Tag: Gothic Revival architecture
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When an English City Drowned a Welsh Village: Llanwyddyn and the Making of Lake Vyrnwy

In the summer of 2018, after weeks of sustained heat, the waters of Lake Vyrnwy receded to levels rarely seen in recent decades (source 1). Along the exposed margins of the reservoir, fragments of masonry and faint outlines of foundations emerged from the silt, traces of lanes and walls briefly visible once more (source 1).…
Antony David Davies
adventure, books, Capel Celyn, drowned villages, extractive economy, Gothic Revival architecture, History, infrastructure and power, Lake Vyrnwy, Liverpool Corporation Waterworks Act 1880, Liverpool waterworks, Llanwyddyn, lost villages UK, montgomeryshire-history, nineteenth century Wales, Powys history, public health reform, resource extraction Wales, rural parish life, social history of Wales, St Wyddelan, submerged communities, travel, Tryweryn, upland communities, Victorian engineering, victorian-wales, Wales, water politics, Welsh Chapels, Welsh heritage, Welsh industrial history, Welsh landscape history, Welsh Nonconformity, Welsh-English relations, welsh-rural-history
