Tag: Welsh history
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The Mid Wales Railway, The Lost Spine of a Divided Nation

To understand the Mid Wales Railway properly, you start with the landscape itself. Mid Wales is not flat, and it is not forgiving. Rivers cut deep valleys, hills force settlements into pockets of habitability, and the human geography is defined by market towns and dispersed farms rather than industrial conurbations. The economy was pastoral and…
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The Land of Saints

A journey through the sacred canon of Wales To understand Welsh identity you must first accept a simple truth: Wales is a country whose ground is saturated with sacred memory. Not sacred in the abstract, not merely in the language of church and doctrine, but sacred in the way wells are named, in the way…
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My Political Heritage, Wales in My Blood, and the Quiet Lessons of Ancestry

Most people assume that political identity is something acquired, a set of opinions formed by the news cycle, public argument, and the shifting pressures of the present. In Wales, that assumption seldom survives contact with history. Welsh political culture was not born yesterday. Nor did it begin with devolution, or with the institutions of modern…
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The Scholar Priest: The Life and Legacy of John Cartwright Jones (1831–1875)

In the long arc of the Jones Glandwr family story, few figures embody the union of intellect, faith, and social ambition as completely as John Cartwright Jones. Born into London privilege yet anchored in Welsh heritage, he lived at the crossroads of Victorian transformation – a clergyman shaped by Oxford scholarship, a family patriarch whose…





