is well
equipped with raw materials for the developing Industrial Revolution. Abundant
supplies are available locally to meet the new demand for iron (particularly for
railway lines) and for coal (to fuel the furnaces of iron works, railway
engines and steamships).
The Welsh
supply of coal outlasts the iron, so from the mid-19th century new iron and
steel works are established near the harbours of the south coast, round
Swansea, Cardiff and Newport. Here foreign ore can be imported, while coal to
fuel the furnaces can be fetched the short distance from the mining valleys
which run up into the hills.
These mining
valleys, with their tight-knit communities centred on the chapel, become the
prevailing image of Wales. Yet they are just one specific part of the country,
in the south. Elsewhere much of the principality remains entirely agricultural,
exporting mainly wool. In the north there is another region of industrial
enterprise, quarrying slate to roof new houses for a rapidly expanding national
population.
Even so, the
valleys are in a real sense the heart of modern Wales. They suffer grievously
in the depression of the 1930s, and in the subsequent slackening of demand for
high-cost British coal. And they play a correspondingly important part in the
development of left-wing Welsh politics.
Welsh Labour
and Nationalism: 1900-1999 CE
The Welsh
mining town of Merthyr Tydfil plays a significant role in the story of Labour
in 20th-century Britain.
The founding
father of the Labour party, Keir Hardie, loses his first parliamentary seat
(London's West Ham) in the election of 1895. For five years he is out of
parliament, campaigning incessantly to establish trades union and Labour
solidarity. Then, in 1900, he wins Merthyr Tydfil as the candidate of the new
Labour Representation Committee.
For most of
the next six years he is the only Labour member in the commons until a sudden
change, in the 1906 election, swells the Labour representation in parliament to
twenty-nine.
A decisive
corner has been turned, and the member for Merthyr Tydfil is now at the head of
a strongly developing political movement (Hardie retains the Welsh seat until
his death in 1915).
The Labour
party suits the radical mood of the Welsh valleys, but it also appeals
increasingly to other regions of the principality. In the 1966 election Wales
returns 34 Labour members to parliament and three Conservatives. Three decades
later, after the 1997 election, there are 34 Labour MPs and not a single
Conservative representing a Welsh constituency. But there are now, in a
development of equal significance, four members from Plaid Cymru, the party of
Welsh nationalism.
Plaid Cymru,
meaning simply 'party of Wales', has a magnificently Welsh moment of origin.
During the National Eisteddfod in Pwllheli in the summer of 1925 six men meet
in an upstairs room of a temperance hotel. Their shared purpose is independence
for Wales; together they decide to form a Welsh party. They are ready to
contest a parliamentary seat in the general election of 1929, but the party has
no electoral success until its chairman, Gwynfor Evans, wins a Carmarthen
by-election in 1966.
Under his
leadership Plaid Cymru gradually achieves a higher profile in Wales,
particularly through the struggle to establish a Welsh television channel.
In the
familiar link between language and politics, Plaid Cymru recognizes the
importance of Welsh in the nationalist cause - and also the fact that broadcasting
will be a crucial factor in the survival of Welsh as a living language. This
important argument seems to have been won when the new Conservative government
commits itself, in 1979, to a Welsh TV channel.
A few months
later the promise is withdrawn, whereupon Gwynfor Evans declares - in May 1980
- that he will begin a hunger strike in October. A summer of demonstrations is
followed by the capitulation of the government in September. S4C (Sianel Pedwar
Cymru, Channel Four Wales) begins broadcasting in 1982.
Thereafter
Plaid Cymru representation at Westminster rises in successive elections. Two
seats are won in 1983, three in 1987, four in 1992. Meanwhile the party
benefits also from the strong advance of Britain's other Celtic nationalist party,
the SNP in Scotland.
SNP successes
in the 1968 local elections prompt the setting up of a Royal Commission to look
into the issue of devolution, with the terms of reference including Wales as
well as Scotland. The Commission, reporting in 1973, recommends Scottish and
Welsh assemblies with devolved powers within the United Kingdom. The topic is
predictably controversial.
Devolution in
Scotland and Wales 1978-1999 CE
After much
debate a Scotland Act and a Wales Act are passed in 1978, arranging for a
referendum in each region. The acts state that regional assemblies will be
established if two conditions are met: a simple majority in favour, but also a
minimum turnout of 40% of the electorate.
The referenda
are held in March 1979. In Scotland there is a small majority in favour, but
only 32% of the electorate vote. In Wales there is a large majority (4:1)
against the proposed assembly. Later in 1979 a Conservative government wins a
general election, beginning a spell in power which lasts for eighteen years.
Conservative policy is anti-devolution (though as a gesture the Stone of Scone
is returned to Scotland in 1996). So the issue hangs fire - until 1997.
'Decentralization
of power to Scotland and Wales' is in the party manifesto with which Labour
wins an overwhelming victory in the general election of 1997. The pledge is
quickly delivered. Within weeks of the election a bill is passed, arranging for
referenda to be held. The Scots are to be asked two questions: Do they want a
Scottish parliament? Do they want it to have tax-raising powers? The Welsh are
only to vote on a single issue, whether they want a Welsh assemby with devolved
powers which do not include tax raising.
In a 60.4%
turnout the Scots vote 74.3% for a parliament and 63.5% for tax-raising powers.
In a 50.3% turnout the Welsh vote by a tiny majority (0.6%) in favour of an
assembly.
Elections for
both assemblies are held in May 1999, on a system of proportional
representation. About two thirds of the candidates are returned on a first-past-the-post
basis, with the other third added from party lists to achieve the required
balance.
In both
regions Labour wins the greatest number of seats, while falling short of an
absolute majority in either. The second largest vote is in each case for
nationalism, with the SNP winning 35 seats in Scotland and Plaid Cymru 17 seats
in Wales. The Conservatives come third in both regions, and the Liberal
Democrats fourth. But the Liberal Democrats, the most natural allies for
Labour, have enough seats to provide a coalition majority in both Scotland and
Wales.
The strength
of the Plaid Cymru vote surprises and impresses many, though it is also argued
that Labour may have lost support by the centralizing manner in which Alun
Michael has been virtually imposed by Tony Blair upon the Welsh Labour party as
their leader in the run-up to the election.
With 28 seats
in the 60-seat assembly, Alun Michael forms a minority government. The assembly
is officially opened on 26 May 1999 in Crickhowell House in Cardiff. A new
building for the assembly in Cardiff is meanwhile under construction. However,
within nine months the arrangement stitched up by Tony Blair comes apart.
In February
2000 the assembly passes a vote of no confidence in Alun Michael. He is
succeeded as leader of the Wales Labour Party, and as First Secretary of the
assembly, by Rhodri Morgan - the very man kept out of the job the first time
round by the vigorous efforts of Labour party headquarters in London.
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Concerns about the
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Tekels Park is to
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Concerns are raised
about the fate of the wildlife as
The Spiritual
Retreat, Tekels Park in Camberley,
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Tekels Park is a 50
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Theosophical Society in England in 1929.
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