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Until 1974,
Caernarfonshire (/kərˈnɑːrvənʃər/; Welsh: Sir Gaernarfon,
Welsh pronunciation: [ˈsir gaɨ̯rˈnarvɔn]),
sometimes spelled Caernarvonshire or...
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Heritage Site.
Gwynedd covers the
majority of the
historic counties of
Caernarfonshire and Merionethshire. In the past,
historians such as J. E.
Lloyd ****umed...
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North Wales. It is the
oldest city in Wales.
Historically part of
Caernarfonshire, it had a po****tion of 15,100 at the 2021 census.
Landmarks include...
- The
Great Orme (Welsh: Y Gogarth) is a
limestone headland on the
north coast of Wales, north-west of the town of Llandudno.
Referred to as
Cyngreawdr Fynydd...
- The
Caernarfonshire flag (Welsh:
Baner Sir Gaernarfon) is the flag of the
historic Welsh county of Caernarfon. The
origins of the
emblem of the three...
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Talybont (otherwise Tal-y-bont), is a
small village to the
southeast of the city of
Bangor in Gwynedd,
north Wales, in the
community of Llanllechid, and...
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highest percentage of
Welsh speakers of its
respective shire (
Caernarfonshire) and of any
district in
Wales (with 1,500
monolingual Welsh speakers...
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covering the area of the
abolished administrative counties of Anglesey,
Caernarfonshire, most of Merioneth, and a
small part of Denbighshire. The new county...
- Cim or Y Cim is the name of two
relatively small areas of two
Caernarfonshire communities in Gwynedd,
north Wales. The name
means "common land" or "land...
- Y Rhiw (Welsh pronunciation) is a
small village on the
south west tip of the Llŷn
Peninsula in Gwynedd, Wales. The
village forms part of the community...