- Cardigan, Ceredigion
infobox UK place
country = Wales
welsh_name=Aberteifi
constituency_welsh_assembly= Ceredigion
static_
static_image_caption = Cardigan High Street
map_type=
official_name= Cardigan
unitary_wales=Ceredigion
lieutenancy_wales=Dyfed
constituency_westminster= Ceredigion
post_town= CARDIGAN
postcode_district = SA43
postcode_area= SA
dial_code= 01239
os_grid_reference= SN175465
population= 4,203 [Community, 2001 census]Cardigan ( _cy. Aberteifi) is a
town in thecounty ofCeredigion inWest Wales . It lies on theestuary of theRiver Teifi at the point where Ceredigion meetsPembrokeshire . It was thecounty town of the pre-1974 county ofCardiganshire . The town'spopulation was estimated at 4,000 inhabitants in 2007, though it is a significant regional administrative centre forWest Wales , harbouring a hospital, college, a modern arts centre (with two-screen cinema) and a currently under-used nineteenth centuryguildhall together with atheatre and good shopping facilities. Cardigan is twinned withBrioude ,France .The town has recently (2006/2007) undergone a renaissance with a co-ordinated programme of building works restoring many of the facades of the town centre shops in a sympathetic style. The quayside has been rebuilt with a new civic area and landing stage.
History
The town was founded in 1093 by the Norman
Roger de Montgomery . In the following centuryRhys ap Gruffydd , the ruler of the kingdom ofDeheubarth , made a number of attempts to wrest the town from the Normans, finally succeeding in 1165. The castle was rebuilt in stone by Rhys ap Gruffydd 1171. In 1176 first NationalEisteddfod of Wales was held in the town. By the mid13th century the town was in the hands of the Normans once again who enhanced the town defences by building a stone town wall. During theEnglish Civil War ,Cardigan Castle was attacked by the parliamentary forces.Since the
Early Middle Ages Cardigan has been a port. Throughout theMiddle Ages it grew in importance until byElizabethan times it was, afterMilford Haven , the most important port in Wales. A small shipbuilding industry and allied trades like rope and sail making were established in the port in the 17th century. [The Seaport of Cardigan: Cardigan Chamber of Commerce] By the early 19th century over 300 sailing vessels giving employment to more than 1,000 men were registered at the port and more than 200 ships were built in the fiveshipyard s.Cilgerran slate was exported from the port. The riversilt ed up and the port died by the early part of the twentieth century. Plans todredge it have come to nothing over the years.Cardigan Castle
In 1176
Cardigan Castle became the site of the first competitiveEisteddfod . Cardigan also hosted theNational Eisteddfod of Wales in 1942 and 1976. Thecastle was for many years in private hands and as a result became run down and derelict. The town council itself showed little interest in saving it. However a group of volunteers, and the local Catholic Priest, working separately did raise its profile.Ceredigion County Council finally bought it in 2003.Welsh Language
Cardigan is predominantly a
Welsh language speaking community. At the lastcensus more than 70% of the residents were recorded as being able to speak or understand spoken Welsh with 48% able to speak, read and write in the language. [2001 Census. Neighbourhood Statistics: Cardigan] In 1176 and again 800 years later the National Eisteddfod was held in the town. In 2003 the community together with theWelsh Language Board set up a language action plan designed to provide opportunities for people of all ages to get together to speak Welsh. The county council, Twf, Mudiad Ysgolion Meithrin, the Urdd, Cardigan town council, the local Young Farmers, Menter Aberteifi and the Board are working together in pursuit of its objectives.Shrine to Our Lady of Cardigan
Cardigan is also the site of Wales' premier
Roman Catholic Shrine in Wales. In preEnglish Reformation times it was known for a statue of the Virgin Mary, who held a candle whose flame never extinguished. It is known as the shrine to Our Lady of the Taper.Miscellanous
Cardigan Island lies just 200 metres offshore near the town at Gwbert.Cardigan
railway station was closed under theBeeching Axe in 1963. [List of closed railway stations in Britain ]The village of
Moylegrove is nearby.See also
*
St. Dogmaels
*Our Lady of Cardigan External links
* [http://www.cardiganguide.com/gallery/c1.html Photographs of Cardigan]
* [http://tourism.ceredigion.gov.uk/saesneg/cardigan.htm Cardigan's Official site]
* [http://www.cardigantaper.org/ Our Lady of Cardigan, National Shrine of Wales website]
* [http://www.gtj.org.uk/search/simpleSearch.php?srch=aberteifi&lang=en Old photographs of Cardigan port]
* [http://www.gtj.org.uk/en/item1/11355 Aerial photograph of Cardigan]
* [http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadDatasetList.do?a=3&b=546813&c=cardigan&d=14&g=415704&i=1001x1003&m=0&r=1&s=1206603299823&enc=1&domainId=16 2001 Census. Neighbourhood Statistics: Cardigan]
* [http://www.mwldan.co.uk/ Theatr Mwldan Cardigan]
* [http://www.visitcardigan.com/landscape-of-cardigan.htm The Cardigan Geological Landscape]
* [http://www.cardigan-chamber.co.uk/history.htm Cardigan History: Cardigan Chamber of Commerce]
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/mid/sites/cardigan/ BBC Cardigan - Aberteifi]
* [http://www.twfcymru.com/en-gb/home/Pages/default2.aspx Twf]
* [http://www.mym.co.uk/index.cfm?UUID=DE0484E7-70C8-4A56-A23367B950C328B3&language=en Mudiad Ysgolion Meithrin]
* [http://www.geograph.org.uk/search.php?i=3089878 www.geograph.co.uk : photos of Cardigan and surrounding area]References
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