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This is a timeline of Welsh history, comprising important legal and territorial changes, and political events in Wales This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.
The Annals of Wales Welsh history timeline from 447AD to 954AD [3] Late Middle Ages Brut y Tywysogion: 1330: Middle Welsh translation of lost Latin work: Chronicle of the Princes: Continues Welsh history from the end of History Regum Britanniae beginning with the death of Cadwaladr Fendigaid in 682. Ends with a later addition of the period 1282 ...
The earliest known item of human remains discovered in modern-day Wales is a Neanderthal jawbone, found at the Bontnewydd Palaeolithic site in the valley of the River Elwy in North Wales; it dates from about 230,000 years before present (BP) in the Lower Palaeolithic period, [1] and from then, there have been skeletal remains found of the Paleolithic Age man in multiple regions of Wales ...
National Library of Wales. ISBN 0907158730. biography.wales (Dictionary of Welsh Biography) Davies, John (1994). A History of Wales. Penguin Books. ISBN 9780140145816. Encyclopaedia of Wales. University of Wales Press. 2008. ISBN 978-0-7083-1953-6. Lloyd, John Edward (1912). A History of Wales from the Earliest Times to the Edwardian Conquest ...
Janet Burton is professor of medieval history at the University of Wales Trinity Saint David. She researches medieval monasticism, religious orders and congregations. She is a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries, the Royal Historical Society, and the Learned Society of Wales. She initiated the Monastic Wales project in July 2007 to research ...
Wales in the Middle Ages; Wales in the world wars *Walhaz; Welsh coal strike of 1898; Welsh gold; The Welsh History Review; Welsh hook; Welsh Marches; Welsh Not; Welsh rebellions against English rule; Welsh settlement in the Americas; Welsh surnames; Welsh units; Welsh Wig; Wledig; Women's Archive Wales; Wrexham Archives and Local Studies
It was renamed St David's University College in 1971 after joining the federal University of Wales, and in 1996 renamed again to University of Wales, Lampeter. [5] In 2010, the college merged with Trinity University College to form the University of Wales Trinity Saint David. [6]
Wales as a nation was defined in opposition to later English settlement and incursions into the island of Great Britain. In the early middle ages, the people of Wales continued to think of themselves as Britons, the people of the whole island, but over the course of time one group of these Britons became isolated by the geography of the western peninsula, bounded by the sea and English neighbours.