Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The paper was first published in Bala in October 1860, as a four-page supplement, The Merioneth Herald, in The Oswestry Advertiser.Having subsequently become a distinct paper printed in Oswestry, England, in 1864 it became the Merionethshire Standard and Mid-Wales Herald [3] and, in 1869, was renamed The Cambrian News and Merionethshire Standard.
The full masthead proclaimed The Cambrian and Weekly General Advertiser for Swansea and the Principality of Wales. By 1906 it was acquired by South Wales Post Newspapers Co. [1] and, in 1930, merged with Herald of Wales. [2] Many articles in this newspaper have been indexed and the index is searchable at https://archive.swansea.gov.uk/cambrian
Capital North West and Wales operates an opt-out service for the North Wales Coast on 96.3 FM, carrying an hour-long Welsh language programme each weekday. GTFM, a community radio station in Pontypridd, airs Welsh-medium programmes on Tuesday and Sunday evenings and Saturday mornings with a daily news bulletin in Welsh from BBC Radio Cymru.
This page was last edited on 5 September 2022, at 07:34 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Cambrian News, a Welsh newspaper; The Cambrian, a former Welsh newspaper founded in 1806; The Cambrian (U.S.) , a Welsh-language newspaper printed in the United States, 1880–1919; The Cambrian, a newspaper serving Cambria, California, owned by The Tribune of San Luis Obispo
The media in Wales provide services in both English and Welsh, and play a role in modern Welsh culture. BBC Cymru Wales began broadcasting in 1923 have helped to promote a form of standardised spoken Welsh, [1] and one historian has argued that the concept of Wales as a single national entity owes much to modern broadcasting. [2]
The Cambrian Archaeological Association was to sponsor the publication of Westwood's Lapidarium Walliæ: the early Inscribed and Sculptured Stones of Wales in 1876–1879. [17] A final key figure was Rev Cardale Babington, who came from Ludlow in Shropshire. Professor of Botany at Cambridge, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1851 ...
30 March – Dai Thomas, Wales national rugby player (date of death unknown) 1 April – George Ewart Evans, folklorist and oral historian (died 1988) [33] 11 May – Aneirin Talfan Davies, writer and publisher (died 1980) [34] 11 June – Ronnie Boon, Wales rugby union player (died 1998) 12 June – Mansel Thomas, composer and conductor (died ...