Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DolgellauDolgellau - Wikipedia

    The site of Dolgellau was, in the pre-Roman Celtic period, part of the tribal lands of the Ordovices, who were conquered by the Romans in AD 77–78. Although a few Roman coins from the reigns of Emperors Hadrian and Trajan have been found near Dolgellau, the area is marshy and there is no evidence that it was settled during the Roman period.

  2. Mar 25, 2024 · Dolgellau History. Dolgellau is a small market town, population 2,678 (2001 census) situated at the foot of the Cader Idris mountain range in southern Snowdonia. It began as a village in the twelfth century and Cymer Abbey in nearby Llanelltyd was founded in 1198. Owain Glyndŵr held the last Welsh Parliament here in 1404.

  3. She died at Ysbyty Dolgellau aged 67 in 2004. Courtesy of John Atkinson and info supplied courtesy of Wikipedia: Marion Eames (5 February 1921 – 3 April 2007) was a Welsh novelist. Marion was born in Birkenhead, Cheshire, of Welsh parents, but was brought up at Dolgellau from the age of 4, where she attended Dr Williams's School.

  4. The presence in the Roman period of only a small fortlet at Brithdir, 4km east of Dolgellau (area 15), suggests that there was a relatively sparse native population and even this fort, constructed about AD 70-80, was abandoned, at least as a defended site, by about AD 120 (Hopewell, 1997, 315-6).

  5. Dolgellau - Area 1 Dolgellau (PRN 19180) Historic background. The historic core of Dolgellau is built on the floodplain at the junction of two rivers, the Wnion (running east to west), and the Aran, which joins it from the south. The name 'Dolgellau' ('meadows of the cells') may refer to the pens used by drovers for herding animals, or to the ...

  6. History. Dolgellau is a small market town, population 2,678 (2001 census) situated at the foot of the Cader Idris mountain range in southern Snowdonia. It began as a village in the twelfth century and Cymer Abbey in nearby Llanelltyd was founded in 1198. Owain Glyndŵr held the last Welsh Parliament here in 1404.

  7. People also ask

  8. The area around Dolgellau saw the greatest concentration of fulling mills between the mid 16th- and mid 19th-centuries, many of which were sited in the River Arran valley to the south of the town. In the 18th-/19th-centuries, tanning and the production of leather, and especially the glove industry, also prospered, and the number of tourists who came to climb Cadair Idris increased.

  1. People also search for