Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
St Mary Street (Welsh: Heol Eglwys Fair) and High Street (Welsh: Heol Fawr) are major commercial streets in the Castle Quarter of Cardiff city centre, Wales, which form a major thoroughfare running south from the gatehouse of Cardiff Castle. High Street begins at the junction of Castle Street on the A4161 and ends at the junction of Church ...
Originally the site of Cardiff gaol, the gallows were located on the site of the current St. Mary Street entrance, where Dic Penderyn was hanged on 13 August 1831. The market was designed by the Borough Surveyor, William Harpur, and opened in May 1891. [1] A farmers' market is known to have existed at the site since the 18th century.
Bute Street, Butetown (Cardiff Bay) Caroline Street, city centre, also known as Chip Alley or Chippy Lane. Lloyd George Avenue, Atlantic Wharf (Cardiff Bay) St. Mary Street, city centre; The Hayes, city centre; West Grove, Roath
St. Mary Street south end Womanby Street looking south. St. Mary Street (Welsh: Heol Eglwys Fair) and High Street (Welsh: Heol Fawr). The former street is named after the 11th century church of St. Mary, the largest in Cardiff until it was destroyed by the Bristol Channel floods of 1607.
St Mary's Church (Welsh: Eglwys Fair) was an Anglican church in Cardiff, Wales, which stood at the south end of the current St. Mary's Street, from 1107 until 1620.After severe flood damage it was abandoned in 1701 and later replaced at a different location in 1843.
A plaque next to the St Mary Street entrance commemorates the event. [6] The first-floor function room in which the event took place (previously called the Alexandra Room) was renamed "The Captain Scott Room" in 1982, after a chance discovery of a menu from the banquet. The Cardiff-based Captain Scott Society was founded in 1983 as a result. [7 ...
John Speed's 1610 map of Cardiff. The town hall is marked 'P'. The gild hall was replaced by the second town hall in the 1330s. This structure, sometimes called the town house, was built on land allocated by a charter of 1331, was located in the centre of what is now St Mary Street (at ), a site that Cardiff's town hall would occupy for the next 500
The façade on St Mary Street. The Royal Arcade is a shopping arcade in Cardiff, South Wales. Inside the Royal Arcade. The Royal Arcade is the oldest arcade in Cardiff, being built in 1858, it is a Grade II listed building. In 1861, a free library was set up by voluntary subscription above the St Mary Street entrance to the Royal Arcade in ...