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Tourist places in Brecon

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Friday, 02 May 2008

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History of Brecon

Brecon/Aberhonddu (pop. 6,000), which lends its name to the mountains and the national park, lies in a beautiful setting in the valley of the Usk at its junction with the Honddu and the Tarell. It has many Georgian houses, remains of the medieval town walls and a 12th/13th century castle, which was razed to the ground in the 17th century.

Tourist Attractions in Brecon

Offa's Dyke
Offa's Dyke is an earth rampart built by King Offa of Mercia between 784 and 796 to provide protection for the Anglo-Saxons against Welsh attacks. It extends from the Severn estuary to the Dee, a total distance of some 170mi/272km. After defeating Caradoc, a Welsh prince, between Abergele and Rhuddlan (south of Rhyl) Offa built the wall to mark the border between Mercia and Wales. His palace was at Sutton Walls. The earth rampart was reinforced by a ditch on the Welsh side. It can be followed, with many interruptions, for a distance of more than 140mi/224km between the estuary of the Dee and the Wye. A second earthwork known as Wat's (or Watt's) Dyke, which is probably of somewhat later origin, runs parallel to Offa's Dyke, 3mi/5km away, for a distance of some 40mi/64km from the Dee to the Severn.

Pembrokeshire Coast and Penninsula
The drive from Carmarthen Bay via Pembroke to Cardigan in South Wales includes Carmarthen, according to legend the birthplace of Merlin, Manorbier Castle and the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park.

South Wales - From Chepstow to Swansea
The drive from Chepstow to Swansea in South Wales includes the attractive ruins of Tintern Abbey, Newport, Swansea and the Gower Peninsula.

South Wales - From the Brecon Beacons National Park to Monmouth
The drive from the Brecon Beacons National Park to Monmouth in South Wales includes the Brecon Beacons, one of the most beautiful parks in Wales, Hay-on-Wye and the Nelson Museum and Local History Center in Monmouth.

South Wales - The Valleys
In comparison with other British mining areas the Valleys only gained economic importance fairly recently. Mining techniques and productivity levels did not become aligned until the construction of the railroads, which linked the Valleys to the ports of Cardiffmi, Port Talbot, Briton Ferry, Swansea and Llanelli, and enabled export. In its heyday before World War I South Wales possessed the country's second largest mining region. This region, with an exposed, productive coal-bearing area of 1,004sq.mi/2,600sq.km, extends westwards in a kidney shape from Newport/Cardiff for about 50mi/80km, while from north to south it covers an area of approximately 15.5mi/25km. The long syncline is framed by older layers and only selectively overlain by more recent sediments. Through pronounced mountain folding, coal seams found at certain depths experienced extensive fragmentation into individual fields. The quality of the coal ranges from anthracite, glance coal made into hard coal through the process of carbonization and containing 94% carbon, via lean coal and forge coal to fat coal, which is used for carbonization. Mining succeeded in the deeper valleys by the use of tunneling techniques, with flat shafts, while more exposed coal was removed through open-cast mining. On this coal base arose a prospering iron and steel industry, which at the height of the mid-19th century boom in iron employed more than 15,000 workers in the iron metropolis of Merthyr Tydfil alone. The decline of "King Coal" and the "Iron King" began in the 1920s, when, after vehement strikes and lockouts, one mine after another had to cease production and the great iron foundries had to close their gates. The problem was compounded by competition from cheap foreign imports, old-fashioned mining and production techniques as well as the difficult location of some coal seams, which made viable mechanized mining difficult. Even the strong community spirit of the Welsh trade unions, which proved itself in 1984/1985 - in Britain's longest miners' strike - and again in 1992 could not prevent the death of the mining industry. Today three pits in the South Welsh valleys with fewer than 1,000 miners are the final testimony to the great industrial past, when more than 260,000 men working in about 620 collieries brought in excess of 50 million tons of coal to the surface annually. The steel industry has also been cut back, leaving only minimal works along the south coast of Wales.Heavy industry, which was based on the initial effect of coal, has left a bad legacy. That the barely landscaped slag heaps are more than just scenic eyesores was made all too clear by the Aberfan disaster of 1966, when one of them, softened by rain, slid downhill and buried a school with 141 children beneath it. Following this the safety of the heaps was increased, and the state approved investments in the rehabilitation of the landscape. Meanwhile some of the heaps have disappeared, with slopes and hills being landscaped, and leisure parks, lakes, new housing areas and business zones being laid out. Educational trails through the mining area provide interested visitors, equipped with protective helmets and miners' lamps, with an insight into these abandoned industries. The process of making good, recultivating and remodeling the valleys, which has begun with varying degrees of success, remains far from complete.

Manorbier - Carew Castle
The impressive ruins of 13th C Carew Castle lie on one of the many hills surrounding Milford Haven. Its beautifully carved high cross is thought to date from the ninth century. The church at Carew Cheriton, with a Perpendicular tower, is a fine example of 14th C sacral architecture.

Pembrokeshire Coast National Park
Pembroke is an excellent base from which to explore the marvelous scenery of the southwest coast. A particularly delightful walk is along the Pembrokeshire Coastal Footpath, laid out in 1970. It covers a distance of 167mi/267km along the coast from Carmarthen Bay to Cardigan Bay and in doing so crosses the Pembrokeshire Coastal National Park, established in 1952. As walkers pass remote beaches and romantic steep cliffs they are charmed by the unique magic of the landscape; they may also see rare sea birds, such as puffins or razor-billed auks. Pembrokeshire Coast National Park covers an area of 225 square miles and is Britain's only coastal national park. The path walking path is a National Trail and is marked by sign posts depicting acorns.

Tenby / Dinbych y Pysgod
Tenby / Dinbych y Pysgod (pop. 5,220), still with its old town walls, lies on a rocky peninsula at the western end of Carmarthen Bay. This seaside resort, prized at the turn of the century by the artist Augustus John as being "so restful, so colorful and so unspoiled" has a picturesque harbor, around which attractive pastel-colored houses are ... More

grouped, two beautiful sandy beaches, charming narrow alleys, the 15th century carefully restored Tudor Merchant's House and St Mary's Church, the largest parish church in Wales.
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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 07 May 2008 )
 
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