[New  Search]

Items matching castles in Wales (results page 3)

castles: A fortified defensive building or structure. Strictly speaking, a castle was also a home, whereas a fort was purely defensive, but I have used castle for any fortified place. A castle may also have had a dungeon or donjon, a sort of prison for offenders and captured soldiers.
Synonyms: fort, keep, garrison


Wales, one of three divisions of Great Britain; is 135 m. in length and from 37 to 95 m. in breadth, and bounded on the NW. and S. by the sea; it is divided into 12 counties, of which 6 form North Wales and 6 South Wales; is a mountainous country, intersected by beautiful valleys, which are traversed by a number of streams; it is largely agricultural; has mines of coal and iron, lead and copper, as well as large slate-quarries, which are extensively wrought; the Church of England is the church established, but the majority of the people are Nonconformists; it is represented in Parliament by 30 members; the natives are Celts, and the native language Celtic, which is still the language of a goodly number of the people.

Population (1907) 1,519,000

From Nuttall Encylopædia, 1907

previous page 1 2 [3]
Chepstow Castle, 4:3 cropped version
Plate 63.—Flint Castle
Plate 65.—Entrance to Beaumaris Castle.
Plate 72.—Caernarvon Castle
Plate 73.—Gateway and Bridge, Ragland.
Plate 74.—Ragland Castle
Carew Castle
Chepstow Castle
Criccieth Castle
previous page 1 2 [3]

Places Shown

Beaumaris; Anglesey; Wales

Caernarvon; Gwynedd; Wales

Chepstow; Monmouthshire; Wales

Criccieth; Eifionydd; Gwynedd; Wales

Flint; Flintshire; Wales

Pembroke; Pembrokeshire; Wales

Raglan; Monmouthshire; Wales