Amlwch
AMLWCH, a parliamentary borough, a seaport, and parish, in the hundred of Twrcelyn, union
and county of Anglesey, North Wales, 20 miles
(N. W.) from Beaumaris, and 266 (N. W. by W.) from
London; containing 6217 inhabitants. This place,
formerly an inconsiderable hamlet, inhabited only by
fishermen, has, from the variety and abundance of
the mineral treasures contained in the mountainous
district of the parish, become a populous and flourishing town. It derived its name from its situation
on a sandy beach, and its importance from the discovery of the copper-mines in its vicinity, aided by a
small cove between the rocks on the coast, which
afforded a facility of shipping the produce, and has
been subsequently improved into a safe and commodious harbour, secured by a breakwater. The
high table-land of Trysclwyn, otherwise called Parys
mountain, rises at a short distance from the town
into enormous rugged masses of coarse aluminous
shale and whitish quartz, naturally assuming a very
rude and striking appearance; while the rugged
grandeur of its exterior is further heightened by the
mining operations to which it has been subjected.
This mountain is stated to have derived its latter
name from Robert Paris or Parys, the younger, who
is named as one of the commissioners on an inquisition, in the reign of Henry IV., to fine the Anglesey insurgents in the cause of Owain Glyndwr.
From the discovery of certain works formed by the
ancient process of mining, previously to the invention of gunpowder, it is evident that copper-ore has
been worked here at a very early period; and as the
ancient Britons were known to import all their brass
utensils, it is equally probable that that period was
during the occupation of their country by the Romans.
Traces of the ancient mode of operations, by heating
the rock to an intense degree, and pouring water on
the surface, in order to make it split, are discernible
in several places; and at Llanvaethlu, a few miles
from this place, a cake of copper was found, weighing fifty pounds, and bearing a mark resembling the
Roman letter L; from which circumstance it is more
than probable that that people had smelting-works in
the neighbourhood.
But the existence of the immense treasures which
from that time had lain concealed or neglected was
not thought of till the year 1762, when Mr. Alexander Frazier, a native of Scotland, visiting Anglesey
in search of mines, and being struck with the promising appearance of the Parys mountain, induced
Sir Nicholas Bayley, the proprietor, to make some
experiments, and on sinking shafts in the mountain,
copper-ore was discovered. Before a sufficient quantity of it, however, could be obtained to defray the
expenses of the work, the mine was inundated with
water, and the operations were consequently suspended. About two years after, Messrs. Roe and
Co., of Macclesfield, applying to Sir Nicholas Bayley
for a lease of the mine of Penrhyn dû, in the county
of Carnarvon, obtained it only upon condition of their
taking also a lease of part of the Parys mountain,
called Mona mine, and carrying on a level for the
purpose of continuing the works which had been
previously abandoned. With this condition they reluctantly complied, and upon making a fair trial, ore
was discovered; but the expense of procuring it far
exceeding the profits, the adventurers, after carrying
on their works at a great loss for some time, determined to discontinue operations. Their agent, however, previously to abandoning an enterprise upon
which so much labour had been bestowed, and so
much money expended, resolved upon making another and final effort. For this purpose he divided
his men into several small companies, and having
observed, near that part of the mountain which is
called the Golden Venture, a spring of water which,
from its appearance, he conceived must issue from a
mineral bed, he ordered his men to sink shafts in
several places, within 700 or 800 yards of the spot,
and in less than two days they discovered, at the
depth only of seven feet from the surface, that vast
body of mineral ore which has been subsequently
worked with so much advantage to the proprietors.
This important discovery was made on the 2nd of
March, 1768, and the anniversary of that day was
for many years celebrated as a festival by the miners
of the district, and St. Chad considered their patron
saint.
In 1775, the Rev. Edward Hughes, in right of his
wife, who was joint proprietor with Sir Nicholas
Bayley of another part of Parys mountain, now
called Parys mine, commenced a series of operations,
and discovered a still larger body of mineral ore, the
successful working of which laid the foundation of
the immense wealth of his son, the present Lord
Dinorben. The Parys mine soon after its discovery
became the joint property of the Earl of Uxbridge
and the Rev. Mr. Hughes, and the management
was committed to Mr. Thomas Williams, a native
of Anglesey, who subsequently held on lease a part
of Sir Nicholas Bayley's moiety, and by his unremitting labours realized a large fortune. Under the
superintendence of Mr. Williams, the works began to
flourish, and in the course of a few years, several
subordinate companies of melters, refiners, and manufacturers were formed at Holywell, Swansea, Ravenhead, Birmingham, Marlow, and Wraysbury; and
warehouses for the sale of the copper were opened
at London, Liverpool, and Bristol. These various
establishments, all under the direction of Mr. Williams, formed collectively a business of almost unexampled magnitude, involving a fluctuating property
of at least one million sterling, and in which numerous
opulent individuals had a direct interest, and several
thousand persons obtained employment. Towards
the close of the last century, the immense produce of
the Parys mountain exceeded the aggregate produce
of all the other copper-mines in the kingdom, and
had such an effect upon the market, that, for some
years, a severe competition existed between the
Anglesey and Cornish companies, which at length
ended in a coalition, advantageous to themselves, but
injurious to those manufacturers to whom the use of
copper was essential. The inhabitants of Birmingham, Liverpool, Wolverhampton, and other towns
interested in the trade, having made an unsuccessful
application to parliament, for relief against this monopoly, an association of spirited individuals, called
the "Birmingham Copper-Mining Company," purchased mines in Cornwall, and, erecting smeltinghouses in the neighbourhood of Swansea, were
enabled to supply the manufacturers at a more
moderate price, and thus completely destroyed the
effect of the coalition. The mines in the parish continued to flourish until 1800, but from that year to
1811, the Mona mines were worked at considerable
loss: to use a phrase of Mr. Williams's, "the mines
were honey-combed." Owing to the poverty of the
miners and the want of employment, arising from
the depression of the trade, the town was brought to
a state of great distress; from which, however, it
happily recovered upon a new company taking a
lease of Mona mine, in 1811, and by the advancement of a large capital, and the skilful management
of the agents who superintended it.
The town having continued prosperous and flourishing, is now of considerable size; it is provided
with excellent water from various springs in the neighbourhood. The body of copper-ore contained in the
mountain is of unknown extent: and, instead of the
usual process of mining, it was at one time quarried out
in some parts in solid masses, which were afterwards
broken into small pieces, previously to its undergoing
the necessary process of separating the ore from the
matrix of stone in which it is embedded. The Parys
and the Mona mines are both on the same vein,
which in many instances exceeded one hundred yards
in breadth, descending to a great depth; and have
been worked to a very considerable extent in a direct
line, with numerous ramifications in various directions, from which, including open cast excavations
and subterraneous workings, besides shafts, levels,
&c., many hundred thousand cubic yards of earth
and ore have been removed. The principal veins
contain ore in what the workmen term "bellies."
Since 1811, the mines have been worked under cover
by the sinking of shafts and driving of levels, as is
usual in mines scientifically conducted, being the
only mode that can be adopted to follow the veins in
depth, one part of the Mona mine being 600 feet
below the base of the hill. Some idea of the quantity
of ore contained in the Mona mine may be formed
from the result of two contracts for three months
each, made in the year 1787, exclusively of other
smaller contracts during the same period: from one
of these were obtained, within that time, as many as
2931 tons of good copper-ore; and from the other,
488 tons.
Divers other ores have been discovered. A bed
of yellowish greasy clay, varying from one to four
yards in thickness, lying above the copper-ore, and
not more than two feet below the surface, contains
lead in the proportion of from six hundred to a thousand lb. per ton, each ton of metal yielding no less
than fifty-seven ounces of silver. Mixed with this
earth are frequently found portions of the colour of
cinnabar, probably indicating the presence of sulphureous arsenic silver ores, or of quicksilver. On
the temporary decline of the copper-trade, works for
the smelting of the lead-ore were erected on a large
scale; but, owing to the high price of coal, and the
decreasing demand for lead, the undertaking was
ultimately abandoned. The copper-ore is generally
of the yellow kind, and contains pyrites, sulphur, and
from four to five per cent. of copper. Some black
ore has been raised, containing from fifteen to twenty
per cent. of copper; and parts of the vein have produced fine specimens of native copper, adhering, in
a foliated form, to the sides of the intervening rock,
and probably once held in solution and precipitated
by the ferruginous quality of the substance to which
it adhered.
The ore, after being raised, is broken into small
lumps, and separated as much as possible from the
waste; it is then conveyed to kilns, differing in
shape and dimensions, in which it is exposed for a
period of nine or ten months to the action of a
gentle fire, the sulphur being thus separated from
the copper, which is afterwards sent to the smeltinghouses. The kilns contain in general from four to
thirteen hundred tons of ore, and attached to them
are chambers, into which the sulphur, instead of evaporating, is conducted by means of flues in order to
be condensed: the walls of the kilns, generally about
four or five feet in height, and of sufficient strength to
bear the lateral pressure of the ore, vary in length in
proportion to the quantity they are intended to contain. The ore is heaped up to the height of four or
five feet above the walls, in a long convex pile, and
closely covered with stones and other matter, luted
with clay, to prevent evaporation. When it is once
lighted, the ore continues to burn for the period
assigned, during which the chamber is cleared out
as may be required. The sulphur was formerly refined into cubes and cones, principally used in the
manufacture of gunpowder and vitriolic acid, and
into small rolls, which were chiefly sent to London,
forming the stone brimstone exposed for sale in the
shops: at present it is used, in the state of flour, for
making sulphuric acid. Prior to the year 1784, the
whole of the ore was calcined in open kilns on the
top of the hill, the sulphureous vapour exhaling from
which, being condensed in the atmosphere, shed a
malignant influence on the soil, and converted several
hundred acres of land adjoining into a barren waste,
especially between the mountain and the sea. But
since the fumes have been condensed in the chambers
appropriated for their reception, this extensive area of
land has assumed its former appearance of comparative
fertility.
The ore in the mine abounds with sulphureous
acid, which, uniting with the water, flows through
the fissures of the vein, and combining with the
copper, holds it in solution. The water, thus impregnated, is raised into reservoirs, or pits, ranged
in regular series at different elevations, according to
the declivity of the ground; and iron being put into
it, the acid, having a stronger affinity to that metal,
detaches itself from the copper, which is precipitated
to the bottom in a congeries of small granulæ. In
order to expedite the process of precipitation, the
iron is frequently scraped, and a fresh surface is thus
exposed to the action of the acid; but by this means
certain portions of the decomposed iron mixing with
the precipitated copper, the quality of the latter is
impaired and rendered less valuable. The proportion of copper contained in the mass thus precipitated
varies from five to twenty-five per cent.; but if
wrought iron be used, and suffered to remain without scraping, till it is completely decomposed by the
acid, it will precipitate nearly its own weight of
sediment; and a ton of sediment thus precipitated
will generally produce, when dried and smelted,
about twelve hundred-weight of pure copper, which
is more malleable and of a finer quality than that
produced from the ore. After the precipitation has
taken effect in the reservoirs of the upper series, the
water is drawn off into those on the next lower level,
and from those again into the next lower, till the
principal parts of the copper held in solution have
subsided. The copper is taken from the reservoirs
in the form of mud, and when dried is sent to the
smelting-houses. Formerly, after the mineral water
had been drawn off into the last receptacle, the iron
was extracted from its solution in the acid in the form
of green vitriol, or copperas; but this plan not
proving sufficiently profitable, it was abandoned for
the manufacture of alum, which also not realizing the
gains anticipated, was in its turn relinquished. At
present, the only value of the sulphate of iron in the
lower pits is derived from its depositing the oxide of
iron, called yellow ochre, which is refined, dried,
and shipped for the use of painters. The better sort
of copper-ore was at one time smelted in furnaces in
South Wales and Lancashire, and only the poorer at
Amlwch; but the whole is now smelted at this place.
The smelting-houses are upon a very extensive scale,
and contain a vast number of reverberating furnaces,
the chimneys of which are more than forty feet high:
the furnaces are charged every four hours, with
from eighteen to twenty hundred-weight of ore and
slag, producing about half a hundred-weight of regulus, from which, by refinement, nearly one-half of
pure metal is obtained.
The strikingly rugged and barren aspect of the
Parys mountain was formerly rendered more wild by
the immense heaps of burning ore that were piled up
on various parts of its surface; and the noise of the
workmen employed in breaking the masses of ore
which had been detached from the mountain, and
the reverberated roar of frequent explosions of gunpowder used in blasting the rock, added to the dismal
scene an effect truly appalling. Numbers of the workmen might be observed at different elevations on the
edges of tremendous precipices, drawing up the
broken ore in baskets; while others, suspended by
ropes about half-way down, were employed, apparently at the imminent hazard of their lives, in perforating the steep sides of the mountain, in which,
after having secured a resting-place for their feet,
they opened a wide chasm, by detaching large
masses of ore, that fell with prodigious noise to the
bottom.
Towards the close of the last century, when the
Parys and Mona mines were very prosperous and in
vigorous operation, their produce amounted to 30,000
tons of available ore annually, and 1500 men were
employed in them; but when, about the year 1800,
the works declined, and many of the workmen were
obliged to seek employment in other places, not more
than 600 tons were obtained. In the year 1829,
16,400 tons, and in 1830, 15,650 tons, of copper-ore,
were produced from these works, which, in the several
processes of mining, dressing, smelting, and refining,
afford employment to more than 1500 persons. The
Mona mine now belongs to the Marquess of Anglesey;
and the Parys mine jointly to the Marquess, and
Lord Dinorben. Breweries, flour-mills, paint-works,
and works for preparing clay for china-ware, have
been established; and alkali-works on an extensive
scale have been formed by Mr. Hill, to whom a lease
was granted by the proprietors of Parys mines, on
the condition that he would consume their sulphur on
the spot. Little or no trade is carried on, except
such as is immediately connected with the mining
operations and the works dependent on them.
The mineral produce is shipped at Amlwch, which
is considered a creek to the port of Beaumaris, and
the harbour of which has been much enlarged by the
proprietors of the mines. In 1793 an act of parliament was obtained for the improvement of the port
and the formation of a harbour, under the provisions
of which a pier was erected, in 1814; and in 1822, a
breakwater was constructed, by which means this has
been rendered one of the most secure and commodious harbours on the coast of North Wales. There
is a lighthouse with a steady light at the entrance to
it. The harbour is accessible to vessels of 300 tons'
burthen; and from thirty to forty vessels, of from
30 to 200 tons' burthen, are employed in conveying the mineral produce of the district to its several
destinations, and in bringing the articles requisite
for carrying on the extensive works here, and the
supply of the inhabitants. The principal exports
are copper, ochre, salt, and corn, and the chief imports coal, old iron to be used in the precipitation
of copper, and shop goods of various kinds. At
Amlwch is a literary and scientific institution under
the patronage of the Marquess of Anglesey, supported by some of the most intelligent and influential
classes in Anglesey and Carnarvonshire, in which
lectures are delivered monthly, and to which mechanics are admitted members on an annual payment
of two shillings. A customary market, which is
abundantly supplied with provisions of all kinds, is
held weekly; and there are four fairs for the sale of
cattle, on March 8th, May 4th, August 12th, and
October 21st.
By the Act for "Amending the representation of
the people in England and Wales," Amlwch was
constituted a borough, in conjunction with Holyhead
and Llangevni, contributory to Beaumaris, and
sharing in the return of a member to parliament.
The boundaries are minutely described in the Appendix. The right of election is vested in every
male person of full age occupying, either as owner,
or as tenant under the same landlord, a house or
other premises of the annual value of not less than
ten pounds, provided he be capable of registering as
the act directs: the present number of houses worth
ten pounds per annum and upwards is seventy-nine.
The mayor of Beaumaris is the returning officer.
The parish comprises 9270 acres, of which 300
are waste or common land. It is divided into three
parts, viz., Amlwch, Pwllcôch; Llechog, Bodynod,
with Gorddwr; and Llawr-y-Llan; to which, in
levying the county rate, the adjoining parishes of
Bôdewryd and Gwredog are considered a fourth
division. The living is a perpetual curacy, endowed
with £200 private benefaction, £200 royal bounty,
and £1100 parliamentary grant; total net income,
£230; patron, the Bishop of Bangor, who possesses
the great tithes, which were appropriated in the reign
of James I., and have been commuted for a rent-charge
of £908. 14. 6., out of which the curate is allowed
£80 per annum. The church, dedicated to St. Elaeth,
a spacious and handsome structure with a lofty square
embattled tower crowned with pinnacles, was erected
in 1800, at an expense of £2500, defrayed by the
Earl of Uxbridge, the Rev. Edward Hughes, and
Mr. Williams. In the parish were formerly two
chapels of ease, both of which are now in ruins; one,
four miles to the west of Amlwch, called LlanLleianau, or "the cell of the nuns," and the other
about the same distance to the south, called St. Cadog.
There are places of worship for Calvinistic and Wesleyan Methodists, Baptists, and Independents.
Mrs. Eleanor Kynnier, in 1689, gave by deed
£311, directing the interest to be appropriated to the
payment of a master to teach poor children of the
parish to read. A school was accordingly kept up
till the year 1821, when a National school was established, and a building erected at an expense of
£1200, defrayed by £300 accumulation of interest
from the fund, and subscriptions by the miners and
inhabitants. In aid of the annual subscriptions, the
interest of Mrs. Kynnier's donation has, since that
time, been applied; the total income is about £100.
At this school, which is spacious and well constructed,
about 140 boys and 100 girls are gratuitously taught.
A Sunday school, in connexion with the Established
Church, is attended by eighty boys and fifty girls;
and a large number of persons, both children and
adults, are instructed in sixteen Sunday schools belonging to the dissenters, by whom they are supported
by subscriptions and collections made at their respective places of worship. A few donations and bequests by different benefactors, amounting in the
aggregate to £36 per annum, are lost to the parish;
but it is entitled to send one poor man to the almshouse at Bangor, under the will of Bishop Rowlands,
the founder.
Near the extremity of the parish, bordering upon
that of Llanbadrig, are the remains of the monastery
of Llan-Lleianau, situated near the sea-shore, and
consisting principally of some traces of the foundation, and ruins of sepulchral memorials scattered over
the extensive cemetery. In 1841, as the workmen
of Messrs. Parry and Jones were digging some
ochre-pits contiguous, they discovered a gigantic
skeleton, measuring the astonishing length of seven
feet seven inches, and in perfect preservation. Not
far from the same spot are the remains of a British
fortress, called Dinas. The ancient well styled Fynnon Elaeth was formerly in high estimation for the
efficacy of its waters in the cure of various diseases,
and is still held in some degree of repute.
Amroath (Ambroth, or Amroth)
AMROATH (AMBROTH, or AMROTH),
a parish, in the union and hundred of Narberth,
county of Pembroke, South Wales, 7 miles (S. E.)
from Narberth; containing 779 inhabitants. This
parish is situated on the western shore of Carmarthen
bay. It abounds with coal of a peculiarly fine quality, which, burning without smoke or any offensive
smell, is much in request for drying malt and hops;
for this purpose, considerable quantities are shipped
from a place called Wiseman's Bridge, in vessels of
fifty or sixty tons' burthen, for Bristol, and other
places on the banks of the Severn. This part of the
bay is celebrated for salmon, cod, and flat-fish, which
are taken in abundance, for the supply of the market
at Tenby, five miles distant. Iron-ore was obtained
in the parish, during the existence of the Penbrey
Iron Company; but the operations have been suspended since the stoppage of their works. The living
is a discharged vicarage, rated in the king's books at
£3. 18. 6½., and endowed with £600 royal bounty
and £600 parliamentary grant; net income, £112;
patron and impropriator, Charles Poyer Callen, Esq.
The church, dedicated to St. Elidyr, is an ancient
structure in the early style of English architecture,
with a lofty square embattled tower, and is well fitted
up. A school, for the gratuitous instruction of an
unlimited number of children of both sexes, was endowed in 1789 by D. Rees, Esq., of the city of
London, who gave £20 per annum to the parish, of
which £5, according to the will of the testator, are
distributed among the most deserving of the poor,
and the remainder appropriated to the maintenance
of the school, in which are at present about seventyfive children. The endowment amounts to £666.
13. 4. three per cent. consols, vested in respectable
trustees; the present school-room was erected by the
parish, in 1832. A Sunday school, which is supported by subscription, is attended by about fifty
children, nearly all of whom participate in the benefits of the day school.
In the vicinity of Amroath are several elegant
seats, of which two are within the parish. Of these,
Amroath Castle, originally either the residence of
Cadwgan ab Bleddyn, Prince of Powys, or the site
of his palace, and subsequently the seat of the family
of Elliot, at which period it was called Eare Weare,
has been modernised into a marine castellated mansion. It was at this place, according to some writers,
that Cadwgan ab Bleddyn gave a sumptuous banquet
to the neighbouring chiefs, among whom was Gerald
de Windsor, lord of Carew, with his wife Nêst, whom
the son of Cadwgan afterwards carried off by force
from Carew Castle, as is noticed in the account of
that place. Colby Lodge is situated in a highly
romantic dell, opening at one extremity towards the
sea; it commands a fine sea view, and is enriched in
other parts with scenery pleasingly varied, forming a
beautiful and sequestered retreat.
Andrew's, St.
ANDREW'S, ST., a parish, in the union of
Cardiff, hundred of Dinas-Powys, county of
Glamorgan, South Wales, 5¾ miles (S. W.) from
Cardiff; containing 497 inhabitants. This parish is
situated on a line of road running along the coast,
and is bounded on the north by Michaelstone-le-Pit,
on the south by Sully, on the east by Llandough and
Cogan, and on the west by Cadoxton and Wenvoe.
It comprises by admeasurement 3149 acres, of which
800 are arable, 2000 meadow and pasture, 300 wood,
and the rest common. The soil, which varies considerably, is in some places a tenacious blue clay,
and in others a fine reddish-brown loam producing
all kinds of grain, potatoes, &c., of good quality;
beans are grown upon the clayey portion, and some
parts that are wet and marshy are appropriated to
the pasturage of young cattle and the growth of
coarse hay, a great part of the pasture being open
moorland, which is mown yearly and afterwards used
for grazing. The substratum consists of magnesian
and lias limestone, the latter of which is the basis of
the clayey soil. The ground is rather elevated and
hilly towards the inland, or northern, side of the
parish, and level towards the Bristol Channel, or
southern side. The wood is chiefly oak and ash coppice. The lands are subject to partial inundation
from the overflowing of a small stream, called DinasPowys brook; it runs through the south-eastern part
of the parish towards the south, and empties itself
into the Channel. The village, which is large, is
called Dinas-Powys, from an ancient fortress that
existed here and also gave name to the hundred.
The living is a rectory, rated in the king's books
at £14. 13. 1½., and in the patronage of the Crown:
the tithes have been commuted for a rent-charge of
£355, and there is a glebe of seventy-five acres,
valued at £96 per annum, with a commodious rectoryhouse, built by the Rev. Windsor Richards. The
church, which is antique in appearance, contains about
120 sittings. At the east end of the north aisle,
parallel with the chancel, was the burial-place of a
respectable family named Howel, long since extinct,
resident at Bouville, and owners of a great part of
the parish; it was formerly kept in repair by the Lee
family, the present proprietors of part of the Bouville
estate, but the aisle has been pulled down for some
years, and thrown open to the churchyard. In the
floor of this aisle is a stone which bore the following
inscription:—"Here lyeth the body of John Gibbon
James, buried the 14 of August, 1601. And Margaret Mathew, his wife, buried the 8 of January,
1631. He aged ninety-nine, she aged one hundred
and twenty-four." The inscription is now nearly
obliterated, from the influence of the weather since
the aisle was removed. There is a place of worship
for Calvinistic Methodists, with a Sunday school held
in it. Divers benefactions of small amount have been
made for the use of the poor, consisting of bequests
of £2 by William David, and £10 by Thomas Stevens, in 1699; of £5 by Edward Howels, in 1709;
of £5 by William Morgan, in 1718; and of £5 by
Thomas Thomas, in 1729. These sums were vested
in trust with the overseers, but no record exists of
their appropriation to charitable purposes, except,
probably, in the purchase of a poor-house in the
churchyard, which is now nearly a ruin. On part of
the site of the ancient mansion of Bouville, situated
at the north-western extremity of the parish, a farmhouse has been erected by R. F. Jenner, Esq., one of
whose ancestors purchased the mansion, together with
a portion of the estate: there are still some slight
vestiges of the ancient building.
The fortress of Dinas-Powys was situated on the
north-eastern side of the parish. It is stated to have
been built by Iestyn ab Gwrgan, who succeeded to
the kingdom of Glamorgan in 1043, and became possessed of the district called Trêv Esyllt by marriage
with Denis, the daughter of Bleddyn ab Cynvyn,
Prince of Powys. He is said to have called the
castle, after his wife, Denis-Powys; but this etymology is probably incorrect, as the village is invariably
called Dinas-Powys, meaning the city of Powys;
and the castle, Dinas-Powys Castle, in all likelihood
in honour of Iestyn's father-in-law, the Prince of
Powys. It does not appear from the remains to have
been built as a place of permanent residence, but as
an asylum for the inhabitants and their cattle during
the feuds of ancient times. The ruins merely consist
of four walls, between thirty and forty feet high, and
six feet thick, rudely built of unhewn stone, with
battlements about five feet high, and a platform three
feet wide within, inclosing an oblong area of seventy
yards by thirty-five. There are two entrances; one,
apparently the principal, at the east end, now, from
the falling-in of the wall, presenting only a wide
breach; and the other on the north side, about nine
feet high, and six feet wide, arched over with rough
unhewn stones. In the two walls at the end, and the
wall on the north side, are ranges of square holes,
nine inches in diameter, plastered with mortar, distant
from each other five or six feet horizontally, and about
three feet perpendicularly, which were probably intended for the admission of air. Within the area a
mound of earth and stones, of very easy ascent, rises
to the top of the wall on the south side; and near the
northern extremity are the foundations of some walls,
rather difficult to be traced, which appear to have
formed two separate apartments. On the outside of
the great walls, at the north-western corner, is a small
heap of ruins, probably those of an arx, or tower, appendant to the castle, with which it appears to have
communicated by means of a narrow door; and within
the last century, there was a subterraneous passage,
commencing in the side of the rocky hill forming the
site of the castle, and proceeding in a direction towards
this tower, but which has been filled up. The ruins
of Dinas-Powys are the property of the Lee family,
who have caused some parts of the walls to be repaired,
to prevent their further decay.
Andrew's, St., Minor
ANDREW'S, ST., MINOR, a parish, in the
union of Bridgend and Cowbridge, hundred of
Ogmore, county of Glamorgan, South Wales,
4½ miles (S. W.) from Cowbridge; containing 18
inhabitants. This parish derives its name from the
dedication of its ancient chapel to St. Andrew, and is
distinguished by the adjunct Minor from the parish
of St. Andrew's, in the hundred of Dinas-Powys, in
the same county. It is pleasantly situated in the
great vale of Glamorgan, in the south-eastern part of
the county, and near the northern shore of the Bristol
Channel, distant only a few miles from the coast. It
is of small extent, comprising only one estate, called
Clementston, which is co-extensive with the parish.
Clementston House, which has received considerable
additions and improvements, and has undergone a
course of thorough repair, for the residence of its
present proprietor, is a handsome, well-built mansion,
agreeably situated in grounds tastefully disposed.
The living is a sinecure rectory, in the patronage of
T. Franklin, Esq., of Clementston, who, as proprietor
of that estate, pays the minister a modus of £5. The
church or chapel, which appears to have been originally built for the accommodation of the family and
household at Clementston, is now in ruins.
Angle, or Nangle
ANGLE, or NANGLE, a parish, in the hundred of Castlemartin, union and county of Pembroke, South Wales, 10 miles (W.) from Pembroke; containing 388 inhabitants. This place is
situated at the south-western extremity of the county,
in an angle of Milford Haven, affording excellent
anchorage for small vessels; from which circumstance
it probably obtained its name. It is traversed by the
road from Pembroke to the coast. The parish is
bounded on the north by Milford Haven and Angle
bay, on the south and south-west by the Bristol Channel, and on the east and south-east by the parishes of
Castlemartin and Rhôscrowther. It comprises by
computation about 2100 acres, of which 934 are arable,
788 pasture, 160 sandy burrow, 20 wood, and 195
acres cliff, waste, &c.; the soil is generally of a sandy
nature, and produces good crops of corn, hay, turnips,
and potatoes. Limestone of very excellent quality is
found, which, being susceptible of a fine polish, is
formed into mantel-pieces; blocks are also occasionally sent for the works in Pembroke dockyard, and
portions of it are wrought in various kinds of buildings: the chief part, however, is used by the farmers
for manure. The surface in some parts is hilly, and
the scenery, both local and distant, picturesque and
interesting, the eminences commanding beautiful
views of Milford Haven, the Bristol Channel, &c.
In the parish are several mansions of some consideration, namely, the Castle, an ancient castellated structure; Bonjiston, formerly the seat of Lord Lion,
ancestor of the present Earl Cawdor; and a seat
called the Hall, a neat mansion of modern erection.
There is a good village, in which the chief part of
the population reside. The females are employed in
platting straw for bonnets, hassocks, and matting;
and during the season, the men are occupied in
dredging for oysters.
The living consists of a sinecure rectory and a discharged vicarage, the former rated in the king's
books at £10. 10. The latter is rated at £3. 19. 2.,
and endowed with £600 royal bounty; annual value,
£80; patron, the Bishop of St. David's. One-fourth
of the tithes is appropriated to the vicarage, and the
remaining three-fourths to the rectory. The church,
which is dedicated to St. Mary, measures eighty-four
feet in length, including the chancels, and twenty-one
feet in breadth. There is a day school, commenced
in 1823, and containing from forty to fifty boys and
girls, some of whom are gratuitously taught; also a
Sunday school, commenced in 1830, and held in the
premises of the day school. The ruins of a building
that belonged to a monastic order, are situated here;
and near the entrance of the Haven are the remains of
an ancient building called the Block-House, directly
opposite a similar one in the parish of Dale, in the
hundred of Rhôs: from its situation it appears to have
been erected for the protection of the entrance, probably in the reign of Henry VIII., or Elizabeth;
but, from the excellency of the masonry, some tourists
have ascribed to it a Roman origin.
Anglesey
ANGLESEY, an insular county of North
Wales, surrounded by the Irish sea, except on the
south-east, on which side it is separated from the
county of Carnarvon by the long, narrow, and rocky
strait called the Menai. It extends from 53° 6' to
53° 23' (N. Lat.), and from 4° 20' to 5° 5' (W. Lon.);
and comprises, according to Evans's Map of North
Wales, 173,000 acres, or upwards of 270 square miles.
According to the last census, it contains 11,488 inhabited houses, 746 uninhabited, and 135 in progress
of erection; and the population amounts to 50,890, of
which number 24,369 are males, and 26,521 females.
The annual value of real property assessed to the
property and income tax for the year ending April,
1843, was as follows: lands, £129,063; houses,
£15,232; tithes, £15,114; mines, £5834; quarries,
£80: total, £165,323.
This island anciently formed part of the territory
of the Ordovices, by whom it was variously called
Ynys dywell, or "the Shady Island;" Ynys y Cedeirn,
from its heroes, or powerful Druids; and Ynys Vôn,
or Ynys Môn, afterwards written singly Môn, which
the Romans latinized into Mona. From the first of
these names, Mr. Rowlands, in his "Mona Antiqua
Restaurata," supposes the Thule of the Romans to
have been derived, and considers Anglesey as the
"ultima Thule." The same respectable antiquary
thinks that the name Môn is derived from the position of the island with respect to the other parts of
Britain; that syllable, with the same sound, being
found in the names of other western extremities of
this and other countries inhabited by the Celtæ.
Thus Cornwall was called by the Romans Danmonium (the furthest point of it being to this day called
Penvonlaz, or Wlad); the Isle of Man, Moneda; and
the westernmost part of Ireland, Momonia, or in Irish,
Mown. The common ancient British appellation of
the island, viz., Môn mam Gymru, "Môn, the mother,
or nurse, of Wales," is supposed by some to allude
to its productiveness, which afforded so great a supply
of food to the other parts of Wales; by others the
name is derived from its having been the chief residence of the Druids, whom the primitive Britons
considered the parents of science and the guardians
of society. This region, from its remote and insular
situation, its vicinity to the Isle of Man, and the
facility with which a passage might hence be made
to that island, or to Ireland, appears to have been
chosen by the Druids, as their most secure asylum,
during the persecution which they endured from the
invading Romans.
The first Roman commander who penetrated as
far as Mona was Suetonius Paulinus, to whom
the supreme authority in Britain was entrusted in
the year 58. Having subdued the continental part
of North Wales, this general crossed the Menai by
means of flat-bottomed boats, and by swimming that
arm of the sea at low water; and made an easy conquest of the island, in spite of the opposition of the
Druids, many of whom he massacred, cutting down
their groves, overturning their altars, and destroying
the seminary of that order. He is thought to have
made his entrance into Mona at Porthamel ferry,
five miles westward from the site of the Menai
suspension bridge. Before, however, Suetonius had
wholly completed his conquest, his operations were
interrupted by a formidable insurrection of the country in his rear, under the celebrated Boadicea; and
this diversion of the Roman forces gave the remainder of the Druids a respite from persecution for
fifteen years. The next attack which they experienced was under the direction of Julius Agricola,
who was sent by the Emperor Vespasian to command
the forces in Britain, in the year 78. This commander, on his arrival, found the Ordovices, the inhabitants of North Wales, in revolt; but he soon
subdued the continental part of their territory, with
great slaughter, and compelled their chieftains to take
refuge in Mona. He then advanced to the shore of
the Menai, opposite to Moel-y-Don in this county;
and the struggling Britons, thus hemmed in, were
urged to the necessity of exerting all their energies
in defence of their lives, liberty, and sacred institutions. Tacitus describes the British army which
lined the shores to resist the landing of the Romans,
as accompanied by another army of Druids, of both
sexes, and in such confusion, that he designates them
as a multitude of viragoes and madmen. The auxiliaries of the Roman army having crossed the Menai
on horseback to the great surprise and consternation
of the Britons, a desperate struggle ensued, in which
the latter were totally defeated; and the Druids, by
command of the conqueror, were thrown into their
own sacrificial fires. Under the Roman sway, the
island is supposed to have contained one station,
situated at Caer Gybi, close to the present town of
Holyhead.
After the dissolution of the Roman power, and
during the reign of Einion Urdd, son of Cynedda,
who united under his government the kingdom of
the Strath-Clyde Britons and the province of North
Wales, and resided in his northern territories, the
Irish Scots, under the command of Sirigi, or "the
Rover," landed in Mona, and having defeated the
natives, took possession of the island. On receiving
intelligence of this invasion, Einion Urdd sent his
eldest son, Caswallon Law Hîr, to the relief of
Mona; and the latter executed his orders by routing the enemy at Holyhead, where their fleet was
lying at anchor, and by slaying Sirigi in a personal
encounter. About the year 443, Caswallon, having
succeeded to his father's throne, made choice of
Mona for his residence; and, being the eldest branch
of the Cyneddian family of British princes, he enjoyed a pre-eminence in dignity, and received from
the other Cambrian princes homage and obedience,
as their superior lord.
From this epoch may be dated the establishment
of a distinct sovereignty in North Wales, which
country, however, was overrun, and for a few years,
early in the sixth century, held in subjection, by the
Saxon monarch, Edwin of Northumbria. About the
year 817, in right of that equal distribution of the
property of a deceased person among all his children,
by the custom which prevailed among the Welsh,
similar to the Saxon gavelkind, Howel, the younger
son of Rhodri Molwynog, late sovereign of North
Wales, laid claim to the island of Mona, as his share
of his father's inheritance. This claim being denied
by his eldest brother, Cynan Tindaethwy, the reigning prince, the contending parties agreed to decide
the affair by force of arms, the result of which, in two
successive battles, was favourable to Howel, who
thus obtained possession of the disputed territory.
But Cynan, enraged at these defeats, determined to
make a vigorous effort, even at the hazard of his
crown and life, to recover the island; he raised a new
army, and marched against his brother, who, finding
himself unable to rally a sufficient force, withdrew to
the Isle of Man, leaving Mona in the possession of
Cynan. During the reign of Mervyn Vrych, who
had married Esyllt, daughter of Cynan Tindaethwy,
Egbert, King of the West Saxons, having desolated
a great part of North Wales, advanced to Mona, and
overcoming the Welsh in a bloody battle fought at
Llanvaes, near Beaumaris, took possession of the
island, which, though soon recovered by King Mervyn, at this period lost its ancient name of Mona
among the Anglo-Saxons, who henceforward called
it Angles-Ey, or, "the Englishmen's Isle." Anglesey
was again invaded by the Saxons in 846, under the
Mercian prince, Burrhed, who perpetrated the most
cruel ravages: but the young prince Rhodri, or
Roderic (afterwards surnamed Mawr, or, "the
Great"), who had but just succeeded to the sovereignty of North Wales, opposed a spirited resistance
to the invaders, who, unable to effect the entire subjugation of the island, were soon afterwards compelled to quit it, in order to defend their own territories against the Danish incursions. The Danes,
having been repulsed from England by Alfred, made
a descent in the year 873 upon Anglesey, where, in
two successive battles, one fought at Bryn-goleu,
and the other at Menegid, they were vigorously encountered by Roderic. About this period the Welsh
prince removed the royal residence from Caer Seiont,
now Carnarvon, where it had been fixed by the successors of Caswallon Law Hîr, to Aberfraw, on the
south-western coast of the island, where that prince
had originally established it. An interval of freedom
from the molestations of the Danes afforded the English another opportunity of invading Anglesey with
a formidable army. The Welsh sovereign opposed
them with his usual spirit, and at length fell in defence of his country, being slain with his brother
Gwyriad, in one of the battles fought with the
English.
According to the late king's division of the sovereignty among his three sons, the island was included
in the kingdom of Gwynedd, or North Wales, the
residence of whose sovereigns was at Aberfraw, in
the palace which had been erected by Roderic. A
large body of Danes landed in the island in the year
900; but this invasion seems only to have been distinguished by a battle fought at Rhôs-meilion, in
which fell Mervyn, Prince of Powys. Early in the
reign of Edwal Voel, who succeeded to the sovereignty of North Wales in the year 913, the Irish
made a descent upon Anglesey, which they laid waste
with great cruelty. A party of marauders from the
same country made another descent in the year 966,
destroyed the royal palace at Aberfraw, and slew
Roderic, the youngest son of Edwal Voel. In 969
the island once more suffered from an invasion of
the Danes, who ravaged the easternmost part of the
county, in the vicinity of Penmon; and in a second
enterprise, shortly after, they gained for a time complete possession of it. Constantine the Black, fired
with the deepest resentment at the injuries received
by his family from his cousin Howel, Prince of North
Wales, by whom his father Iago was then held in
close confinement, collected an army of Danish
pirates, and in the year 979 laid waste the island;
but Howel, having assembled his forces, routed the
Danes in a battle fought at Gwaith Hîrbarth, in
which Constantine was slain. Meredydd, a prince
who ruled in Powys by right of his mother, about the
year 985, gained possession of the kingdom of North
Wales; but the Danes invading Anglesey soon after,
took prisoner Llywarch, that sovereign's brother,
with two thousand of his men, and put out his eyes,
which so terrified Meredydd, that he fled into Powys,
leaving his subjects of Gwynedd without a sovereign,
and exposed to the ravages of any invader: in consequence of this, the Danes again landed in Anglesey,
and laid waste the whole island. Soon after the
accession of Trehaern ab Caradoc to the sovereignty
of North Wales, in 1073, Grufydd ab Cynan thought
this a favourable opportunity to assert his right to the
same throne, to which he had an hereditary claim.
This prince, during the late reigns, had sought refuge
in Ireland, his mother being a native of that country;
and having procured aid from some of the Irish
princes, his kinsmen, he landed a body of troops in
Anglesey, of which he soon effected the conquest.
He then passed the Menai, but was defeated by
Trehaern in Merionethshire, and compelled to return
to the island, where he soon after received reinforcements from Ireland, enabling him to make himself
master of the kingdom for which he contended.
In 1096, during the reign of William Rufus in
England, and of Grufydd ab Cynan in Gwynedd,
a formidable army of English, under the command of
Hugh Lupus, Earl of Chester, and Hugh the Red,
Earl of Shrewsbury, invaded North Wales, at the
secret instigation of several powerful native chieftains; and Grufydd retired to the mountains for
safety. The two earls, encountering no resistance,
advanced into that part of Carnarvonshire which lies
nearest to Anglesey; when Grufydd, anticipating
the danger which threatened the seat of his government, crossed the Menai into the island, and receiving a small reinforcement from Ireland, resolved to
defend this part of his territory. At this critical
moment, however, Owain ab Edwyn, lord of Englefield, one of the secret betrayers of his country,
whose daughter was the wife of Grufydd, and who
was himself his prime minister and adviser, openly
avowed his treachery, and joined the English army
with his forces. The Welsh prince, alarmed at the
defection of so powerful a chieftain, and unable to
oppose the increased numbers of the enemy, withdrew to Ireland. Thus again left unprotected,
Anglesey fell an easy prey to the English, who took
ample revenge upon its inhabitants, for the cruelties
which had a little before been committed by the
Welsh on the English border; they massacred many,
and barbarously mutilated others. The deliverance
of North Wales at this perilous period was brought
about by a train of fortuitous circumstances. Magnus, son of Harold, King of Norway, having taken
possession of the Orkneys and the Isle of Man, accidentally arrived at this time on the coast of Anglesey, and attempted a descent upon it. In the opposition which the English made to his landing, the
impetuous valour of the Earl of Shrewsbury hurrying
him into the water, the Norwegian prince levelled
an arrow at him, which, through the opening of his
helmet, pierced his brain through his right eye, and
he fell convulsed in the sea: the Welsh regarded this
as a stroke of retributive justice coming immediately
from the hand of the Almighty. The death of the
Earl of Shrewsbury produced some disorder among
the English, and compelled them to abandon the
shore: and the Earl of Chester, on this disaster,
suddenly withdrew to Bangor, where he for some
time fixed his abode, carrying on a desultory warfare
with the people of Anglesey, whom he annoyed with
frequent aggressions. The latter Earl, in the course
of this expedition, erected a castle at a place called
Aber-Lleiniog, on the shores of the Menai, near Beaumaris. The Norwegians, finding that the English
had left nothing to plunder, immediately re-embarked; and this was the last attempt made by any
of the northern nations to ravage or subdue this
island.
In the year 1151, Cadwalader, brother of Owain
Gwynedd, Prince of North Wales, who had long
been kept in confinement by his nephew Howel,
escaped from prison, and, fleeing to Anglesey,
brought a great part of the island under subjection:
but a formidable body of troops being sent against
him by the Prince of North Wales, he was obliged
to seek refuge in England. At the period of the invasion of North Wales by Henry II., in 1157, the
English fleet, which, under the conduct of Madoc ab
Meredydd, Prince of Powys, sailed from Chester to
infest the coasts of North Wales, made a descent on
Anglesey, and ravaged a part of the island; but in
returning to their ships, the forces which had landed
were attacked by the whole strength of the island,
and entirely destroyed, and the English fleet immediately weighed anchor, and sailed back to Chester.
In 1173, Davydd ab Owain Gwynedd, Prince of
North Wales, forcibly took Anglesey from his brother
Roderic, whom he put into close confinement: upon
this occasion the island suffered considerable devastation. On the invasion of Wales by Henry III., in
1245, that monarch's justiciary in Ireland received
orders to make a diversion from that kingdom on the
Isle of Anglesey, which was accordingly effected in
August, and the whole island laid waste; but not
being promptly supported by the English king, the
Irish forces were assailed by the inhabitants, when
laden with plunder, and driven back to their ships.
Upon the eve of the great invasion of Wales by
Edward I., in 1277, that sovereign directed a fleet
from the Cinque Ports to cruise on the coast of
Wales, one object being the reduction of this island,
which it fully effected. Llewelyn ab Grufydd, the
reigning prince of North Wales, being shortly after
compelled to sue for a treaty of peace, obtained it
only upon hard conditions, one of which was, that
though he should continue to hold the island of
Anglesey, he should pay for that permission the annual sum of 1000 marks, and that, if he died without
issue, the island was to be vested in the King of
England and his heirs for ever. Edward, however,
remitted the yearly tribute of 1000 marks. This
treaty was afterwards broken, and Edward, in his
next invasion of Wales, while lying in the vicinity
of Conway, again, in like manner, ordered a strong
detachment of marines and other forces, in the vessels
of the Cinque Ports, to take possession of Anglesey,
in order not only to deprive the Welsh of the advantage of that fruitful island, as a source of provisions,
but also to confine them within narrower limits, and,
by dividing their attention, to facilitate his entrance
into the inner recesses of their continental territory.
The service was performed with complete success;
the island was easily taken, as the chief persons in it
supported the interests of Edward, in conformance
with the oaths which they had taken at the late
peace. The English in Anglesey then made preparations for crossing the Menai by a bridge of boats,
constructed from the point called Moel-y-Don; but,
owing to the imprudence of a part of their forces,
which crossed before the completion of the bridge,
and was consequently surprised and destroyed by the
Welsh, the rest were compelled to remain for a time
in Anglesey; nor did they finish the bridge and
make good their passage until after the unfortunate
death of Llewelyn, in the winter following. On the
complete subjugation of the principality in this
campaign, Edward allowed its inhabitants to enjoy
their estates under the tenures by which they had
held them under their native princes; and the rents
which the inhabitants of Anglesey had been accustomed to pay were fixed at only £450 a year, although
they had yielded 1000 marks annually to Llewelyn.
Though conquered, and reduced in numbers by
the long war which they had so bravely maintained,
the native spirit of the Welsh remained unsubdued,
and was often exasperated into rebellion by the
tyranny of their new masters, who found it necessary,
for the maintenance of their authority, to fortify
themselves in numerous strong castles. The Isle of
Anglesey at this time formed the principal rendezvous
of all the native chieftains, who, notwithstanding
their formal submission to the authority of Edward,
were unceasingly engaged in plots to throw off the
English yoke, and made this the centre of several
important insurrections, which were successively
quelled. In 1284, Edward had appointed his favourite, Sir Roger de Puleston, sheriff and keeper of
Anglesey; this powerful knight was slain, in 1294,
during the insurrection led by Madoc, an illegitimate
son of the late Llewelyn, who soon after gained possession of Anglesey. Edward, having quelled the
rebellion in the continental part of the principality,
crossed the Menai into Anglesey; and the English
forces on this occasion destroyed the church, with
some part of the other buildings, of Llanvaes Priory,
and devastated its lands. The king, seeing the impossibility of preventing the excitement of other
rebellions, which might threaten the stability of his
dominion in Wales, so long as Anglesey, without an
English garrison, afforded such facilities for combination, found it necessary to erect in the island a
castle equal in strength and importance to the castles
which he had previously founded at Carnarvon and
Conway, and to place in it a garrison equally
formidable. As the site of this fortress, he selected
Port Wgyr, a place of great antiquity near the eastern extremity of the county, which at that time had
acquired the name of Bonover, and to which the
Anglo-Normans, on account of its situation in a flat
on the sea-shore, gave the appellation of Beaumarais,
since slightly modernised into Beaumaris. The work
was completed in 1296.
The ill-fated Sir Grufydd Llwyd, who was a
native of Tregarnedd, in this county, received the
honour of knighthood from Edward I., in 1284, on
bringing him the intelligence of Queen Eleanor's
being delivered of a son (afterwards Edward II.) at
Carnarvon. He subsequently did homage for his
estates to this young prince, at Chester. But afterwards, indignant at insults offered to himself, and
deeply resenting the wrongs and oppressions heaped
upon his duped and suffering fellow-countrymen, he
formed a plan for liberating them from the intolerable
slavery to which he considered that he had contributed, in accepting, with other chieftains, the
young prince Edward as sovereign. In 1322 he
took up arms, and for a time overran some parts of
North Wales with irresistible impetuosity; but at
length being defeated by the English troops, he retired into Anglesey, to his house of Tregarnedd,
which he had strongly fortified; and garrisoned with
his followers another stronghold, called Ynys Cevni,
about three-quarters of a mile distant, in a marshy
part of the sands called the Malltraeth, a spot which
he contrived to insulate with the waters of the river
Cevni. After a desperate struggle, he was at last
taken prisoner here by a body of English, and conveyed to Rhuddlan Castle, in Flintshire, where he
was executed soon afterwards. In the reign of
Henry IV., the custody of the castle of Beaumaris,
together with the whole county and dominion of
Anglesey, was granted to the renowned Henry
Percy, surnamed Hotspur. During the revolt under
Owain Glyndwr, in the same reign, the monks of
Llanvaes Priory being suspected of favouring his
designs, the English monarch, on his first taking the
field against the insurgents, put some of the friars to
the sword, carried the rest away prisoners, and plundered the convent.
In the great civil war of the seventeenth century,
the inhabitants of the island distinguished themselves
by their persevering attachment to the royal cause.
So early as the year 1642, Beaumaris Castle was
garrisoned for the king by command of its constable,
the Earl of Dorset. Thomas, the first Lord Bulkeley,
afterwards succeeded to the constableship of the
fortress; and his son, Colonel Richard Bulkeley,
assisted by several other gentlemen of the county,
held it for the king, until June 1646, when it was
surrendered on honourable terms to General Mytton:
it appears, however, to have fallen again into the
hands of the royalists. In 1648, the inhabitants of
the whole island rose for the purpose of aiding in the
restoration of the unfortunate monarch's affairs, at
the time that several diversions were made in different parts of Britain, with a view to the liberation of
Charles, then a prisoner in the Isle of Wight. Resolutions were immediately drawn up; and it was decided by a council of war that a general declaration
should be published, subscribed by all the inhabitants from the age of sixteen to sixty.
The words of this curious document are as follows:
—"We, the inhabitants of the Isle of Anglesey,
whose names are hereunto subscribed, after mature
consideration, and hearty invocation of the name of
God for directions and assistance, do remonstrate and
declare to our fellow-subjects and neighbours, whom
it may concern, that we, having, according to our
bounden duty and allegiance, preserved the said
island in due obedience to our most dread sovereign
lord, King Charles, during the time of this intestine
war and rebellion; and, by God's blessing upon our
careful endeavours, defended the same until the
enemy had over-mastered the whole kingdom (a few
strongholds excepted), this being the only county of
England or Wales for two months together kept entire under his Majesty's authority and command;
and being then, through the vast number of men
and horse threatened to be poured in upon us (finding no possible expectance of relief), enforced to
submit to the then prevailing power; do now, out of
conscience towards God, and loyalty towards his
anointed, with all humbleness, prostrate ourselves,
our lives and fortunes, at his Majesty's feet, resolving,
with the utmost exposal of all that we are or have, to
preserve the said island, together with the castle and
holds therein, in due obedience to his sacred Majesty,
his heirs and lawful successors, against all rebellious
opposers and invaders whatsoever; and do also, with
sincerity of heart, profess that we will, according to
our several degrees, places, and callings, maintain
the true Protestant religion by law established, his
Majesty's royal prerogative, the known laws of the
land, just privileges of parliament, together with our
own and fellow-subjects' legal properties and liberties. And we do also further declare and protest,
that we shall and will account all those that do, or
shall, stand in opposition hereunto, to be enemies
and traitors to their king and country, and accordingly to be proceeded against, being most ready to
contribute our best abilities for their reducement,
and reinstating of our gracious sovereign (who hath
long endured the tyranny and oppression of his barbarous and bloody enemies) to his rights, dominions,
and dignity, according to the splendour of his most
illustrious progenitors. Given under our hands the
14th day of July, 1648."
This declaration immediately led to an expedition
for the reduction of the island, under the command
of General Mytton; and, when the parliamentarian
forces were descried from Beaumaris green, approaching over the mountain of Penmaen Mawr, on
the opposite side of the Menai, great demonstrations
of defiance were made at the former place. However, after a slight skirmish near Cadnant with Major
Hugh Pennant's troop of horse, General Mytton's
forces advanced without further opposition to Orsedd
Migin, where they held a rendezvous, the morning
after their passage across the straits. Hence they
marched immediately upon Beaumaris, by way of
Red-hill Park, and drew up in order of battle upon
the hill; the islanders, commanded in chief by Colonel
Bulkeley, and by Colonel Roger Whitely as majorgeneral, drawing up in the fields below. A smart
engagement speedily ensued, in which the royalists
were defeated and put to flight, with the loss of some
slain and four hundred made prisoners. The town
was now closely pressed and soon taken, notwithstanding that the church was obstinately defended
by a number of men who had been left locked up in
it by their commander. Most of the royalist commanders retired into the castle, to which General
Mytton sent a summons, demanding the bodies of
the two colonels, Bulkeley and Whitely, who immediately surrendered themselves to save the effusion
of blood in the slaughter of the prisoners, which was
threatened in case of a refusal. Unable successfully
to resist the formidable force brought against it, the
garrison in the castle also capitulated on honourable
terms, on the 2nd of October; and articles of agreement were drawn up and signed by the parliamentarian commissioners and by those appointed for the
purpose by the governor of the castle, on behalf of
the inhabitants of the whole island. On the 9th of
October, instruments were interchanged, in which it
was stipulated that the estates of persons within the
island should be relieved from sequestration, on condition of paying one twenty-fifth of their value; and
that they should be permitted to compound for them
at the rate of two years' income for all estates of inheritance, and for other estates in proportion. This
mulct was paid by instalments, and the total amount
of the money thus obtained from the island is supposed to have been about £20,000.
Anglesey is in the diocese of Bangor, and province of Canterbury; comprising the deaneries of
Llivon, Malltraeth, Menai, Tal-y-bolion, Twrcelyn,
and Tyndaethwy, in the archdeaconry of Bangor and
Anglesey: the number of parishes is seventy-four,
of which twenty-five are rectories, four vicarages, and
the rest perpetual curacies. For purposes of civil
government it is divided into six hundreds, having
the same names as the deaneries. It contains the
boroughs, market-towns, and sea-ports of Amlwch,
Beaumaris, and Holyhead; the borough and markettown of Llangevni; and the market-town of Llanerchymedd. One knight is returned to parliament for
the shire, and one representative for the united
boroughs: the county member, and the member for
the boroughs, are elected at Beaumaris; the pollingplaces for the county are Beaumaris, Holyhead, and
Llangevni. It is in the North Wales circuit: the
assizes and sessions are held at Beaumaris, where
stands the county gaol and house of correction.
There are twenty-two acting magistrates. It comprises the poor-law union of Anglesey, and parts of
those of Bangor and Beaumaris, and Carnarvon: see
the articles on Bangor and Carnarvon.
The exact form of the island, of which the general outline is somewhat oblong, extending in length
nearly from north-west to south-east, is extremely
irregular, the rocky barrier of its sea-worn shores
being broken in numerous places by small bays,
creeks, and other inlets. It is the only county in the
principality of which the surface approximates to
uniformity of character, the whole gently undulating,
and there being few swells that can properly be
termed hills, or hollows deserving the name of valleys. The interior being also devoid of wood, nearly
all the land is inclosed, and the inclosures being
seldom surrounded by the lively green of quickset
hedges, the district exhibits a very dreary aspect, and
impresses the beholder at first sight with an idea of
sterility, which, however, does not predominate, as
the land, when under proper management, is in
general highly productive. The only part possessing
any striking sylvan beauty is that bordering on the
Menai. But although the scenery of the island is
so little interesting, the traveller, after proceeding
a few miles from the shores of the Menai, by looking
across that arm of the sea into Carnarvonshire, will
obtain a splendid view of the chain of mountains
which stretches through that county, and the outline
of which is varied at irregular intervals by numerous
diversified peaks, above all which rises the majestic
Snowdon. As the spectator recedes from the Menai,
the connecting links of this magnificent chain are
gradually lost, and only the insulated summits of the
highest mountains remain visible in the distant horizon. The high table-land called Mynydd-y-Trysclwyn, in the north-western part of the county, is
an object of especial interest to travellers, from a
part of it forming the far-famed Parys Mountain,
distinguished for its mineral treasures, and which
has been supposed to derive its name from one
Robert Parys, a commissioner in an inquisition, in
the 8th of Henry IV., to fine such of the inhabitants
of Anglesey as had taken part in Owain Glyndwr's
insurrection. The aspect of this elevation, rising
into enormous rugged rocks of coarse aluminous
shale and whitish quartz, is naturally very rude; and
the romantic grandeur of its outward form has been
heightened by the vast mining operations which
have penetrated its interior, yet in part lie open to
the day like immense quarries. The most extensive
tract of marsh land is that of Malldraeth, or Malltraeth, near Newborough, in the southern part of the
county. It is situated on the shores of a sandy creek,
extending a considerable distance inland, in a northeastern direction; and comprises about three thousand acres. Acts of parliament for inclosing it were
obtained in the years 1788 and 1790, and an embankment across the lower part of it, one thousand
four hundred yards long, was nearly completed, when
the whole work was suddenly abandoned, and on
the 23d of January, 1796, an uncommonly high tide
added a breach, twenty roods long, to the space of
about twenty roods which had been left unfinished.
In this neglected state the work remained until early
in the present century, when a scheme for erecting
another embankment, upon an enlarged scale and
more durable plan, was carried into execution, under
the provisions of an act obtained in 1815, the work
being completed in 1819.
It is probable that Anglesey originally joined
the main land; for near Porthaethwy, on the shores
of the Menai strait, some rocks called the Swelly
rocks jut out nearly across the channel, which are
supposed to be the remains of an isthmus. In the
rugged openings between these rocks, the sea, for
about an hour after the commencement of the floodtide, violently fluctuates and foams, owing to the
meeting of two currents, called Pwll Ceris, which
renders the passage very dangerous. Across the
Menai strait were formerly six ferries, sanctioned
by authority; but this number was reduced to five
by the erection of the magnificent suspension bridge
over the narrowest part of it, at the ferry of Porthaethwy, commonly called Bangor ferry. On the
subjugation of North Wales by Edward I., the six
ferries became the property of the Crown; but the
king soon granted one of them, viz., that of Cadnant,
to Einion, Bishop of Bangor, for christening the
young prince Edward of Carnarvon: the rest continued in the possession of the Crown until the time
of Henry VIII., who granted four of them to Richard
Giffard; and Giffard, in the twenty-third year of
that monarch's reign, let them on a term to William
Bulkeley, from whose descendants they have since
been transferred to different hands. Though the
situations of the ferries appear to have been well
chosen, according to the nature of the strait, yet,
owing to sand-banks, to opposing tides rushing into
them from each extremity, and to other natural
causes, the passage is not absolutely safe by any one
of them, and serious accidents have occurred at each.
The most southern of the five remaining ferries is that
of Abermenai, opposite to Carnarvon; the next, at a
distance of three miles north-eastward, that of Tal-y-Voel. Four miles beyond is that of Moel-y-Don,
and, three miles further, the Menai bridge; beyond
which is that of Cadnant, now removed to Garth;
and lastly, the longest of all the ferries at high water,
viz., that between the town of Beaumaris and Aber
in Carnarvonshire.
The shores of Anglesey are studded with several
islets, of which the principal are the three following. Priestholme, also called Ynys Seiriol, and
Puffin Island, is separated from the easternmost extremity of the county by a deep channel, about
half a mile broad. It is of an oval form, about a
mile long, and half a mile broad, extremely lofty,
and has a precipitous shore on every side, except that
which faces the promontory of Penmon, where the
land is not quite so elevated: it slopes gradually
from the summit to the edge of these cliffs, and
forms a bold boundary on the west to the broad
bay of Beaumaris. The next to this, proceeding
along the northern coast of the island, is Ynys y
Moelrhoniaid, or "the Isle of Seals," commonly
called the Skerries, situated at its northernmost
extremity, in front of the village of Llanrhwydrys,
and about half a league from the main land, from
which it is separated by a deep and dangerous
channel. Its surface is composed chiefly of rocks,
half covered with vegetation; and on its highest point
is a lighthouse, erected about the year 1730. To
this succeeds Ynys Cybi, or Holy Island, at the
westernmost point of Anglesey, comprising the
parishes of Holyhead and Rhôscolyn, and consisting
for the most part of barren rocks and dreary sands.
The channel separating the island from the rest of
Anglesey is narrow, and fordable in some places at
low water; the great Irish road is carried over it by
means of a noble embankment, three-quarters of a mile
long.
A remarkable phenomenon attends the tides on
the shores of this county, more particularly in the
Menai straits. It appears that two tides set in from
the western sea, which are divided by the isle of
Anglesey, one part passing through the Menai
straits, and the other through the great channel
lying between Holyhead and the Irish coast. The
latter tide having to extend its influence round
the greater part of the island before it can reach
the north-eastern entrance of the Menai, the flow
is upwards of an hour earlier at Carnarvon than
at Beaumaris; and the water from the main sea
begins to pour into the strait at Carnarvon while it
is yet ebbing out of it at Beaumaris; consequently
the water in the vicinity of Carnarvon continues
falling after the direction of the current is changed.
In like manner, the ebb commences at Carnarvon
before it is high water at Beaumaris; and though
the direction of the current in this case is also
changed, yet it continues rising at the Menai bridge
for a considerable time after it has begun to ebb at
Carnarvon. These tides (the one entering the
Menai from St. George's Channel, and the other
from the Irish Sea,) meet at a place near Beaumaris,
called Taraw Point.
The climate of the county, owing to the seabreezes which constantly blow over it, and the
greater uniformity of its surface, is milder and less
boisterous, and the snow lies upon the ground a
shorter time, than in the neighbouring counties.
But, from the same causes, it is incommoded with frequent mists in the autumn, in which season the inhabitants are subject to intermittent fevers: still they
are in general healthy.
The soils, though various, are for the most
part fertile. They consist chiefly of the following
kinds, viz., a friable mould; a shallow soil on light
sand; a coarse healthy soil on hard rock; a quick
warm soil, invigorated by marl; a reddish and stiffish
loam; and a black peaty earth, under which are
generally beds of peat, forming useful turbaries.
There is also an abundance of marly soils, lying in
contiguity with the ranges of limestone hereafter
described. The reddish loams are of excellent quality, and lie near the shores of the Menai, in the
vicinity of Llanidan. The light soils, consisting of
various admixtures of sandy loam, rounded pebbles,
gravel, peat, &c., occupy the greater part of the
island, and are best adapted for the culture of barley,
peas, turnips, &c. Free loams, of a rather better
quality than the last-mentioned, are found in different
parts of the interior.
The agriculture of the county has very much
improved since smuggling, which was formerly carried
on by the inhabitants to an amazing extent, was suppressed by the vigilance of the government: within
the last fifteen years, especially, the improvements
have been great. The larger part of the island, however, still presents a mixed aspect of wildness and
cultivation, excepting a few scattered farms, which
are managed under superior systems. Of the inclosed
lands, which occupy nearly the whole of its surface,
about an eleventh part is actually under tillage; and
of this quantity, about one-fourth is annually sown
with oats, and the remainder with barley and wheat
in equal portions. The rotations of crops are various,
but the white corn crops of oats and barley are too
frequently taken in unvaried succession, or alternately with each other, for five or six years. The
average produce of oats is only from four to six times
the amount of seed sown, although sometimes, under
superior management, as much as from fifteen to
sixteen: the produce of barley is very various; and
that of wheat averages no more than that of oats,
although some farmers obtain from eight to ten times
the quantity sown. The cultivation of peas, which
used formerly to be considerable, is now greatly
diminished, and beans are hardly ever seen; but
there is no part of North Wales where potatoes are
cultivated so well and so extensively as in this island.
Turnips were first introduced as an agricultural crop
in 1765, and their culture has been since gradually
increasing in extent: in 1797, there were about fifty
acres under turnips, of which only seven were drilled.
Anglesey is distinguished for a native species of this
root, which is a small yellow garden turnip, called in
the adjacent county of Carnarvon Maip sîr Von. A
few small patches of land are occasionally sown with
hemp. The artificial grasses are of the ordinary
kinds. Burnet grows naturally on the limestone hills
near Llanidan, bordering on the Menai; and the
plantago maritima, or narrow-leaved sea plantain, is
found wild on different parts of the sea-shore: the
latter tastes like samphire, is very succulent, and is
eagerly eaten by sheep. Anglesey contains about
150,000 acres of meadows and pastures, of which the
natural produce is in general of a fine quality, great
quantities of hay seeds being annually conveyed from
it as far as the hilly parts of Denbighshire and Merionethshire. The grass lands are almost exclusively
devoted to the rearing of cattle, to be sold lean to the
graziers of other districts having richer pastures,
where they are fattened for different places: lean
cattle, therefore, constitute one of its chief articles of
export. The dairies are so few, and on so small a scale,
as hardly to meet the consumption of the island; nor
is the cheese of good quality, for, to supply the want
of that richness of which the milk is robbed for the
sake of making butter, the curds are so saturated with
rennet as to make it quite spongy.
The extraordinary manures are various and valuable. Lime is extensively used within a convenient
distance of those parts of the island where it is burned;
and sea-weed, or sea-thong, and the fucus of various
kinds, are collected on the shores after storms, and
either spread on the fields to be immediately ploughed
in, or made into composts with various other manures.
But that for which Anglesey is more particularly distinguished, is the shell-sand found on different parts
of its coasts, but of the best quality in the Traeth
Côch, or Red Wharf bay, in the eastern part of its
northern shores; what is obtained at this place contains about two-thirds, and from that to four-fifths, of
decayed shells. It is carried to every part of the
island in carts and wagons, is generally laid upon the
land about an inch thick, and if its fertilizing particles are not suddenly washed away by violent rains,
it enriches the soil for ten or twelve years. The first
time this shell-sand is known to have been used as a
manure was in 1645, by the Rev. Thomas Williams,
rector of Llansadwrn; at present, besides the extensive consumption of it in the island, great quantities are shipped coastwise to Denbighshire and Flintshire. Both the shell-sand and the sea-weeds are
preferred to lime, upon lands that have been for some
time under cultivation.
The plough in most common use is the large old
kind, which was universally used in North Wales
prior to the introduction of the lighter Lummas plough,
about the year 1760. The mould-board is a plain
plank, which turns the split over by its extreme
length; and by the holder pressing much on the left
handle, its nether edge forms an acute angle with a
line parallel to the surface of the soil, by which means
a feather-edged split is formed, which, in ley grounds,
does not afford a sufficient depth of mould for the
harrow. The surface resting on the ground from the
heel to the point of the share is four feet long, and
the friction occasioned by this large surface requires
great force to overcome it.
In this county, where the rearing of cattle is in
most cases the farmer's principal object, and the dairy
is almost entirely neglected, the calves are not weaned
until they arrive at double the age at which they are
generally weaned in other counties. This partly
accounts for the bull-like appearance of the oxen about
the head and dewlap; but it is a received opinion
that they are hardier in consequence, and may be
kept on coarser pasture. The characteristics of the
choice Anglesey oxen, commonly called Runts from
their small size and peculiar appearance, are (says the
Rev. W. Davies, in his View of the Agriculture of
North Wales) the same in most points with those of
the Roman oxen described by Columella. Their
colour is coal-black, with white appendages; they
have remarkably broad ribs, high and wide hips, deep
chest, large dewlap, flat face, and long horns turning
upwards: their average weight, when fat, at three or
four years old, is from eight to eleven score lb. per
quarter. These deep-chested and short-legged oxen
are much esteemed by the graziers for their aptness
to fatten; but they are not quite so well adapted for
draught. Anglesey is distinguished for its Sheep,
which are the largest native breed in North Wales,
weighing, according as they are fed, from ten to sixteen lb. a quarter, and sometimes as much as eighteen
lb.; they have black legs and faces, and are generally
without horns. Whether they were originally from
the same stock as the present small sheep of the
county of Carnarvon, and attained their superiority
in size from a milder climate and better pasturage, or
are a foreign species brought over at some remote
period from Ireland, cannot now be ascertained.
They bear a fleece weighing from one lb. and threequarters to two lb. and a half; and are shorn about
the middle of May, or early in June: some are shorn
twice a year. Several experimental farmers have
introduced other breeds from England. Great numbers of Hogs were formerly bred in the county for
the English markets, but after the establishment of
steam-boats from Dublin to Liverpool, which caused
the importation of large numbers to the latter place
from Ireland, this traffic declined. The native breed
of Horses is of an inferior description, and their natural awkwardness and want of symmetry are increased
by the universal custom of fettering them, as well as
the sheep; a practice which is rendered necessary by
the want of proper fences. Tender furze, bruised
with mallets, or ground in mills erected for the purpose, used to be a chief article of fodder for horses,
and the farmers were then accustomed to sow furze,
and sometimes to let the crop at a certain price per
acre, in which case it was frequently more profitable
than a crop of wheat; but this system is now abandoned. Rabbits are very numerous in some places
in the vicinity of the sea-coast, where the sandy soil
favours their burrowing, more especially near the
ruins of the monastery of Llanddwyn. Seals are
frequently seen on the shores of the island. The
water-rail is a constant visiter early in the spring;
and that rare aquatic bird, the shag, sometimes makes
its appearance on the shore near Holyhead. The
horticulture of the county presents nothing very remarkable; sea-kale, which grows in abundance on
the coasts, has in some places been introduced into
gardens, and is found an excellent substitute for asparagus, being also somewhat earlier in the spring.
Anglesey is said to have been anciently called "the
dark or shady island," in allusion to its thick groves
of wood. At present its woodlands are almost wholly
confined to a narrow slip along the Menai; and even
here, great numbers of the trees, sinking beneath the
force of the western blasts, which sweep over them
loaded with saline particles, have a stunted and
blighted appearance. Lord Boston, however, has
some considerable woods at Lligwy, in the parish of
Penrhôs-Lligwy; and a few plantations have been
made elsewhere, which have flourished, with the exception of those trees immediately exposed to the
westerly winds. Wherever a few trees occur in the
hedge-rows, they are invariably much inclined towards
the north-east, by the violent winds from the opposite
quarter.
At the commencement of the present century the
amount of waste land was between 12,000 and 13,000
acres, from which must now be deducted the whole
extent of Malltraeth marsh, which has been embanked
and inclosed. Of this amount, 9000 acres, including
Malltraeth marsh, are level and highly improveable.
The principal uninclosed tract on the uplands is
Talwrn-Mawr, a dreary and continuous chain of
wastes, intermixed with old inclosures, and running
through the greater part of the county. The surface
of the uninclosed level wastes is continually pared by
the poor inhabitants for fuel. Some of the flat lands
lying adjacent to the sea are covered with drifting
sands, more especially those near the southern extremity of the county. Anglesey being comparatively
destitute of coal, peat, and wood, the inhabitants are
chiefly supplied with coal brought coastwise from
Flintshire and Lancashire, which being sold at a high
price, the poor are frequently unable to purchase it,
and are thus compelled to collect the dried dung of
cattle from the moors and fields, to the great injury
of the soil, and the paring of the surface of sound
waste land. The Anglesey Agricultural Society
was established in the year 1808.
The mineral productions are of great variety
and importance; but the geology of the island, which
is also interesting, has received very little illustration. Its prevailing rock may be said to be clayslate, but granite occurs in a small spot near its centre;
and on its south-eastern and north-eastern sides is
an abundance of limestone and gritstone, in some
places accompanied by a few thin and poor strata of
coal. The immense produce of the island in copper
is wholly obtained from the Parys Mountain mine
and the Mona mine, which are in fact only portions of the same mine, distinguished under these
two names to mark the possessions of two different
proprietors. They are situated in the northern part
of the island, in the vicinity of Amlwch, a town
which entirely owes its elevation from the rank of an
inconsiderable fishing-village, to the discovery and
extensive working of the mineral treasures of the
neighbouring high ground of Trysclwyn, in which
these mines are contained. There is abundant reason
to suppose that copper-ore was procured and smelted
here at a very remote period; but the main stratum,
after several unsuccessful attempts, was discovered
only on the 2nd of March, 1768, the anniversary of
which day was for many years kept as a festival by
the miners. This mass was in some places found to
be more than 300 feet thick, and lay in vast clusters,
called stock works. Both the mines are situated on
this grand vein, which has numerous branches, and
was formerly worked, not, as now, by means of subterraneous excavations, but open to the day, in
the manner of a quarry, the chief substance of the
mountain itself consisting of copper-ore. The matrix
of the ore is a dark-coloured petrosilex, over which
lie strata of aluminous schistus, and a yellow earth
containing ores of lead; in many places the ore is
immediately covered by a thin stratum of red shale
and ochre: the various strata thus bounding the ore,
dip in general towards the north, at an angle of about
forty-five degrees. The ore consists chiefly of the
yellow sulphate of copper, the richest of which generally contains twenty-five per cent. of metal, and
the same amount of sulphur. The worst ore yields
nearly the same quantity of sulphur, for which it is
principally worked, but produces only from one and
a quarter to two per cent. of copper. These mines
also contain black ore, consisting of copper mixed
with galena, calamine, and a little silver; malachite,
or green and blue carbonate of copper; native copper, in very small quantities; sulphate of copper,
crystallized and in solution; sulphate of lead in considerable quantities, containing a tolerably large
portion of silver; and native sulphur. Although the
ores are not equal in richness to those obtained in
Cornwall, yet they are rendered of immense value
by their abundance and the facility with which they
are worked. As the greater part of the ore consists
of sulphate of copper, the roasting of it for the sake
of the sulphur forms a considerable branch of its
manufacture. The regulus of copper, which collects
itself, during the process of roasting, into a globule
in the centre of the ore, is separated from the rest by
breaking the latter, and then smelted.
The amount of ore annually raised, and manufactured, at Amlwch, is estimated at about 16,000
tons. Towards the close of the last century, when
the Parys and Mona mines were most prosperous,
the quantity of available ore annually procured,
amounted to no less than 30,000 tons, the raising
of which afforded employment to 1500 men. The
works afterwards declining, the number of men
gradually decreased, so as, in the year 1809, not to
exceed 600, the remainder having emigrated to
Liverpool and other places; but the concern some
years afterwards gradually and materially improving,
the number of workmen increased in proportion,
and now amounts to upwards of 1500, who are employed in the different departments of these important mining and smelting works.
The finest metal obtained is that from the sulphate
of copper held in solution in the vitriolic waters,
which, by pumps and other machinery, are raised
from the mines into large cisterns, about two feet
deep, some square and others oblong, into which are
thrown quantities of old iron, brought for the most
part from London and Liverpool. On the iron being
thrown in, its supposed transmutation into copper,
which this mineral water is so remarkable for producing, immediately commences. By the laws of
elective attraction, as it is termed by the chemists,
the sulphuric acid, having greater affinity with, and
stronger attraction to, iron than copper, lets go the
latter, which is precipitated to the bottom of the cisterns in the form of a ponderous muddy sediment, of
a yellowish colour, and attaches itself to the iron,
which it dissolves and retains in solution in the same
manner as it at first did the copper. When this
change in the circumstances of the two metals is
completed, the acid menstruum containing the iron
is drawn from the cisterns, and received into other
pits on a lower level, leaving behind it the precipitate
of copper, which is collected together, dried on the
kilns, and smelted. One ton of iron will precipitate
from its solution an equal weight of copper mud,
which, when smelted, produces twelve hundredweight of the purest copper. The only value of
the sulphate of iron in the lower pits, is at present
derived from its deposition of yellow ochre, which is
refined, dried, and shipped for the use of painters.
"Nature," as Mr. Pennant observes, "has been profuse in bestowing her mineral favours on this spot;"
for besides the above, together with an ore of zinc,
which, after being properly prepared, is sent off to
London, there is found, above the copper-ore, and
about three-quarters of a yard beneath the surface
soil, a bed of yellowish greasy clay, from one to four
yards thick, containing a large proportion of lead.
Of this metal one ton of the clay yields from 600 to
1000 lb. weight, containing no less than fifty-seven
ounces of silver per ton of metal. The ore used at
one time to be wrought, and smelted at extensive
works erected for the purpose.
Next to Flintshire and Denbighshire, Anglesey
claims the third place among the counties of North
Wales possessing coal mines. The coal strata have
all the usual accompaniments of that mineral, except
ironstone; but hitherto only a small profit has been
derived either to the proprietors or the public from
working them, which has been attempted only on
the borders of the Malltraeth marsh, and between
the rivers Braint and Caint. In the former place
were found,—first, sand to the depth of five feet;
secondly, freestone for the next sixty-six feet;
thirdly, black shale, for a further depth of six feet;
fourthly, a bed of good coal, three feet and a half
thick; fifthly, indurated clunch, two feet deep; and
lastly, freestone to an unknown depth. In the latter
occurred,—first, peat; then, gravel; next, clay; and
lastly, coal metal, as the workmen term it, that is,
shaly clunch, having tumblers of coal interspersed
with it in irregular masses, some of which were of
several tons' weight: but having reached this, the
work became flooded, and was abandoned after being
carried, at a great expense, to the depth of 120
feet. It has been stated, as a discouraging symptom
in boring for coal in this island, that its strata dip
almost perpendicularly; but the inclination of the
three feet and a half coal near the Malltraeth, would
seem to be only one yard in ten, which is towards
the east-by-south; and the concomitants of coal,
namely, freestone and limestone, appear in nearly
horizontal strata, in several parts of the island.
The vast Limestone ranges of Denbighshire and
Flintshire, which also form Great Orme's Head, in
Carnarvonshire, are continued from this latter point,
under the bay of Beaumaris, to the easternmost extremity of the island, whence they extend in the
same north-western direction, along the sea-coast to
Dulas, and thence beyond Amlwch to Cemmaes and
the northernmost parts of the county. From several
points of this range, ramifications extend quite into
the interior of the island, and, in some instances,
even entirely across it, as from Lligwy to Llanfinnan
and Llangevni, and from Penmon, at its easternmost
extremity, along the shores of the Menai, where it
appears at Plâs Newydd and Llanidan. From the
latter place, a line of insulated limestone rocks is
continued in the same direction by Trêvdraeth,
Bôdwrog, and Llanvaethlu. Between these two
lines are quarries of millstone, and some inferior
kinds of gritstone; and between the south-western
part of the latter and the bay of Carnarvon is found
a much finer freestone: some of the limestone strata
are of the kind called terras limestone.
Anglesey contains a great abundance and considerable variety of Marbles, some of which are excellently adapted for sculpture and ornamental architecture. White marble is found at Llangwyvan;
blue-veined grey marble and blue-veined white
marble at Cemmaes, near Amlwch; black, grey,
and mottled brown marbles on the northern coast
(between Traeth Côch and Moelvre Point), which
are in considerable demand, to be manufactured for
sepulchral monuments and architectural ornaments;
and asbestine marble near Cemlyn bay, in the parish
of Llanvair-ynghornwy. This last kind is intersected
by narrow veins of a remarkable, white, incombustible substance, of a silky appearance, which from its
brittle nature, renders the stone in which it is inclosed unsusceptible of a very high polish. A green
marble is found near Rhôscolyn, in Holy Island,
which contains a green amianthus, or brittle asbestos;
and unripe asbestos, of a waved schistose appearance,
occurs in different parts of the county, more especially on the shores of the Menai, from Bangor
bridge to Maes-y-Porth, opposite to Carnarvon.
Serpentine is found at Maes-y-Porth, and at Cemmaes. The island also produces different kinds of
Potters'-clay, both white and yellow. Fullers'-earth,
both white and of a dusky colour, is found in small
quantities at Mynydd-y-Twr, near Holyhead; as also
is a peculiar kind of saponaceous argil. In the
vicinity of Amlwch is found a kind of earth, remarkable for yielding two-thirds of pure magnesia.
Steatite, or soap rock, occurs both at Mynydd-y-Twr,
and in the vicinity of Llanvair-ynghornwy. Three
kinds of Marl are found in the county, adjacent to
its limestone rocks; these are distinguished according
to their different colours, which are red, grey, and
white: pits of the two former are known to be as
much as 200 years old; and the white marl, at Llanddyvnan, was discovered about the year 1652, by
some of the parliamentarian soldiers then stationed
in Anglesey. Barytes, united with vitriolic acid,
and tinged with red, occurs at Llangeinwen.
The manufactures in the county, excepting
those of the mineral productions of Amlwch, are
very inconsiderable. Many of the inhabitants buy
quantities of the coarse wool of the mountainous districts of Carnarvonshire, at the fairs of Carnarvon and
Bangor, and manufacture it, intermixed with the
native wool of the island, into cloths of a deep blue,
flannels, blankets, &c., for home consumption; and
these manufactures are facilitated by a few carding
and spinning machines in different places. Most of
the remaining wool is disposed of to the Yorkshire
clothiers at Chester fair. It appears that Anglesey
was in ancient times a place of much commercial
importance; and its exports are still of great value,
consisting chiefly of copper, yellow ochre, zinc, and
alkali; shell-sand, for manure; barley and oats in
productive seasons; and cattle, sheep, and hogs.
The number of cattle annually sent to the English
market has been variously estimated, but, according
to the best authority, it averages about 8000, of
which 900 are yearlings, 2100 of two years old, and
5000 of three years old and upwards. Before the
erection of the suspension bridge over the Menai,
the numerous herds purchased here were compelled
to swim in droves across that strait; and although
numbers of the weaker sort were sometimes swept
down by the force of the current, a distance of several
miles, yet losses were seldom experienced. The
annual exportation of sheep to the English market is
from 5000 to 7000, and of hogs about 1000. The
chief imports, besides the ordinary supplies of foreign
articles, are corn and coal. An extensive illicit trade
was formerly carried on by the inhabitants, more
especially in the several narrow sandy coves between
the rocks on the southern coast of the island, so well
adapted for receiving small vessels unobserved by
the revenue officers; but this has long been nearly
annihilated by the vigilant measures of the government.
The natural harbours are numerous, and some of
them have been much improved by art. Beaumaris,
near the eastern extremity of the island, has a good
harbour: the custom-house at this place is not only
the controlling office to the different ports of the
island, but also to others in North Wales. To the
north of Beaumaris is Traeth Côch, or Red Wharf
bay: this is of considerable extent, and receives the
waters of the small river Torryd, but is too much
exposed to winds from the north-east; an inconvenience that can only be removed by the erection
of a pier. Two leagues further along the northern
shore of the county is Dulas Bay, at the mouth of
the Dulas river, which is narrow at the entrance,
and obstructed by fragments of rock. Proceeding
round St. Elian's Point is Amlwch, where, by excavating a vast rock, a harbour has been formed,
about two hundred and fifty yards long and forty
wide, capable of containing thirty vessels, of from
one hundred to three hundred tons' burthen each.
Cemlyn, or Crooked Pool bay, in the northernmost
part of the island, might, at a little expense, be rendered a safe port. Holyhead, which, being only
twenty leagues from Dublin, is the station for the
Irish packets, had naturally a good port for the reception of small vessels, formed by some cliffs, on
the summit of which stands the church of that town,
and by a small island called Ynys Cybi, on which
stands a lighthouse: this was rendered more commodious at the expense of government. The vast improvements now in progress will be found noticed
under the head of Holyhead. Aberfraw has a small
harbour, capable of admitting vessels of thirty tons'
burthen, which is susceptible of great improvement;
as also is that of Malltraeth, situated between Aberfraw and the south-western entrance to the Menai, at
the mouth of the small river Cevenny, or Cevni.
Anglesey is wholly devoid of inland navigation, natural or artificial: but it is pleasingly watered by
twelve small streams, which flow from the gentle
elevations of the interior in various directions to the
sea: among the principal of these are the Cevenny,
the Alaw, the Fraw, and the Dulas. Beaumaris is a
place of considerable resort for the purpose of seabathing.
The waters immediately surrounding the shores
abound with various kinds of fish, namely, cod,
turbot, soles, plaice, herrings, whitings, crabs, lobsters, and oysters of different kinds. The crabs and
oysters are remarkably abundant and excellent; the
former are chiefly taken on the rocky coasts in the
vicinities of Llanddwyn, Rhôscolyn, Holyhead, and
Penmon, where they are found at low water, hidden
under stones amongst the sea-weed left by the previous tide. The large kind of oysters found in the
channel at the eastern extremity of the county, which
separates the little island of Priestholme from the
main land of Anglesey, are in great esteem, under
the name of "Penmon oysters," and great quantities
are annually pickled, packed in neat small casks, and
exported to different parts of the kingdom. This
channel is likewise remarkable for some peculiar
species of fish, among which the Beaumaris shark,
the Anglesey morris, and the trifurcated hake, are
most worthy of notice: here are also found several
rare species of muscle. Various kinds of beautiful
shells are taken by the dredgers for oysters in this
channel, and in Red Wharf bay. The cliffs of
Priestholme island produce abundance of samphire,
the gathering of which, together with the eggs of the
sea-fowl, forms a hazardous employment, which is
followed by many of the hardy islanders: the southwestern end of the same island abounds with the
smyrnium olusatrum, or Alexanders, which, when
boiled, afford a salutary repast for sailors just arrived
from long voyages.
The island having long been the grand thoroughfare to Ireland, and possessing an abundance of excellent materials for making and mending roads,
these mediums of communication received improvement in this county as early as in any other of the
principality; and at present the old Irish mail-road,
which runs the whole length of the island, from the
shores of the Menai to Holyhead, as also the roads
connecting the principal towns and villages, are in
good repair. Early in the present century, Lord
Bulkeley formed an excellent road, at his own expense, along the beautiful shore of the Menai, from
Bangor ferry to Beaumaris; and various other important public improvements have since taken place,
among which may be noticed the erection of the
superb suspension bridge over the Menai, in the vicinity of Bangor. Great alterations were also made,
early in the century, in the mail-coach route from
Bangor to Holyhead, by which the distance was reduced from twenty-five to twenty-one miles, and
several fatiguing ascents avoided.
The mail is now conveyed by the Chester and Holyhead Railway, which was opened in the year 1848.
This important line of communication crosses the
Menai by a splendid tubular bridge, and, like the
old mail-road, runs the whole length of the county,
to Holyhead, where superior packets are now stationed. Quitting the bridge, the railway passes along
a great embankment, near the end of which rises the
Anglesey Column, on the summit of a lofty eminence. It then runs parallel for some miles with
the Holyhead road, leaving which, it curves in a
south-western direction, and passes through some
deep cuttings, and under a substantial stone bridge
which forms part of the road leading to Llangafo, on
the left. The line proceeds about two miles and a
half north of the town of Newborough, and soon after
crosses the tidal-river Cevenny by a noble viaduct of
nineteen arches, forming one of the greatest ornaments of the railway. It next runs along the Trêvdraeth tunnel, about 550 yards in length, cut through
some exceedingly hard rock; then intersects the
parish of Llancadwaladr from east to west, and reaches
the vicinity of Bôdorgan, about halfway between the
Menai strait and Holyhead, and not far from the
town of Aberfraw. Hence the line proceeds in a
north-western direction, along ordinary cuttings and
embankments, passing within a few hundred yards of
Llanvaelog Rectory, and over a bleak sandy common
called Tywyn Trewyn, where a beautiful view is
obtained by the traveller of Cymmerau bay and the
headland of Rhôscolyn, on the left. After passing
under a number of bridges in rapid succession, the
line again approaches the Holyhead road. It crosses
the small river Alaw, and afterwards runs parallel
with the great Stanley embankment, constructed by
government across the sands and an arm of the sea,
in order to shorten the line of the road to Holyhead.
At the end of the embankment, the railway passes
Penrhôs Park, soon after which it arrives at its terminus at Holyhead harbour.
The remains of antiquity are numerous, and
of great interest. In ancient times Anglesey formed,
as before-mentioned, a chief place of refuge for the
Druids, when expelled from their previous abodes by
the progress of the Roman arms; and various memorials of that remote period of its history are yet
visible. The parishes of Llanedwen, LlanddanielVab, and Llanidan, on the borders of the Menai,
include a district abounding with remains indicative
of its having been a scene of Druidical worship,
and Mr. Rowlands, in his "Mona Antiqua Restaurata," attempts to prove that this part of Anglesey
was the principal seat of the religious rites of the
Druids, and the residence of the Arch-druid. Among
the monuments now existing are two cromlechs, contiguous to each other, in Plâs Newydd Park, the
property of the Marquess of Anglesey, one of which
has a table-stone of great weight, about thirteen feet
long, eleven broad, and four thick. At a little distance is a carn now overgrown with vegetation, which,
on being opened, was found to contain various rude
apartments; and at Bôdowyr, in the same vicinity,
is a cromlech whose table-stone, resting upon three
strong supporters, is seven feet long, six broad, and
six thick. At Tre'-vry are some small traces of
stone circles. But the most remarkable monument
of this period yet existing, and around which these
and some smaller remains of Druidical antiquity are
scattered, is what has been supposed to be the chief
seat of the Druids, at a place called Tre'r Dryw.
This, styled by Mr. Rowlands the Brein Gwyn, or
royal tribunal, is a circular hollow, one hundred and
eighty feet in diameter, surrounded originally by an
immense rampart of loose stones, brought hither from
a distance. It has only a single entrance: and near
it are the remains of a circle of stones, with a cromlech in the midst, and of a gorsedd, or great copped
heap of stones, all extremely imperfect: two of the
stones of the circle are very large, one, which at present serves for the end of a house, being twelve feet
seven inches high, and eight feet broad; while
another, yet standing, is eight feet high, and twentythree feet in circumference. Various other cromlechs
are to be seen in different parts of the island. A
very large one is situated in the grounds of Lligwy,
in the parish of Penrhôs-Lligwy, where are also
several Druidical circles, nearly contiguous to each
other, comprising numerous upright stones: the
table-stone of the cromlech is of a rhomboidal form,
seventeen feet and a half long, fifteen feet broad, and
four feet thick, supported by several upright stones at
the height of only two feet from the ground. In a
field near the seat called Presaddved, in the western
part of the island, are two cromlechs, one yet standing, the other fallen, the table-stones of which are
about thirteen feet long, and nine broad. Near
Pentraeth are two small stones standing upright, at
the distance of about fifty feet from each other; and
another similar one lies prostrate at a short distance:
the whole are supposed to have formed some Druidical monument.
The remains of roman antiquity discovered in
Anglesey are but few and inconsiderable. On the
summit of Gwydryn Hill is a semicircular fortification, called Caer Idris, or Castell Idris, consisting of
a triple fosse and vallum: this is thought to have
been of British origin, but to have been afterwards
occupied by the Romans. Various remains of fortifications in which the discriminative peculiarities
of Roman workmanship are visible, are yet left
standing in the vicinity of Holyhead, among which
may be specified the massive walls that nearly
surround the churchyard, in the form of a parallelogram, at one corner of which is a circular bastion
tower; a long dry wall, twelve feet high, and in
many places regularly faced, which runs along the
side of the hill called Pen Caer Cybi; and Caer twr,
a circular building on the summit of the same elevation, supposed by Mr. Pennant to be the ruins of a
pharos, or lighthouse. At Tan-y-Cevn, on the
river Braint, and in the neighbourhood of the great
assemblage of Druidical remains above-mentioned,
are two large quadrangular intrenchments, nearly
contiguous to each other; and in the same vicinity
is Caerleb, or "the moated intrenchment," also of
quadrilateral form, having a double fosse and vallum,
and comprising within its area the foundations of
various buildings, both circular and angular. At a
place called Castell, between Llanerchymedd and
Tregayan, coins of several Roman emperors have
been found. In the parish of Llanvlewin were dug
up, about the commencement of the present century,
three golden bracelets and a Roman bulla of the
same metal; and near Aberfraw have been frequently found the amulets called gleiniau nadroedd,
or "snake gems," supposed to have been manufactured by the Romans, and given to the superstitious
Britons in exchange for the commodities of their
country.
On a precipitous hill called Bwrdd Arthur, or
"Arthur's Round Table," in the vicinity of Llangoed, are vestiges of an ancient fortification, surrounded by two lofty ramparts of loose stones, and
called Din, or Dinas Sylwy: within the area are the
foundations of oval buildings. About a mile from the
village of Monachtŷ, or Mynachdŷ, are two circular
encampments, formed by single ditches and ramparts,
and commonly called Castell Crwn; and another
British fortification, called Craig-y-Ddinas, is situated on a rocky eminence on the sea-shore of the
parish of Llanvair-Pwllgwyngyll. Tregarnedd, a
house in the parish of Llangevni, derived its name
from an immense carnedd, or piled heap of stones,
surrounded by a circle of upright stones: beneath
were numerous hollow passages, formed by flat flagstones laid upon others placed edgewise. The stones
of this carnedd were almost all removed a few years
ago, by the tenant of the land. In a deep gully
leading from Llanddona church to the sea-shore are
two round tumuli, supposed by Mr. Pennant to have
been thrown up by the Danes for the protection of
their vessels, which were often moored in Red Wharf
bay, on this part of the coast. About a mile from
Monachtŷ are three of those large upright stones
commonly called meini hîrion, which stand at the
distance of about 500 yards from each other, the intermediate space forming nearly an equilateral triangle. Another, called Llêch-gynvarwydd, stands
on an eminence near the church of that name. In
the centre of Penmon Park, near Beaumaris, is a
very ancient British cross, curiously and richly
sculptured.
At the period of the Reformation there were, at
Penmon a priory of Benedictine monks, and at Holyhead a college of prebendaries: at Llanvaes a house
of Franciscan friars was existing in the reign of
Henry V. There are yet extensive remains of
Penmon Priory, and part of the ancient conventual
church now serves as the parochial church: the
round arches by which the architecture of this edifice
is distinguished, and which in England are regarded
as evidences of the Saxon or early Norman erection
of the buildings in which they are found, are in this
instance thought by some to be of ancient British
construction. Near the centre of Priestholme island,
or Ynys Seiriol, amidst some faint vestiges of other
buildings, is an ancient tower, supposed to have
formed part of a religious house, a cell to the neighbouring priory of Penmon. A portion of Llanvaes
Priory is now used as an outhouse to the seat of
Sir R. B. Williams Bulkeley, Bart. Many of the
seventy-four parishes of the island have their churches
situated near the sea-shore, and one or two of the
buildings are so placed as to oblige the minister
to regulate the time of divine service according to
the state of the tide, which at high water completely
surrounds them. Such is the case with that of Llangwyvan, on the western side of the island. The
churches most distinguished for architectural curiosity
are, St. Mary's, at Beaumaris, a handsome edifice;
that of Holyhead; and that of Llaniestyn, a very
plain building, but containing a remarkably curious
font, and a sculptured slab of the fourteenth century,
forming one of the most interesting antiquities in
Wales. That of Llaneilian is distinguished for a
handsome tower and spire, of which appendages
nearly all the churches are destitute, having simply
at the west end a small turret, with an arched aperture, for a single bell. Parts of some of the buildings
are perhaps of the ninth or tenth century, or still
earlier. The Anglesey village-church is usually
cruciform, the structure small in size, commonly from
thirty to sixty feet in extreme length; and low in
height, the gable seldom being more than twenty
feet from the ground.
Almost the only ruins of any mural fortress at
present existing are those of Beaumaris Castle, which
are very grand and extensive. Remains of a small
fort of Norman erection, called Castell Lleiniog, are
yet standing on a conical mound in Penmon parish,
in the vicinity of Beaumaris. The most remarkable
old mansions are, Bôdychan, about half-way between
the Menai bridge and Holyhead, now used as a barn;
Penmynedd, in the parish of that name; Plâs Côch,
in the parish of Llanedwen, a very interesting building, admirably kept up; and Plâs Côch, in the town
of Beaumaris, the ancient manor-house of the Bulkeley family, now tenanted by poor families, but still
exhibiting some curious remains of ancient domestic
architecture. The seats of more modern date most
worthy of notice are, Plâs Newydd, the property of
the Marquess of Anglesey; Llanidan, that of Lord
Boston; Baron Hill, that of Sir R. B. Williams
Bulkeley, Bart.; Penrhôs, that of the Stanley family;
Bôdorgan, Cadnant, Carreglwyd, the Friary, HênIlŷs, Llanddyvnan, Llanvawr, Plâs Llangoed, Llwydiarth, Plâs Gwyn, Presaddved, Red Hill, Trêgayan,
and Trê-Iorwerth. A few of the farm-houses and
their offices are particularly well built and commodious, but the greater number are of an inferior description; and the cottages are generally of the most
wretched appearance. Quickset hedges, as well as
timber, flourish on the shores of the Menai; but in
the interior the vast expanse of horizon, without any
interruption from woods or hedges, is wearisome to
the eye: there the common fences are banks of sods
about four feet and a half high, with a ditch on each
side. Dry stone walls are not uncommonly used to
form inclosures on the larger estates; and of late years
great progress has been made in the raising of quickset hedges, notwithstanding the antiquated opinion of
its impracticability. Furze is sometimes sown on the
banks, and both hawthorn sets and furze seed are imported from Ireland. The common household bread
is made of barley or oats. Servants hired by the
year generally commence their term of service on the
1st of May.
Anglesey confers the title of marquess on the
noble family of Paget, the present marquess having
been raised to that dignity on the 23rd of June,
1815, in acknowledgment of the bravery and heroism
which distinguished his military career during the
continental war.
Arddr (Arddau)
ARDDR (ARDDAU), a hamlet, in the parish
of Llanbedr, union of Conway, hundred of Llêchwedd Isâv, county of Carnarvon, North Wales,
4 miles (N. by W.) from Llanrwst; containing, with
the hamlet of Dôl-y-Garrog, 144 inhabitants.
Argoed
ARGOED, with Ystrad, a hamlet, in the parish
and union of Trêgaron, upper division of the hundred of Penarth, county of Cardigan, South
Wales; containing 793 inhabitants, of whom 692
are in the market-town of Trêgaron. The name of
Argoed signifies "a sheltered and sequestered position among woods," which, with Ystrad, "a dale," is
descriptive of the situation of these two hamlets in
the vale of Teivy. The town of Trêgaron occupies
the banks of the Berwyn, near its junction with the
Teivy river.
Arthog Chapel
ARTHOG CHAPEL, a hamlet, in the township of Cregennan, parish of Llangelynin, union
of Dôlgelley, hundred of Tal-y-bont and Mowddwy, county of Merioneth, North Wales, 6½
miles (W. S. W.) from Dôlgelley: the population is
returned with the parish. This place is situated on
the road from Dôlgelley to Llwyngwrd, and on the
south side of the river Maw, or Mawddach, near the
influx of which into Barmouth bay is an extensive
turbary, or peat moss. A great quantity of peat is
dug, and conveyed in small boats down the river to
Barmouth, and up to Llanelltyd, whence it is sent in
carts to Dôlgelley and its neighbourhood, for fuel.
Arthog, a modern mansion in the later style of English architecture, is pleasantly situated on rising
ground, well sheltered by hills, of which the sides
are adorned with plantations, and the summits command extensive and pleasing views, particularly of
the sea-port and bay of Barmouth, and the vale of
Mawddach as far as Dôlgelley. In the grounds is a
highly picturesque waterfall, called Avon Cregennan.
A chapel was erected, about forty years ago, at the
expense of two successive proprietors of the Arthog
estate, but it has neither been endowed nor consecrated; the duty is gratuitously performed by the
curate of the parish, in English and Welsh alternately.
In 1844 a day school in connexion with the Established Church was commenced, which is partly supported by subscription, and partly by the children's
parents. There is also a place of worship for Calvinistic Methodists, to which a Sunday school is
attached.
Asaph, St.
ASAPH, ST., a city,
and parish, and the head
of a union, partly in the
hundreds of Isdulas and
Yale, county of Denbigh, but chiefly in the
Rhuddlan division of the
hundred of Rhuddlan,
county of Flint, North
Wales, 15 miles (W. by
N.) from Flint, 18 (N. W.
by W.) from Mold, and
214 (N. W.) from London; containing 3338 inhabitants. The hill upon which the upper part of the
city is built, and the township in which the cathedral
church is situated, are called Bryn-Paulin. From
this circumstance, corroborated by the peculiar adaptation of the spot for a military station, and from its
position between two rivers, the proximity of an exploratory post on the brow of the hill called Bron-yWylva, or "the watch hill," and the discovery of
numerous Roman coins, St. Asaph is by some writers
supposed to have been occupied by the Roman forces
under Suetonius Paulinus, either in advancing to the
conquest of the Isle of Mona, now Anglesey, or on
their rapid return to subdue the revolted Britons
under Boadicea. The city, which was originally
called Llan-Elwy, derived its origin and ancient
name from the erection of a church on the bank of
the river Elwy by St. Kentigern, commonly called
St. Mungo by the Scottish historians, bishop of
Glasgow and primate of Scotland. This ecclesiastic,
about the middle of the sixth century, being compelled to quit his see by a pagan prince of that
country, fled for refuge into North Wales, where he
was kindly received by Caswallon, uncle of Maelgwyn
Gwynedd, then sovereign of the country, who assigned to him the pleasant tract between the rivers
Elwy and Clwyd, the site of the present city. Here
Kentigern built a church of wood, and laid the foundation of an extensive monastery, similar to that
established at Bangor-Iscoed, which so rapidly increased, that, during the time he presided over it,
it is said to have contained not less that 965 brethren,
of whom part devoted themselves to religious instruction and the performance of the services of the
church, and the remainder to labour and secular pursuits. Maelgwyn, whose seat of government was
then at Deganwy, on the river Conway, about
eighteen miles distant, was at first opposed to this
growing establishment; but he became reconciled to
it, and Kentigern having converted him to the Christian faith, he allowed it to be elevated into an episcopal see, which he endowed with several lordships,
and invested with many privileges and immunities.
On the death of the prince by whom Kentigern had
been expelled from North Britain, his successor
Roderic, King of the Strath-Clyde Britons, recalled
the prelate to his original charge, and reinstated him
in the dignities of which he had been deprived: the
latter then appointed Asaph, or Hassaph, his successor in the see of Llan-Elwy, which from him obtained the appellation of St. Asaph, by which it has
since been known. Asaph, who was a native of
North Wales, and eminently distinguished for his
piety, dying in 596, was buried in the cathedral
church, which had been probably rebuilt of stone
during his prelacy. He was subsequently canonized,
and his memory was held in such veneration, that
the circumstance of his remains having been deposited in the cathedral contributed greatly to its
prosperity, and to the high character for sanctity
which it afterwards attained.

ARMS.
The history of the see, which includes all events
of importance connected with the city, is involved in
some obscurity. Its situation near the Marches exposed the latter to the attacks of hostile armies, by
which it was often ravaged; and its being also a barrier, on the line of demarcation between the sovereignties of North Wales and Powys, made the city
frequently an object of contention in the intestine
wars among the native chieftains, by whom it was
alternately laid waste. From these causes the records of the successors of Asaph, for a period of
nearly 500 years, are lost. We learn, however,
from the Welsh Chronicles, and on the authority of
Spelman, that the Bishop of St. Asaph was among
the suffragan bishops to St. David's who, in 601,
were present at the meeting held with St. Augustine
and his associates. And though the see may have
been occasionally vacant during those times of distraction and tumult, Wharton considers it as certain
that the bishops were regularly appointed. Positive
mention occurs of Chebur, whom Wynne, in his
History of Wales, states to have accompanied a deputation of learned men to Rome, in the year 940,
to obtain from the pope a ratification of the celebrated
code of laws compiled by Hywel Dda, sovereign of
all Wales, at the making of which the Welsh Chronicles and the learned Spelman agree that a bishop of
St. Asaph assisted. The monastery continued to
flourish till nearly the commencement of the ninth
century, about which time the monks were dispersed,
but their lands and possessions continued with the
see, which, notwithstanding the frequent assaults it
experienced, retained possession of its privileges and
endowments. In the year 1016, the cathedral church
was begun to be rebuilt of stone, chiefly by the
munificence of King Ethelred and the Archbishop
of Canterbury; it was completed by Canute, soon
after he had ascended the throne. Though these
acts of munificence were obviously intended to conciliate the affections of the Welsh, they failed in producing the desired effect; the latter expelled all the
Saxon ecclesiastics, and declared open war against
them. The subsequent benefactions of Edward the
Confessor, conferred on the see from the same motive,
did not produce a different result; but Harold, after
he had taken Rhuddlan, was more successful in his
efforts for conciliation, and bestowed on the ecclesiastics considerable portions of land in Disserth.
After the Norman Conquest of England, this
place suffered dreadful ravages in the fierce conflicts
between the Anglo-Normans and the native chiefs.
The city was laid waste, and almost deserted by its
inhabitants; the bishops were plundered, and driven
from their see; the episcopal chair remained vacant
for some years, during this frightful period of war and
devastation; and the revenues of the bishopric were
seized on by the Crown. In the reign of Henry I.,
Hewens, Bishop of Bangor, the first Welsh prelate
that ever attended an English council, being present
at the synod held at Westminster in 1102 before
Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury, described in
forcible terms the great distress to which the Welsh
prelates were reduced. Shortly after, an ecclesiastic
named Gilbert was appointed to the see of St. Asaph,
and consecrated by Theobald, Archbishop of Canterbury, assisted by the bishops of London and
Rochester; and this authority of consecration, which
had been previously exercised by the bishops of St.
David's, was retained by the archbishops of Canterbury ever afterwards. Gilbert died in 1152, and was
succeeded in the prelacy by Galfrid ab Arthur, commonly called, from the place of his birth, or from his
archdeaconry, Geoffrey of Monmouth, who holds a
distinguished rank among the ancient monkish chroniclers. On the invasion of North Wales by Henry
II., in 1157, Owain Gwynedd, the reigning sovereign,
encamped his forces for some time at a hamlet in this
parish, which was subsequently called Cîl Owain, or
"Owain's retreat;" and afterwards, on the nearer approach of the enemy, he retired to a stronger position
at Bryn-y-Pin, five miles west of the city, from which
post he frequently descended to skirmish with the
English. In 1175, Godfrey, then bishop, was driven
from his see by the Welsh, and Adam was appointed
his successor: at a council held in London, at which
Henry II. was present, that monarch gave to the
deposed bishop the abbacy of Abingdon. Reyner,
Bishop of the see in 1188, accompanied Baldwin
Archbishop of Canterbury, who was then preaching
the crusades in Wales; and exerted his personal influence in promoting the object of the primate's
exertions within his diocese.
In 1241, a treaty of peace was concluded between
Henry III. and Davydd ab Llewelyn, Prince of
North Wales, and signed on the part of the latter by
the Bishops of Bangor and St. Asaph, at Alnet, on
the river Elwy, near this city. On the renewal of
hostilities, in 1247, both those prelates, having taken
part with their countrymen in resisting the ambitious
designs of the English king, had their churches destroyed, and their lands laid waste by the English
forces, and were reduced to such a state of destitution,
that they were compelled to abandon their respective
sees, and to subsist upon alms. The Bishop of St.
Asaph retired to the abbey of St. Mary Osney, at
Oxford, where he soon afterwards died. After a
vacancy of two years, the Dean and Chapter petitioned Henry III. for licence to elect a bishop, and
Anian, or Einion, was appointed to the see, and
consecrated in 1249. His second successor, who had
been confessor to Edward I., by whom his appointment was confirmed in 1268, bore the same name,
and was distinguished by the surname of Schonaw:
he had been a Dominican friar of Nanney, and was
from that circumstance also called, by the Welsh, y
Brawd dû o Nannau, "the black brother of Nannau."
He obtained for his church, in 1271, from John
Fitz-Alan, Earl of Arundel and lord of Oswestry
and Clunn, a grant of 100 acres of land at St.
Martin's, in acknowledgment of which, he was to
present annually at Midsummer a pair of gilt spurs;
and in 1276 he received from Edward I. a confirmation of the rights and privileges of his see. Richard,
son of Fitz-Alan, confirmed and materially augmented the benefaction of his father; and in 1278,
Grufydd Vaughan, lord of Yale, settled upon the
bishop and his successors the manor of Llandegla.
During the invasion of the principality by Edward I, the city suffered great devastation, and, in
1282, the cathedral and the houses of the ecclesiastics
were burnt to the ground, by a body of English
forces in the service of that monarch. Alarmed at
this calamitous event, and sensible of the continual
danger to which the establishment was exposed, from
the defenceless state of the city, which afforded
neither shelter nor security against the frequent
outrages both of the English and the Welsh, Anian
was desirous of removing the seat of his diocese to
Rhuddlan, about three miles distant, which, being a
fortified place, might afford protection from those
devastations to which, during the unsettled state of
the principality, St. Asaph was constantly exposed.
Edward sanctioned the design of Anian, and offered
to grant a site for the erection of a new church, and
one thousand marks towards the expense of the
building; but the removal was not carried into effect,
either from reluctance to abandon the ancient seat,
which had acquired a high degree of veneration as
the depository of the ashes of St. Asaph, or, as
Godwin supposes, through the death of Pope Martin
IV., to whom application had been made for licence
to remove it; or more probably, as Browne Willis
states, in consequence of circular letters from the
Archbishop of Canterbury, exhorting the bishop and
canons to rebuild the cathedral on its former site.
In the year 1284, the building which forms the principal part of the present structure was erected. In
the course of the preceding negotiations, matters had
been so represented to the king, that he deprived
Anian of the prelacy, seized the temporalities for his
own use, and entrusted the spiritual management of
the see to the Bishop of Wells; but Archbishop
Peckham, who visited the see of St. Asaph, in company with the deposed bishop, convinced of the necessity of having a resident prelate, prevailed upon
Edward to restore Anian to his see, and he was accordingly reinstated. During the continual struggles
between the kings of England and the native princes
of Wales, the bishops of St. Asaph were constantly
led to embrace either one side or the other; and
Leonine de Bromfield, Anian's immediate successor,
adhering to the party of Edward, repeatedly excommunicated Madoc, son of Llewelyn, Prince of Wales,
for his determined opposition and resistance to the
English monarch. This prelate, in 1310, gave four
portions of the tithes of the parish to the four vicars
choral of his cathedral, for serving the parochial cure;
but the vicars have now only four portions of five
townships in the parish, the corn tithes of the said
townships being divided into five portions, of which
the bishop receives one. He also appropriated the
rectories of Llansilin and Rhuddlan to the cathedral
canons, and that of Llanasaph to the cathedral. He
died in 1313, and bequeathed considerable property
to the Church, having obtained special licence to that
effect from Edward, to whom his goods, like those of
other Welsh prelates deceased, would otherwise have
escheated. The confirmation of an annual fair on
May 1st, the anniversary of the death of St. Asaph,
was obtained for the city by Davydd ab Bleuddyn,
successor of Leoline, who, besides a grant of certain
lands to himself and his successors, also procured
a confirmation of the appropriation of Nantglyn
church to the vicars choral, for saying mass in the
chapel of St. Mary, in St. Asaph, which appears to
have been erected about this time.
William de Spridlington, who succeeded to the see
in 1375, procured, on account of its poverty, several
livings to be held in commendam with it, and one
for the better support of the vicars; he also obtained
from Edward III. the grant of a weekly market and
an annual fair, the former to be held on Monday,
and the latter on the 9th of Octaber. Previously to
this period, the tenants of the lordship of Llan-Elwy,
or St. Asaph, were bound to find six labourers to
work throughout the year in the quarry called Red
Rock, or at such other work as should be appointed
by the bishop, for the maintenance of the cathedral
church. In 1381, this prelate released them from
the imposition, on condition of their paying annually
the sum of ten marks, which is stated by Bishop
Godwin to have been paid in his time, and called
Ardreth y Garreg Gôch, or "the rent of the red
rock." John Trevaur, the second prelate of that
name, being detained prisoner in the castle of Flint,
in 1399, by Henry, Duke of Lancaster, was induced
to pronounce sentence of deposition against his sovereign, Richard II., in favour of this ambitious nobleman, by whom, after the accomplishment of his
usurpation, he was sent on an embassy into Spain.
During his absence in that country, Owain Glyndwr,
exasperated at his adherence and that of his clergy
to the cause of the usurper, burnt the cathedral, of
which he left only the outer walls standing; destroyed
the houses of the canons; and reduced the episcopal
palace to ashes. Trevaur, on his return, finding the
insurrection of Glyndwr increasing, and his party
every day gaining ground, went over to the side of
that chieftain, for which reason he was expelled from
his see; and being sent to Paris upon an embassy
by Owain, he died there in 1410. The political
troubles of this reign continuing, the see appears to
have remained vacant from the time of his expulsion
to his death, and the spiritualties were entrusted to
the Abbot of Shrewsbury, by the Archbishop of
Canterbury, who also issued a mandate to the Archdeacon of Chester, to certify the names of such as
preached up rebellion in the diocese of St. Asaph.
After the accession of Edward IV. to the throne,
Thomas, Bishop of St. Asaph, being a strenuous
adherent of the House of Lancaster, was expelled
from his see. During the short restoration of Henry
VI., he was reinstated with full possession of all its
privileges; but upon Edward's return to power, he
was arraigned on a charge of high treason, and,
being convicted, was compelled to purchase his pardon by the surrender of the bishopric to Richard
Redman, a prudent and learned divine, and a zealous
adherent of the House of York. The cathedral, after
having lain for eighty years in the desolate condition to
which it had been reduced by Glyndwr, was rebuilt
by the munificence of this prelate, aided by the
liberal contributions of the neighbouring gentry.
Bishop Redman, having countenanced the pretensions of Lambert Simnel, the feigned Duke of York,
fell under the displeasure of Henry VII.; but unreservedly submitting himself to the clemency of that
monarch, he continued to preside over the see till
his death. The city for a long period exhibited
marks of the desolation it had suffered from the
insurgents under Glyndwr, and it was not till nearly
a century after, that the episcopal palace was rebuilt
by Davydd ab Owen, who also erected a bridge of
wood over the river Clwyd, about a quarter of a
mile north-east of the city, which was afterwards
rebuilt of stone, but is still called Pont Davydd
Esgob, or "Bishop David's Bridge."
During the civil commotions in the seventeenth
century, St. Asaph suffered dreadful havoc; the
revenues of the see were sequestrated by the parliament, the cathedral was desecrated, and converted
into a stable for horses and oxen, and the palace was
appropriated as a tavern for the sale of liquors. In
this degraded state the place continued till the
Restoration, when, after a vacancy of nine years,
the see was filled by Bishop Griffith, who restored
the cathedral, which was afterwards greatly improved
by his successor, Dr. Isaac Barrow, who also rebuilt
the episcopal palace, and erected and endowed almshouses for eight poor widows. During the prelacy
of Dr. John Wynne, a violent hurricane blew down
the upper part of the cathedral tower, which, falling
into the choir, greatly damaged that part of the
building; it was, however, immediately repaired
by the bishop and other dignitaries of the see,
aided by the gentry and clergy resident in the
vicinity.
Among the bishops of St. Asaph, many have
been eminently distinguished for learning and piety,
and for their sedulous attention to the interests of
the see. Bishop Hughes, who was promoted to the
diocese in 1573, was a great benefactor both to it
and to the city; he procured from the Archbishop of
Canterbury a faculty to hold in commendam with the
bishopric the archdeaconry of St. Asaph, which until
very recently was invariably held by his successors
in the see. He died in 1600, and was interred in the
cathedral church. The learned William Morgan, an
eminent linguist and divine, was one of the principal
persons engaged in translating the Bible into the
Welsh language, the first edition being printed in
1588; he also assisted in the English version commonly called Queen Elizabeth's Bible. He was translated from Llandaf to this see in 1601, and died in
1604. Parry, the successor of Bishop Morgan, and
his coadjutor in the translation of the Bible, was
succeeded by John Owen, who introduced the custom
of preaching in Welsh in the parochial church of St.
Asaph. This latter prelate repaired and beautified
the cathedral, in which he placed an organ of large
dimensions; and paved the road between the cathedral and the parish church, a portion of which latter
he rebuilt: he also enlarged the episcopal palace.
Having lived to see the revenues of his diocese sequestrated by the parliament, he died at Aber Kinsi,
near St. Asaph, in 1651, and was privately buried in
the cathedral, under the bishop's throne. Dr. Isaac
Barrow, uncle of the celebrated mathematician of
that name, was alike eminent for his munificence and
his piety; he greatly promoted the interests of the
diocese by his prudence, and the welfare of the city
by his benevolence and charity. He died in 1680,
at Shrewsbury, from which place his remains were
removed to St. Asaph, and interred in the churchyard, near the west door of the cathedral. Dr.
William Beveridge, sometimes styled the "Apostolic
Beveridge," was equally eminent as a divine, and for
his proficiency in oriental literature. He published
a treatise on the excellence of the Hebrew, Chaldee,
Syriac, Samaritan, and Arabic languages, with a
Syriac grammar; and, among numerous devotional
works, one entitled "Private Thoughts," which has
deservedly acquired a high degree of admiration, and
"The Church Catechism Explained, for the use of
the diocese of St. Asaph." This excellent prelate,
who was promoted to the see in 1704, did not enjoy
the dignity for more than three years and some
months; he died at Westminster in 1708, and was
buried in St. Paul's Cathedral. The same virtues
which had adorned his character as a parish-priest,
snone conspicuously in his episcopate; contemporary
writers speak in the most affectionate terms of this
true ornament of the Christian Church, and when he
was dying, one of the chief of his order said of him,
"There goes one of the greatest, and one of the
best men, that England bred." Bishop Fleetwood,
who succeeded him, expended large sums of money
in repairing and beautifying the cathedral, and materially contributed to the obtaining of an act of parliament, in 1712, for abolishing the custom of mortuaries due from the clergy of his diocese, in lieu of
which vexatious source of revenue, the sinecure
rectory of Northop was annexed to the see. Dr.
Thomas Tanner, the celebrated antiquary, and wellknown author of the Notitia Monastica, for some
time presided over the see: he died in 1735, and
left his valuable collection of manuscripts to the
Bodleian library.
The city is beautifully situated on the gentle
acclivity of an eminence, washed on the eastern side
by the river Clwyd, and on the western by the river
Elwy, which unite at the distance of about a mile to
the north. Over the Elwy, at the extremity of the
principal street, is a handsome stone bridge of five
arches; and over the Clwyd is a fine bridge of more
modern erection, within a quarter of a mile to the
east of the cathedral. The houses in the principal
street are of brick, and in general small, though
neatly built; the streets are well paved, but not
lighted. Under the provisions of an act of parliament, passed some years ago, for making a new line
of road, several handsome houses and pleasing cottages were built, which have greatly improved the
appearance of the place. In the construction of the
new road, which now forms the best street in the
town, an elegant bridge was erected over the river
Clwyd, near Bronwylva; the road was raised several
feet, in order to avoid a steep hill; and some beautiful plantations were formed on both sides of it,
which contribute to render the approach to St. Asaph
as picturesque as it is commodious. The view of
the city is peculiarly striking: its elevated position
near the termination of the rich and fertile Vale of
Clwyd, on an eminence crowned with the cathedral,
makes it a conspicuous object from every side; and
the luxuriant groves of trees in which it is deeply
embosomed, give to it a pleasingly romantic appearance. The surrounding scenery, which in every
direction abounds with objects of interest and beauty,
is seen to great advantage from the eminence on
which the city is built, and from the high grounds in
the immediate vicinity. From the brow of a hill,
about two miles distant from the town, on the road
to Holywell, is an extensive view of a portion of the
Vale of Clwyd, beautifully diversified with cornfields and meadows, groves and woods, intersected
by the windings of the river, and enlivened with
numerous pleasing cottages; the whole skirted with
rugged and precipitous mountains, except on the
right hand, where a fine view of the sea is obtained,
bounded in the distance by dark receding mountains. To the south the prospect embraces the
town of Denbigh, with the venerable remains of its
ancient castle on the lofty summit of an isolated rock;
while on the north are seen the ruins of Rhuddlan
Castle, forming an interesting object in the distance.
The road from St. Asaph to Denbigh is in many
parts highly picturesque: the small Vale of Elwy, at
the extremity of which is a bridge of one arch over
that river, eighty feet in the span, called Pont-yrAllt Gôch, is richly wooded, and abounds with finely
varied scenery; the Elwy sometimes rushes along
the vale with the impetuosity of a torrent, and is
beautifully shaded by the luxuriant foliage on its
banks. The market is on Friday; and fairs are held
on Easter-Tuesday, July 15th, October 16th, and
December 16th, chiefly for cattle. The Chester
and Holyhead railway, opened in 1848, passes five
miles to the north of the city.
By the act for "Amending the representation of
the people in England and Wales," St. Asaph was
added to the other boroughs of the county, now
eight in number, which unitedly return one member
to parliament. The right of election is vested in every
person of full age occupying, as owner, or as tenant
under the same landlord, a house or other premises
of the clear yearly value of not less than ten pounds,
provided he be capable of registering as the act directs:
the number of houses worth ten pounds per annum
and upwards is about eighty. The boundaries of the
borough are minutely described in the Appendix.
The mayor of Flint is the returning officer. The
powers of the county debt-court of St. Asaph, established in 1847, extend over the whole registrationdistrict of St. Asaph, except six parishes, which are
under the court at Denbigh.

ARMS OF THE BISHOPRIC.
The diocese appears
originally to have comprehended the whole territory of the ancient
Princes of Powys. Its
jurisdiction afterwards,
and till lately, extended
over the county of Flint,
with the exception of the
parishes of Bangor, Overton, Hanmer, Hawarden,
and Worthenbury; the
whole of Denbighshire, except the deanery of Dyfryn Clwyd, and the chapelries of Holt, Iscoed, and
Penley; the hundreds of Edeyrnion, Penllyn, and
Talybont and Mowddwy, in the county of Merioneth;
the greater part of the county of Montgomery, including thirty-seven parishes; three parishes in the
county of Carnarvon; and eleven parishes and chapelries in the county of Salop. By the act 6th and 7th
of William IV. c. 77, it was proposed to unite the
sees of St. Asaph and Bangor, on the next avoidance of either; but the change being considered
injurious to the interests of the Church, the act
that was passed in July, 1847, for establishing a
bishopric in Manchester, contained a provision also
for the preservation of the two Welsh sees. Under
this act the diocese of St. Asaph comprises Flintshire and Denbighshire, the eastern part of Montgomeryshire, one deanery in Merionethshire; three
or four parishes in Carnarvonshire, on the east bank
of the river Conway; and a small part of the county
of Salop. The ecclesiastical establishment is formed
of the bishop; a dean, who is also chancellor of the
diocese; two canons, four cursal canons, four vicars
choral, an organist, six lay clerks, six choristers, and
other officers. The bishop was formerly also archdeacon; but in 1844, two archdeacons were appointed,
one for St. Asaph, the other for Montgomery.
The cathedral consists principally of the structure raised by Bishop Anian, about the year 1284,
and, after its demolition by Owain Glyndwr, restored
and partly rebuilt by Bishop Redman, towards the
close of the fifteenth century, with the exception of
the choir, which was partly rebuilt about the year
1770, by the dean and chapter. It is a plain cruciform structure, chiefly in the decorated style of English architecture, with a low embattled tower rising
from the intersection of the nave and transepts, and
having at the north-east angle a square staircase
turret. The exterior is of simple but good design.
The nave is of the decorated style, and separated from
the aisles by lofty piers and arches, the details of
which are plain, but of good character; it is lighted
by a range of clerestory windows, square-headed and
enriched with ancient tracery, and at the west end by
a window of six lights, an elegant composition in the
decorated style, enriched with flowing tracery of
exquisite design. The transepts, which are also in
the decorated style of architecture, are without aisles,
and lighted by a range of windows of appropriate
character, but not remarkable for their tracery. The
choir, which is also without aisles, is of comparatively
modern date, and though apparently an imitation of
the later style, bears but a faint resemblance to any
of the styles of English architecture. At the east
end is a window, said to be a fac-simile of the east window in Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire, and which
in 1810 was filled with stained glass, at the expense
of the dean and chapter, aided by the contributions of
the gentry in the neighbourhood, whose armorial
bearings are emblazoned in some of the compartments.
The choir was very small, scarcely affording accommodation for more than the officiating clergy, but it
has lately been enlarged. The south transept is
partly fitted up as a chapter-house and library, containing a valuable collection of more than 2000
volumes, which is open to the clergy of the diocese.
The whole length of the cathedral, from east to west,
is 179 feet, the length of the nave 119 feet, the whole
breadth along the transepts 108 feet, and the length
of the choir sixty feet: the height of the roof from
the pavement is sixty feet, and that of the central
tower ninety-three feet. There are few monuments
of any interest, and, though many of the bishops have
been interred within the walls, scarcely any memorials of them have been erected. An altar-tomb,
with a recumbent figure in episcopal robes, is said
to commemorate the munificent prelate Davydd ab
Owen, who was interred here in 1512; and near the
west door is a plain tomb in the churchyard, with an
inscription to the memory of Bishop Barrow, who
died in 1680. A monument of white marble, to the
memory of Dean Shipley, was erected by subscription about the close of the year 1829, at an expense
of about £600; it consists of a full-length figure of
the dean in his canonicals, in a sitting posture. In
the north transept is the handsome altar-tomb of
Bishop Luxmoore, who was buried in a vault beneath.
The organ, which has lately received several additions
and improvements, is much admired by competent
judges for the superior quality of its tone, and for its
general effect. The churchyard was inclosed with a
wall and handsome palisades in 1815, and in the following year was planted with trees and laid out in
good taste. The cathedral has undergone a course
of repair, out of the funds arising from the tithes of
Llanrhaiadr-yn-Mochnant, granted by act of parliament, in the 54th of George III., for that purpose.
The Episcopal Palace, situated at a short distance
to the west of the cathedral, was rebuilt, upon a more
extensive scale and in an appropriate style, at the
expense of Bishop Carey. The Deanery, about a
quarter of a mile from the cathedral, and on the west
bank of the river Elwy, has also been rebuilt, by the
present dean. The canons' houses, which were demolished by Owain Glyndwr, have never been rebuilt.
About half a century ago, a curious seal of a Bishop
of Llandaf, of the fourteenth or fifteenth century,
was found in a garden, near the cathedral; it passed
into the possession of the late Mr. Bailey, then
organist of the cathedral, and afterwards organist at
Chester. The bishop holds his consistory court,
which is the only court exercising ecclesiastical jurisdiction within the diocese, either himself or by his
surrogate, in the chapter-house, as occasion may
require, generally about nine times in the year.
The four vicars choral of the cathedral perform
the ecclesiastical duties in rotation, dividing equally
among them a part of the tithes of the parish, and
also four out of five portions of those of Gwyddelwern,
in the county of Merioneth, of which the vicar of that
parish receives the fifth; but they have no cure of
souls in the parish of St. Asaph. In addition to this
they receive a small stipend, styled "preaching
money," from the members of the chapter. The net
income arising to them from the tithes of this parish
is £179. The Parochial Church, dedicated to St.
Asaph and St. Kentigern, is situated at the base of
the eminence crowned by the cathedral, and consists
of two parallel aisles, called respectively Eglwys
Asaph and Eglwys Cyndeirn, St. Asaph's and St.
Kentigern's churches. It is a small edifice without
a tower, and is supposed to have been erected about
the year 1524. The interior contains two monuments
of white marble, one of them to the memory of
Thomas Humphreys, Esq., of Bôd-Elwyddan, commonly called Bôdlewyddan, who bequeathed a sum of
money for charitable purposes to the parish. In the
churchyard, which is very spacious, are some ancient
tombs, said to have been brought from Rhuddlan
Abbey, two miles distant: they are of stone, and in
the form of coffins, most of them having on the lids a
sword and spade sculptured; one, which wants this
ornament, has in lieu of it a shield with a lion rampant, beneath which passes a sword grasped by a hand,
and round it the inscription "Hic jacet Ranulfus de
Smalwode." There are places of worship for Calvinistic Methodists, Independents, Wesleyans, and
Baptists.
Certain lands were assigned by Bishop Hughes for
the endowment of a free grammar school, but the
grant being conditional, and the contingencies referred to not happening, it did not take effect. A
grammar school is endowed, however, with part of
the produce of 121 acres of land given in trust to the
vicars of St. Asaph, on the expiration of certain lives,
by Mrs. Elizabeth Williams, of Siamber Wen, by
will dated October 25th, 1729. The lands were left
for education and the clothing of poor people, the
proportion of the income for each purpose not being
specified: £35 are paid out of the rents to the master,
and his salary is increased by a rent-charge of £5
upon a farm in the parish, left by a donor now unknown; and by the interest of £200, bequeathed by
Mr. Hutchinson, of Wrexham, in 1829. The number
of free boys in the school is limited to thirty. The
building consists of a schoolroom, and small apartment attached for the use of the master; the school
was formerly held in the cathedral churchyard, but
was removed at the expense of the dean and chapter.
A day and Sunday National school for boys, established in 1833, is supported by donations and subscriptions, and by an endowment of £7. 4. 9. out of
the interest of a bequest of £400 by Bishop Barrow,
the residue being applied to the support of his almshouses; the number of boys in attendance is about
one hundred. There is also a day and Sunday school
for girls in connexion with the Church, supported by
subscription, and containing about seventy scholars;
and in the park of Bôdlewyddan are two schools, for
boys and girls respectively, maintained by Sir John
and Lady Williams. The dissenters have six Sunday
schools in the parish.
Almshouses for eight poor widows were founded
in 1678, by Bishop Barrow, who left the above sum
of £400, half for these almshouses, and half towards
the maintenance of a free school at St. Asaph, which
he had intended to build: he died, however, in 1680,
before he had carried the design into effect. The
almshouses, having fallen into decay, were rebuilt by
Bishop Bagot. The widows are appointed alternately by the bishop and dean, and the families of
Cevn and Llanerch; and in addition to £6 per annum
from Bishop Barrow's bequest, they receive £25 per
annum, the rent of two parcels of land in Gwernglevryd, comprising fourteen acres, purchased in 1747
with the produce of some consolidated charities,
amounting to £150, including a bequest by Thomas
Humphreys, of £60, for various charitable purposes,
in 1696. Besides the above endowments, there have
been given for charitable uses, £20 each by Margaret
Lloyd in 1720, and Ellen Lloyd in 1726, to the poor
of Meriadog and Wigvair; £100 by the Rev. William Lloyd in 1732, and £20 by Susannah Lloyd in
1750, for the poor of the parish in general; and £60
by the Rev. Robert Lloyd, to the poor of Bôdlewyddan, Bryn Paulin, Meriadog, Gwernglevryd, Talar,
Vaynol, and Wigvair. These and other bequests are
invested in the St. Asaph turnpike-trust, and the
Denbigh and Rhuddlan trust, to the amount of £260.
A portion of land also, now producing £12 per annum,
was left by Thomas Foulkes for the poor. This sum,
and the interest of £210 out of the £260, together
with the residue of the income from Mrs. Elizabeth
Williams's lands, are distributed among the poor of
the parish in clothing; the interest of the remaining
£50 of the £260 is expended in clothing for the poor
of Meriadog and Wigvair only. A poor boy of the
parish may receive benefit from Dr. George Smith's
charity at Northop. The poor-law union of which
this place is the head, was formed April 10th, 1837,
and comprises sixteen parishes; namely, Abergele,
St. Asaph, Bettws-yn-Rhôs, Bôdvari, Cwm, Denbigh, Dyserth, Hênllan, Kegidock or St. George's,
Llandulas, Llansannan, Llanvair-Talhairn, Llanyvydd, Meliden with Prestatyn, Rhuddlan with Rhyl,
and Tremerchion. It is under the superintendence
of twenty-four guardians, and contains a population
of 23,568, of whom 15,201 are in Denbighshire, and
8367 in the county of Flint.
Near the river Elwy, in the hamlet of Wigvair
(which see), is Fynnon Vair, or "the well of Our
Lady," situated in a richly wooded dell. This spring,
which is inclosed in a polygonal basin of hewn stone,
discharges about one hundred gallons per minute:
the water is strongly impregnated with lime, and was
formerly much resorted to as a cold bath. Connected
with the well are the ruined walls of a cruciform
chapel, which, prior to the Reformation, was a chapel
of ease to St. Asaph, in the later style of English
architecture: these remains are partly overgrown
with ivy; and the ruin, elegant in itself, derives additional interest from the beauty of its situation.
There are numerous elegant mansions in the parish,
among which the most conspicuous are, Bôdlewyddan,
the seat of Sir John Williams, Bart., lately enlarged
or rebuilt in the English castellated style; Pengwern,
the hospitable seat of Lord Mostyn, erected about
the beginning of the last century; Cevn, rebuilt in
the Elizabethan style of architecture; and Bronwylva, the residence of Colonel Sir Thomas Henry
Browne, erected in the year 1660, and enlarged in
1816. In this last mansion are some valuable trophies,
taken during the late war, including Napoleon Buonaparte's travelling map and books of roads of the
French empire, in splendid Morocco cases, emblazoned with the imperial arms, taken from his library
at Fontainbleau in the year 1815; and a French
field-marshal's baton, two feet three inches in length,
covered with purple velvet ornamented with golden
bees, and surmounted with an imperial crown, taken
in Silesia, in 1812, by a division of Blucher's corps.
Mrs. Hemans, the poetess, resided for some time at
Bronwylva.
In the hamlet of Meriadog are some magnificent
natural caverns, extending for a considerable distance
into the limestone rocks. In some parts of these the
roof is more than forty feet in height; and near the
river Elwy the base of the rock is perforated by a lofty
natural arch, twenty-one yards in length, and thirtysix feet high, through which is a road capable of admitting a wagon loaded with hay. Various fossil
remains have been found in the caverns; among
which are, the skull of some remarkably large animal,
with the teeth, of corresponding size, perfectly enamelled; and the tongue of an animal, as large as a
deer's tongue, of which the form and grain were perfect, though the relic was completely petrified.
Aston
ASTON, a township, in the parish of Hawarden, union of Great Boughton, hundred of
Mold, county of Flint, North Wales, 2 miles
(N. by W.) from Hawarden; containing 303 inhabitants. On a gentle eminence stands the residence of
Aston Hall. The Chester and Holyhead railway
passes in the vicinity, about a mile from the mansion.
Aston
ASTON, a township, in the parish of Lydham,
lower division of the hundred of Montgomery,
county of Montgomery, North Wales, 6 miles
(S. E. by E.) from Montgomery; containing 70 inhabitants. This township, which is situated on the
border of Shropshire, on the road from Bishop'sCastle to Montgomery, formerly composed part of
the manor of Teirtrêv, or "the three townships,"
which had a chapel attached; but subsequently this
manor was divided, and Aston was connected with the
parish of Lydham, the greater part of which is in the
hundred of Purslow, county of Salop. It forms one
of the eighteen parishes and townships incorporated
for the support of their poor in the house of industry
at Forden.
Athan, St.
ATHAN, ST., a parish, in the union of Bridgend and Cowbridge, hundred of Cowbridge,
county of Glamorgan, South Wales, 5 miles
(S. S. E.) from Cowbridge; containing 379 inhabitants. This place, according to Dr. Malkin, derives
its name from St. Tathan, a nephew and one of the
disciples of St. Iltutus, who lived here in retirement,
about the commencement of the sixth century, and
founded the parish church, in which, returning after
an absence of several years, he was interred, and of
which he became the tutelar saint. The parish is
pleasantly situated in the most fertile part of the vale
of Glamorgan, bordering upon the Bristol Channel,
to which the village extends, and near the small port
of Aberthaw, which is a creek to the port of Cardiff.
The scenery is beautifully diversified with hill and
dale, and the air is remarkably salubrious. The
neighbourhood abounds with excellent limestone, the
working of which, for burning as an article of manure,
affords employment to such of the poorer inhabitants
as are not engaged in agriculture. The living is a
rectory, rated in the king's books at £15. 9. 7.; present net income, £369, with a glebe-house; patrons,
the Rayer family. The church contains two monuments to the Berkrolles family. There are places of
worship for Wesleyans and Calvinistic Methodists.
A day school in connexion with the Established
Church, commenced in the year 1843, is partly supported by subscription; and two Sunday schools are
gratuitously conducted, one of them in the premises
of the day school, and the other in the meeting-house
of the Calvinistic body. Several persons of the
names of Walter and Spencer, upwards of a century
since, gave a sum of £45 for the use of the poor, twothirds of which are vested in the Cowbridge turnpiketrust, and the other third is in private hands; the interest of the whole is regularly distributed among three
or four poor parishioners, under the directions of the
select vestry. Another charity, amounting to £20,
the gift of several persons, has been lost by the insolvency of the party to whom the money was lent.
On the edge of an abrupt acclivity, in the parish,
are the venerable remains of East Orchard Castle,
erected by Roger Berkrolles, or Berclos, upon whom
this lordship was bestowed at the time of the Conquest, he being one of the twelve knights who accompanied the Norman adventurer Fitz-Hamon. A
small rivulet winds pleasingly round the eminence
on which the castle is built, and the ruined walls,
mantled with ivy, present an object highly picturesque. Berclos is said to have divided his lands
with the original proprietor, and out of his reserved
moiety to have afforded subsistence to other families
who had been dispossessed of their property by the
Normans.
Atpar
ATPAR, a hamlet, in the parish of Llandyvriog, union of Newcastle-Emlyn, upper division
of the hundred of Troedyraur, county of Cardigan, South Wales: the population is returned
with the parish. This place was formerly one of the
contributory boroughs within the county, united in
returning a member to parliament; but, according to
the late Sir S. R. Meyrick, it forfeited its franchise
by misconduct, being deprived of the privilege by a
vote of the House of Commons, in 1742. It has,
however, by the act for "Amending the representation of the people in England and Wales," been
restored to the enjoyment of the elective franchise,
and, in conjunction with Aberystwith and Lampeter,
shares with Cardigan in the return of one member.
The right of election is vested in every male person
of full age occupying, as owner, or as tenant under
the same landlord, a house or other premises of the
clear yearly value of not less than ten pounds, provided he be capable of registering as the act directs.
The number of these tenements within the limits of
the borough, which include the hamlet of NewcastleEmlyn on the other side of the river Teivy, is
seventy-eight. The mayor of Cardigan is the returning officer. Atpar is said to have been a
borough by prescription, and was anciently governed
by a portreeve, recorder, and two bailiffs. The burgesses were made upon the presentment of a jury,
which consisted apparently of the proprietors of
burgages; and were accustomed to vote, whether
resident or not, for the election of a member: at
present there are no burgesses alive. A belief prevails among the inhabitants, that the charter was
destroyed by a fire which occurred within the memory
of some now (or lately) living, and in which, there
can be no doubt, many of the documents of the borough perished. The hamlet is situated on the northern bank of the Teivy, and is connected by a stone
bridge with Newcastle-Emlyn, the two places forming one town of the latter name. Atpar comprises
within its limits an elegant villa, called Atpar Hill;
and the residence of Emlyn Cottage.