Tag: Welsh uplands
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Voices from the Uplands, why I wrote it, and why it matters now

Voices from the Uplands: The Davies Family and the Soul of Rural Wales is, in the simplest sense, a book about my own ancestors, the Davies family of Caeadda, Llanwrin. But I did not write it to produce another neatly ordered pedigree, nor to add one more family tree to the growing pile of genealogical summaries…
Antony David Davies
agricultural history, book-review, books, Chapel culture, Community history, Cultural heritage, diaries, domestic archives, Family archives, family history, Genealogy, Heritage preservation, Historical memory, History, letters, Llanwrin, Local history, Machynlleth, Microhistory, Montgomeryshire, Nonconformity, Oral history, photographs, Powys, Public history, Rural Wales, Social history, Wales, wales rural life, Welsh Chapels, welsh farming, Welsh history, Welsh identity, Welsh language, Welsh uplands -
A Christmas in the Victorian Welsh Uplands

In the high country of mid and north Wales, where the hills folded into one another like great, weathered blankets and the lanes were little more than tracks worn by generations of hooves and boots, Christmas in the Victorian era arrived quietly. There was no sense of sudden abundance, no dramatic break from the rhythm…
Antony David Davies
19th-century-wales, Agrarian Wales, books, Calennig, christmas, Christmas in Wales, Cultural memory, fiction, History, Mari Lwyd, Mid Wales, Nonconformist Wales, North Wales, Noson Gyflaith, Plygain, Rural communities, Rural winter life, Upland farming, Victorian Christmas, Victorian domestic life, victorian-wales, Welsh Chapels, Welsh Christmas traditions, Welsh countryside, Welsh farmhouse life, Welsh folk traditions, Welsh rural life, Welsh Social History, Welsh uplands, writing
