Many of the people in my direct family and allied
families originated in Wales. I have listed here some links to some
of my local pages and some Welsh oriented web sites that might be of interest to other researchers.
Click on the image for a view of Wales - Then
and Now
The Royal Houses of Wales (The right one is in Welsh)
If you want a Hi-Resolution image click
here for English version,
here for Welsh version
(Warning: these are big files)
History of Wales, Anglesey, and Llanddeusant
"I y to ifanc"
A Welsh expression meaning, "To the next generation"
Wales, Cymru in Welsh, is part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain. It
lies on the western side of the island of Great Britain, covering 8,000
square miles (roughly 80 miles east-west, by 100 miles north-south), with
2.8 million inhabitants as of 1991.
Wales is bordered by the Irish Sea (on the north near Liverpool), the
Bristol Channel (to the south off Cardiff), England (on the east), and
Cardigan Bay and St. George's Channel (to the west) separating it from
Ireland. Thus, it features an expansive coastline, but is also home to the
Cambrian Mountains, which rise to 3,500 ft at Mt. Snowdon. Cardiff is the
capital and largest city. Large coalfields and major industries are
concentrated in the south, as is most of the population. The small island
off the northwest coast is Anglesey.
History of Wales
The earliest inhabitants of Wales, like those of the rest of Britain,
were a short, dark race, generally referred to as Iberian1. These were
succeeded by Celts2. At the time of the coming of the Romans in 55 BC, the
tribes of Wales represented a mixture of the primitive Iberians with the
later invading Celts. They bore the general name of Cymry.
After a long struggle the subjugation of these tribes was completed
during the reign (AD 69-79) of the Roman emperor Vespasian. Soon after the
Roman empire disintegrated (early 5th century) came the Anglo-Saxon3
invasion. The Celtic inhabitants of Britain took refuge in the Welsh
mountains, where, in time they were merged with their native kin and
maintained their independence against the conquerors.
The disparate clans, which were converted to Christianity by Celtic
monks, gradually coalesced, and border wars with the now-Anglo-Saxon England
were constant. Offa, ruler of the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Mercia4 in the 8th
century, built an earthwork extending the length of the Welsh border, known
as Offa's Dyke; it helped to establish a separation between the Welsh and
English.
In the 11th century William I of England set up earldoms along the Welsh
border, but for 200 years Welsh soldiers resisted the English threat to
their independence. Following a brief relaxation of English pressure in the
12th century during which Welsh medieval culture flowered, English conquest
of Wales was finally accomplished in 1282 by Edward I, who, to placate Welsh
sentiment, initiated the English custom of entitling the king's eldest son
the "Prince of Wales".
In 1485 a Welshman became the first Tudor5 king of England, Henry VII.
Under the Tudors, Wales became more assimilated with England. Henry VIII
made this official by signing the Act of Union in 1536, which united Wales
politically with England. Welsh representatives entered the English
parliament, Welsh law was abolished, and English was established as the
official language of legal proceedings. Welsh political history became that
of Great Britain.
In time, however, the "Anglicization of the gentry"6 created a breach in
Welsh society, which was further deepened by religious differences. Slow to
adopt Protestantism, the Welsh people were decidedly cool to Oliver
Cromwell's Puritanism and had to be persuaded by force. In the 18th century
they began to lean heavily toward Calvinism7, and the growth of the
Calvinistic Methodist Church was an assertion of Welsh nationalism.
Economic and social conditions in Wales during the 1800's resulted in
greatly increased emigration. A sharp increase in the population resulted in
more competition for the already limited acreage of good land. Hundreds
flocked to bid for any farms for sale. The Welsh had been emigrating to the
US since Colonial days, but the flood tide left during the mid- and
late-1800's. After the civil war the westward building railroads and land
agents flooded Europe with literature extolling the Utopia beyond the
Atlantic where land was deep and fertile, relatively cheap, and available in
unlimited amounts. About 100,000 Welsh emigrated to America during the
1800's. Of these, more than 90% settled in Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, and
Wisconsin.8
Nationalism culminated in 1920 in the disestablishment of the English
church in Wales. Welsh nationalism has been kept alive up to the present by
the Plaid Cymru party (founded in 1925), which has at times elected members
to the British Parliament and otherwise kept pressure on the major parties
to protect the special interests of Wales.
The Industrial Revolution tapped the mineral wealth of Wales, and south
Wales was soon the chief coal-exporting region of the world.
Industrialization brought poverty and unemployment, however, especially in
the 1920s and 30s. Following the boom of World War II, the government
undertook a full-scale program of industrial redevelopment, including
nationalization of the mines. Political nationalism survives as an issue; in
1979 Welsh voters decisively defeated a British proposal to limit home rule.
Anglesey
Anglesey, or Angelsea, was a former county in northwestern Wales. It
comprises many islands, including the main isle, Anglesey (which is
separated from the Welsh mainland by the Menai Strait) and the small nearby
Holy Island, both in the Irish Sea. Anglesey was settled by the Celts by
about 100 BC. It became a center of Druidism9 as a result of its being
relatively remote and naturally protected, which delayed Roman influence and
the spread of their soon-to-be-adopted religion, Christianity. But the
Romans eventually conquered (AD 61-78) the island and suppressed Druidism.
Roman ruins can still be found in Anglesey today. By the time the Romans
left (AD 406) Christianity had taken hold. Anglesey was subsequently invaded
by Vikings, Saxons, and Normans10 and fell to Edward I, King of England, in
the 13th century. In 1974 Anglesey became part of the new county of Gwynedd.
The island of Anglesey features peaceful farmland, pretty villages and
historic towns, and the panoramic views of mountains and sea. It has some of
the most impressive prehistoric remains in the British Isles, with standing
stones and burial chambers surviving in most parts of the island. The
island's main industries have been farming, fishing, and quarries.
The Welsh language is descended from the Celtic language spoken across
Britain before the Saxon invasion. Today about half a million people speak
the language. Its chief stronghold is in the northwest (Anglesey and nearby
mainland areas.)
Llanddeusant
Llanddeusant is a small village on the island of Anglesey, 7.5 miles NE
of Holyhead. The word llanddeusant in Welsh means "church of the two
saints." Llan = church; ddeu = two; and sant = saint. The village lies to
the north of the Afon (river) Alaw. Its waters were used to power the
ancient Howell Grist Mill, which ground wheat.
Llanddeusant's famous landmark is a three-story windmill to the west of
the village. Melin (mill) Llynnon was built in 1775-6 for Herbert Jones. It
was badly damaged by storms in 1918, but was restored by the borough council
sixty years later and was opened to the public in 1984. The three pairs of
millstones and the hoists now work once again, grinding flour.
Anglesey is roughly diamond-shaped, being about 25 miles across from east
to west, and also about 25 miles from north to south. The red circle on the
map marks the village of Llanddeusant, between Holyhead, the largest town on
the island, and the Llyn (lake) Alaw.
Endnotes
The Iberians were an ancient people of eastern and southern Spain.
The Celts (pronounced "Kelts") were a people who dominated much of
western and central Europe in the 1st millennium BC. The word Celt is
derived from Keltoi, the name given to these people by Herodotus and other
Greek writers. To the Romans, the Continental Celts were known as Galli, or
Gauls; those in Britain were called Britanni.
Anglo-Saxon refers to two Germanic tribes. The Angles occupied the region
that is now the state of Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. With their kindred
ethnic groups, they formed the people who came to be known as the English.
The name England is derived from them. The Saxons were originally from areas
now in Denmark and northern Germany. The term Anglo-Saxon today commonly
refers to anyone with an English ancestry.
Mercia was an Anglo-Saxon kingdom that once occupied parts of western
England, and later almost all of southern England as well.
Tudor is the family name of the dynasty that occupied the throne of
England from 1485 to 1603. The house was founded by the Welsh nobleman Owen
Tudor, who married Catherine of Valois, the widow of the English king Henry
V. Their eldest son, Edmund Tudor, married Margaret Beaufort, a descendant
of John of Gaunt, son of King Edward III. In 1485 Edmund and Margaret's son,
Henry, killed Richard III of the house of York and became Henry VII, the
first Tudor monarch. The successive Tudor sovereigns were Henry VIII and his
son and two daughters, Edward VI, Mary I, and Elizabeth I; the three died
childless. The Tudors, especially Henry VIII, played an important part in
the Reformation by making the English church, now called Anglican,
independent of the pope.
"Anglicization of the gentry" means that the former Welsh nobles, now in
power close to the throne in London, gradually became more English and less
Welsh.
Calvinism is the Christian theology of the French church reformer John
Calvin, who wrote highly influential works in the mid-1500's on the subject
of Reform from catholic doctrine. It lead to the development of the
Methodist and Presbyterian branches of Protestantism.
This entire paragraph is taken from Ancestors and Descendants of Thomas
J. Williams, Hugh J Edwards, and Hugh Parry, by M. Coburn Williams, Logan
Utah , June 1991. I found the book at the Mormon's Family History Library in
Salt Lake City about 1995.
Druidism was the religious faith of most ancient Celtic inhabitants of
Gaul (France) and the British Isles from the 2nd century BC. In parts of
Britain that the Romans were slow to invade, Druidism survived longer, until
it was supplanted by Christianity two or three centuries later. The superior
military strength of the Romans and the subsequent conversion of many
followers of Druidism to Christianity led to the disappearance of the
religion. The Druids believed in reincarnation, and descent from a supreme
being. They were also well-versed in astrology, magic, and the mysterious
powers of plants and animals; they held the oak tree and the mistletoe,
especially when the latter grew on oak trees, in great reverence, and they
customarily conducted their rituals in oak forests.
The Normans were Vikings who established colonies in the AD900's along
the north coast of current-day France (Normandy). They later conquered all
of England (1066), behind their leader, William the Conqueror, who then
became William I, King of England.