Tag: writing
-
How an Injury Changed Me

20 July 2025 will remain a date I never forget. It was a Sunday, and I bent to lift a box from beneath a shelf, incorrectly assuming that it was light. It was not. In that moment I sustained a back injury which was diagnosed as a slipped disc. The sensation has stayed with me…
-
Arthur Charles Humphreys-Owen (1836–1905): A Liberal Landowner in a Changing Wales

In the political and civic history of Montgomeryshire during the nineteenth century, Arthur Charles Humphreys-Owen stands as a representative figure of a transitional generation. Born into the professional middle ranks of respectable society, but elevated through inheritance into the county gentry, Humphreys-Owen embodied the gradual adaptation of the landed class to the expanding civic and…
-
Ann Griffiths (1776–1805): The Mystic Voice of Welsh Methodism

Within the religious and cultural history of Wales, few figures possess the quiet yet enduring authority of Ann Griffiths, the celebrated hymn writer of Montgomeryshire. Though her life was tragically short, ending at the age of only twenty-nine, her influence on Welsh Nonconformist spirituality has been profound and lasting. In an age when women seldom…
-
Rhodri Mawr and the First Architecture of Welsh Power

Introduction, Beyond Legend Rhodri Mawr, who died in 878, stands at a structural turning point in Welsh history. He was neither the first king in Wales nor the ruler of a unified nation in any modern sense. Yet during his lifetime the scale at which Welsh politics operated changed perceptibly. What had been a mosaic…
-
Herbert George Flaxman Spurrell (1877–1918), Science, Service, and a Life of Exceptional Promise

Herbert George Flaxman Spurrell stands out within my family history as a figure whose life moved far beyond the rural landscapes of Mid Wales into the international worlds of science, medicine, and imperial service. Though his career was cut short by the First World War, the scale of his intellectual achievement, and the geographical breadth…




