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Welcome to Wales, United Kingdom. We offer free
travel and tour information for visitors.
Wales is a country that is part of the
United Kingdom, bordered by England to its east, and the Atlantic Ocean
and Irish Sea to its west. It is also an elective region of the European
Union. Wales has a population estimated at three million and is officially
bilingual, with both Welsh and English having equal status.
Originally and traditionally a Celtic land and one of the Celtic nations,
a distinct Welsh national identity emerged in the early fifth century,
after the Roman withdrawal from Britain. The 13th-century defeat of
Llewelyn by Edward I completed the Anglo-Norman conquest of Wales and
brought about centuries of English occupation. Wales was subsequently
incorporated into England with the Laws in Wales Acts 1535–1542, creating
the legal entity known today as England and Wales. However, distinctive
Welsh politics developed in the 19th century, and in 1881 the Welsh Sunday
Closing Act became the first legislation applied exclusively to Wales. In
1955 Cardiff was proclaimed as national capital and in 1999 the National
Assembly for Wales was created, which holds responsibility for a range of
devolved matters.
The capital Cardiff is Wales's largest city with 317,500 people. For a
period it was the biggest coal port in the world and, for a few years
before World War One, handled a greater tonnage of cargo than either
London or Liverpool. Two-thirds of the Welsh population live in South
Wales, with another concentration in eastern North Wales. Many tourists
have been drawn to Wales's "wild... and picturesque" landscapes. From the
late 19th century onwards, Wales acquired its popular image as the "land
of song", attributable in part to the revival of the eisteddfod tradition.
Actors, singers and other artists are celebrated in Wales today, often
achieving international success. Cardiff is the largest media centre in
the UK outside of London.
Llywelyn the Great founded the Principality of Wales in 1216. Just over a
hundred years after the Edwardian Conquest, Owain Glyndŵr briefly restored
independence in the early 15th century, to what was to become modern
Wales. Traditionally the British Royal Family have bestowed the courtesy
title of 'Prince of Wales' upon the heir apparent of the reigning monarch.
Wales is sometimes referred to as the 'Principality of Wales', or just the
'principality', although this has no modern geographical or constitutional
basis.
The English name "Wales" originates from the
Germanic word Walh or Waelisc, which referred to foreigners who had been "Romanised".
Waelisc also provides the source of English word Welsh. As the terms Walh
or Waelisc were not used by Germanic speakers to describe their eastern
neighbours, it would have had a meaning that was more than just
"foreigner". Anglo-Saxons used their version of an Old Teutonic term to
apply to speakers of Celtic languages as well as to speakers of Latin. The
same etymology applies to walnuts (meaning—nut of the Roman lands) as well
as to the "wall" of Cornwall in Britain and to Wallonia in Belgium. Old
Church Slavonic also borrowed the term from the Germanic, and it served as
the origin of the names of the Romanian region of Wallachia and its
people, the Vlachs.
The Welsh call their country Cymru in the Welsh language, which most
likely meant "compatriots" in Old Welsh. The name competed for a long time
in Welsh literature with the older name Brythoniaid (Brythons). Only after
1100 did the former become as common as the latter; both terms applied
originally not only to the inhabitants of what is now called Wales, but in
general to speakers of the Brythonic language and its descendants, many of
whom lived in "the Old North": the placenames Cymru (Welsh for Wales), its
Latinised version Cambria, and Cumbria and Cumberland in the North of
England, derive their names from the same origin. The Angles, Saxons and
Jutes were known indiscriminately as Saeson in Welsh (the term is cognate
with "Saxon"; compare Gaelic Sassenach); Sais, plural Saeson, is the
modern Welsh word for "Englishman."
There is also a medieval legend found in the Historia Regum Britanniae of
Sieffre o Fynwy (Geoffrey of Monmouth) that derives Cymru from the name
Camber, son of Brutus and, according to the legend, the eponymous King of
Cymru (Cambria in Latin); this, however, is considered largely the fruit
of Geoffrey's vivid imagination. more...http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wales
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