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{{Short description|Town in Carmarthenshire, Wales}} | |||
{{infobox UK place | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2019}} | |||
|country = Wales | |||
{{Infobox UK place | |||
|welsh_name= Talacharn | |||
| country = Wales | |||
|constituency_welsh_assembly= | |||
| welsh_name = Talacharn | |||
|official_name= Laugharne | |||
| constituency_welsh_assembly = | |||
|static_image = ] | |||
| |
| official_name = Laugharne | ||
| static_image_name = Laugharne from the castle (5842).jpg | |||
|latitude= 51.7694 | |||
| static_image_caption = Laugharne from the castle | |||
|longitude= -4.4631 | |||
| coordinates = {{coord|51.7694|-4.4631|display=inline,title}} | |||
|community_wales=] | |||
| community_wales = ] | |||
|unitary_wales= ] | |||
| unitary_wales = ] | |||
|lieutenancy_wales= ] | |||
| lieutenancy_wales = ] | |||
|constituency_westminster= | |||
| constituency_westminster = ] | |||
|post_town= | |||
| post_town = CARMARTHEN | |||
|postcode_district = | |||
| postcode_district = SA33 | |||
|postcode_area= | |||
| postcode_area = SA | |||
|dial_code= | |||
| dial_code = 01994 | |||
|os_grid_reference= SN301109 | |||
| os_grid_reference = SN301109 | |||
|population= | |||
| population = 1,222 | |||
}} | |||
| module= ]<br />Map of the Laugharne Township community | |||
}} | |||
'''Laugharne ''' {{IPAc-en|ˈ|l|ɑr|n}} ({{langx|cy|Talacharn}}) is a town on the south coast of ], ], lying on the ] of the ]. | |||
The ] of Laugharne Township ({{langx|cy|Treflan Lacharn}}) with its ] and Charter<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.laugharnecorporation.co.uk/2010/10/when-why-and-by-whom-was-laugharne.html|title=History of Laugharne Charter|publisher=Laugharne Corporation 2010}}</ref> is a unique survival in Wales. In a predominantly English-speaking area, just on the ], the ] is bordered by those of ], ], ] and ]. It had a population at the ] of 1,100.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.citypopulation.de/en/uk/wales/admin/carmarthenshire/W04000507__laugharne_township/|title=Carmarthenshire County Council|access-date=18 Feb 2024}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
] | |||
'''Laugharne''' {{IPAc-en|ˈ|l|ɑr|n}} ({{lang-cy|'''Talacharn'''}}) is a ] in ], ], lying on the ] of the ]. It is known for having been the home of ] from 1949 until his death in 1953, and is thought to have been an inspiration for the fictional town of ] in '']''. The Township was originally known as Abercorran, but this was changed to Laugharne after the Civil War, in honour of Major-General ], a renowned local army officer, who had commanded a Parliamentarian army, before rebelling in 1648. | |||
] ] also includes the communities of ], ] and Llanddowror.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.carmarthenshire.gov.wales/media/1212796/laugharne-ward.pdf|title=Carmarthenshire County Council: Policy, Research and Information Section|access-date=18 June 2020}}</ref> | |||
==History== | |||
In the early 12th century, grants of lands were made to ]s by ] when their country was flooded, and later they were joined by Flemish soldiers banished by ].<ref>{{cite book|title=Laugharne, Local History and Folklaw.|author=R.H. Tyler and others|year=1925|publisher=Gomer Press, Llandysul, Dyfed}}</ref> They were weavers and dyers and were such an influence that ] was hardly ever heard in Laugharne. | |||
], who lived in Laugharne from 1949 until his death in 1953, famously described it as a "timeless, mild, beguiling island of a town".<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.undermilkwood.net/prose_laugharne.html|title=Dylan Thomas on Laugharne|date=2015|website=Dylan Thomas The Official Website|publisher=The City and County of Swansea|access-date=June 11, 2020}}</ref> It is generally accepted as the inspiration for the fictional town of ] in '']''. Thomas confirmed on two occasions that his play was based on Laugharne<ref>Letters to ] March 6, 1948 and ].{{cite web|url=https://www.discoverdylanthomas.com/milk-wood-llareggub-explained-dylans-words|title=Under Milk Wood and Llareggub Explained Through Dylan's Words October 1951|date=2015|access-date=August 12, 2020|website=www.discoverdylanthomas.com}}</ref> although topographically it is also similar to ] where he briefly lived.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dylanthomas.com/dylan/dylans-work/milk-wood-chronology/|title=Under Milk Wood – A Chronology|publisher=The City and County of Swansea|access-date=March 22, 2016}}</ref> | |||
A ], known originally as the Castle of Abercorran, existed in Laugharne before the ] and belonged to the princes of South Wales. Henry II visited it in 1172 on his return from Ireland and made peace with Prince Rhys of ]. Through the marriage of Prince Rhys' daughter, the castle passed to Sir ], who had been Lord High Admiral of England. His daughter Elizabeth inherited the castle and married Owen Laugharne of St. Bride's who gave his name to the castle. | |||
==History== | |||
Possession passed to the Crown and during the 16th century belonged to ], returning to the crown after his death. In 1644 the castle was garrisoned for the king and taken for Parliament by Major-General Rowland Laugharne, who subsequently reverted to the king's side. This led ] to lay siege to the castle, burning and leaving it in ruins. | |||
]<ref>Carmarthen museum records indicate the photograph was taken during the excavation of the archaeological site at Laugharne by Herbert Eccles (whose Broadway estate contained the quarry) and S. Grant Dalton in either 1913 or 1917. {{cite web |title=Coygan Cave, Carmarthenshire |url=https://www.ahobproject.org/database/showSite.php?View=GEN&LocNum=54/%5d |website=AHOB |access-date=25 June 2021}}</ref>]] | |||
], originally known as Abercorran Castle<ref name="RCAHMW: Abercorran Castle">{{cite web|title=RCAHMW: Abercorran Castle|url=https://historicplacenames.rcahmw.gov.uk/placenames/recordedname/9d55d4a8-90b4-4c2f-b599-60b0454e94c3|access-date=18 June 2020}}</ref>]] | |||
] | |||
Throughout much of the ] period, human activity in the Laugharne area was centred on Coygan Bluff,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Historic Landscape Characterisation:Taf & Tywi Estuary|url=https://dyfedarchaeology.org.uk/HLC/CarmarthenBayMap.htm|access-date=22 June 2021|publisher=Dyfed Archaeological Trust}}</ref> a steep-sided limestone ]<ref>{{cite web |last1=Murphy |first1=K. |title=Site of Coygan Cave, near Laugharne |url=https://historypoints.org/index.php?page=site-of-coygan-cave-near-laugharne |website=History Points}}</ref> overlooking the now submerged coastal plain to the south. A natural cave<ref> | |||
{{Coflein|num=103399|desc=Coygan Cave|access-date=29 September 2021}}</ref> on the southeast face of the promontory was excavated five times between 1865 and 1965<ref>{{Cite web|title= 199 Coygan Cave, Laugharne|date=1995|url=https://www.ahobproject.org/database/showSite.php?View=GEN&LocNum=54/|access-date=22 June 2021|publisher=The Ancient Human Occupation of Britain (AHOB) Database}}</ref> yielding significant evidence that its chambers acted as a temporary shelter for groups of hunter-gatherers moving through the landscape over 50,000 years ago<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dyfedarchaeology.org.uk/lostlandscapes/earliesthumans.html|title=Earliest Humans in Paleolithic Wales|first1=Michael|last1=Ings|first2=Fran|last2=Murphy|date=2011|website=Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales website}}</ref> and later material in the form of flint tools indicating an extended series of occupations from the ] periods.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=G.Wainwright|date=1967|title=An Early Neolithic Settlement on Coygan Rock,Carmarthenshire|journal=Antiquity |volume=41 |issue=161 |page=66 |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/antiquity/article/abs/an-early-neolithic-settlement-on-coygan-rock-carmarthenshire/D49E64EC166E5996A1518D92C50175CE|access-date=15 January 2021|publisher=Cambridge University (Abstracts)|doi=10.1017/S0003598X00104855 |s2cid=162697347 }}</ref> These discoveries suggest that the Township<ref>{{Cite web|title=Laugharne Township Boundary Map|url=https://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/unit/10382233/boundary|access-date=23 June 2021|publisher=Vision of Britain.org}}</ref> is probably the oldest still-inhabited settlement in Wales. Contemporary artefacts from the ] period have also been found at nearby ] and ] caves along with older hominin remains at ] but, unlike at Laugharne, the communities associated with them are long vanished.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://dyfedarchaeology.org.uk/lostlandscapes/WCPStechnical.pdf|title=West Coast Paleolandscapes Survey (PDF)|last1=Vitch|first1=Simon|last2=Gaffney|first2=Vince|date=2011|publisher=University of Birmingham: Institute of Archaeology and Antiquity|website=Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales website}}</ref> | |||
In the 4th century BC, a ] was built at the summit of the hill.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Coygan Camp – Ymddiriedolaeth Archaeolegol Dyfed – Dyfed Archaeological Trust |url=https://www.archwilio.org.uk/arch/query/page.php?watprn=DAT7451&dbname=dat&tbname=core&sessid=CHI2dm3f6q6&queryid=Q197210001612281923|access-date=22 June 2021|publisher=Historic Environment Record}}</ref> During the ], Coygan camp is recorded as the site of an open settlement with funerary and ritual activity shown by a short-cist contracted inhumation. Further finds at a nearby round barrow on Laugharne Burrows<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Cantrill |first1=T.C.|title=The Shell Mounds on Laugharne Burrows |journal=Archaeologia Cambrensis |date=1909 |volume= 9 |issue=6th Series |pages=433–472 |hdl=10107/4722433|url=http://hdl.handle.net/10107/4722433|access-date=25 June 2021}}</ref> together with ] burials at Plashett<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Hill Morris |first1=William |last2=Ward |first2=Anthony H. |title=Antiquarian Exploration of Presumed Bronze Age Sepulchral Remains on Allt Cunedda, South East Dyfed. New information on discoveries |journal=Carmarthen Antiquary |date=1984 |volume=20 |url=http://www.kidwellyhistory.co.uk/Articles/AlltCunedda/AlltCunedda.htm |access-date=29 June 2021 |publisher=Carmarthenshire Antiquarian Society}}</ref> and Orchard Park<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Jones |first1=J.F.|title=Orchard Park Beaker Burial |journal=Carmarthen Antiquary |date=1951 |volume=2 |page=5579}}</ref> confirm a more permanent community. Excavation in the 1960s of the defended enclosure on Coygan revealed two huts contemporary with the defensive bank and ditch and a significant quantity of pottery recovered dating to the late 3rd century AD indicating that the site was occupied deep into the Romano-British period.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Aldouse-Green |first1=S. |last2=Scott |first2=K. |last3=Schwarcz |first3=H. |last4=Grun |first4=R. |last5=Housley |first5=R. |last6=Rae |first6=A. |last7=Bevins |first7=R. |last8=Redknap |first8=M. |title=Coygan Cave, Laugharne, South Wales, a Mousterian site and hyanae den: a report on the University of Cambridge excavation. |date=1995 |publisher=Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society |pages=37–39}}</ref> Another significant ] settlement has also been identified at Glan-y-Mor Fort<ref>{{Coflein|num=304152|desc=Glan-y-mor Fort, Laugharne|access-date=29 September 2021|fewer-links=yes}}</ref> in the north of the township. | |||
Laugharne is mentioned as being affected by the ]. It is not known whether this had any long-term effects on the town, but it may have contributed to the silting up of the harbour, which at one time had seen imports of coal and tobacco from the New World. | |||
The Laugharne hoard of over 2000 coins<ref>{{cite web |last1=Oxford Roman Economy Project |title=Laugharne Hoard Discovered 2006 |url=https://chre.ashmus.ox.ac.uk/hoard/165 |website=Coin Hoards of The Roman Empire |publisher=Oxford University & Ashmolean Museum |access-date=25 June 2021}}</ref> and Roman bath remains found at ],<ref>{{cite book |last1=Curtis |first1=Mary |title=Antiquities of Laugharne, Pendine et al. |date=1880 |publisher=R. Clay |location=London |pages=92 |edition=2nd |url=https://archive.org/details/antiquitiesoflau00curt/page/92/mode/2up?q=island+house |access-date=25 June 2021}}</ref> together with the substantial Romano-British group of imported 6th-century finewares, coinage and glass from Coygan Camp, described as "one of the richest from a native settlement in south-west Wales",<ref>{{cite book |last1=Davies |first1=J. |title=Aspects of Native Settlement in Roman Wales and the Marches |date=1980 |publisher=University of Wales College Cardiff |pages=487}}</ref> are all part of a concentration of traditional 'Roman' finds in the area. As evidence of activity from the period is generally scarce, these discoveries confirm the site as one of importance<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Campbell |first1=E. |title=Prehistoric Undefended Settlements Project,Southwest Wales: A Review of Report 2004/53 |journal=Cambria Archaeology |date=1988}}</ref> and suggest that it continued to be a high status settlement well beyond the Roman occupation.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Seaman |first1=A. |title=Defended Settlement in Early Medieval Wales: Problems of Presence, Absence and Interpretation |date=2016 |publisher=Oxbow Books |location=Oxford |isbn=978-1-78570-236-5 |pages=37–52 |url=https://archive.org/details/defended-settlement-in-early-medieval-wa |access-date=27 June 2021}}</ref> A 6th-century inscribed stone lies within Llansadwrnen church to the north, considered to be an outlying burial site of the more important secular settlement on Coygan. Laugharne Church,<ref name=Coflein102141>{{Coflein|num=102141|desc=St Martin's Church, Laugharne|access-date=29 September 2021|fewer-links=yes}}</ref> which contains a 9th-century Celtic slab stone<ref>{{cite web |title=Dark Age Stone Cross, St Martin's Church, Laugharne |url=https://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=30023|website=Megalithic Portal |access-date=26 June 2021}}</ref> and where a ] cemetery has also been recorded, is thought to be a more likely early ecclesiastical site in the immediate area.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Poucher |first1=Philip |title=Corran Resort and Spa, Laugharne, Carmarthenshire Environmental Statement Chapter 2 Cultural Heritage Impact Assessment |date=15 August 2015|url=https://coflein.gov.uk/media/51/11/awp_179_04.pdf |website=Archaeology Wales |page=13|access-date=25 June 2021}}</ref> | |||
==Laugharne Corporation== | |||
Laugharne ] is an almost unique institution, and the last surviving ] corporation in the United Kingdom. The Corporation was established in 1291 by Sir ], a ]. The Corporation is presided over by the ], wearing his traditional chain of gold ] shells, (one added by each portreeve, with his name and date of tenure on the reverse), the Aldermen, and the body of ]es. The title of portreeve is conferred annually, with the Portreeve being sworn in on the first Monday after Michaelmas at the Big Court. The Corporation holds a court-leet half-yearly formerly dealing with criminal cases, and a court-baron every fortnight, dealing with civil suits within the lordship, especially in matters related to land, where administration of the common fields is dealt with. The Laugharne ] is one of only two surviving and still in use today in Britain. The most senior 76 burgesses get a strang of land on Hugden for life, to be used in a form of mediaeval strip farming. | |||
In the ] Laugharne was the main settlement in the area and home to the Lords of Laugharne. It was a ] of ], the largest of the seven '']i'' of the ] in southwest Wales, later to be ruled by the ]. In 1093, Deheubarth was seized by the Normans following ]'s death.<ref>{{cite book|title=The History of Wales, Descriptive of the Government, Wars, Manners, Religion, Laws, Druids, Bards, Pedigrees and Language of the Ancient Britons and Modern Welsh, and of the Remaining Antiquities of the Principality |first=John |last=Jones |date=1824 |pages=63–64 |url=https://archive.org/stream/historyofwalesde00joneuoft#page/n8/mode/2up |publisher=J. Williams |location=London |ol=OL7036828M |access-date=12 February 2019}}</ref> In the early 12th century, grants of lands were made to ]s by ] when their country was flooded.<ref name="flem">{{cite book|title=Laugharne: Local History and Folklore |first=R. H. |last=Tyler |year=1985 |orig-year=1925 |publisher=] |location=Llandysul |display-authors=etal |isbn=9780863831546}} Compiled by Head, Senior Assistant and senior pupils of Laugharne School</ref> In 1116, when ] (the son and heir of Rhys ap Tewdwr) returned from self-imposed exile, the king arranged for the land to be fortified against him; according to the '']'', Robert Courtemain constructed a ] in that year<ref name="coexistence">{{cite book |title=Conquest, Coexistence, and Change: Wales 1063–1415 |first=R. R.|last=Davies |author-link=Rees Davies |year=1987 |location=Oxford |publisher=Clarendon Press |page=101 |isbn=0198217323 }}</ref> (this is the earliest reference to any castle at or near Laugharne<ref name="avent">{{cite book |chapter=Laugharne Castle |first=Richard |last=Avent |title=Carmarthenshire and Ceredigion |editor1-first=Thomas |editor1-last=Lloyd |editor2-first=Julian |editor2-last=Orbach |editor3-first=Robert |editor3-last=Scourfield |year=2006 |publisher=Yale University Press |location=New Haven |series=The Buildings of Wales |isbn=9780300101799 |pages=219–27 (219–220) }}</ref>). Courtemain may be the ''Robertus cum tortis manibus'' ({{langx|en|Robert with twisted hands}})<ref name="Marches">{{cite journal |title=Carmarthen in Early Norman Times |first=John Edward |last=Lloyd |author-link=John Edward Lloyd |journal=Archaeologia Cambrensis |year=1907 |series=6th ser. |volume=7 |page=290 |url=https://archive.org/details/archaeologiacam61assogoog/page/n330/mode/2up}}</ref> mentioned in the ], as one of a number of specifically named Norman magnates{{refn|group=notes|The other named magnates are ], ], William Fitz-Baldwin (son of ]), Robert de Chandos (who held ]), Geoffrey de Broi, ], ], Gumbald of Ludlow, Roger de Berkeley (Lord of ], and possible son of ]), William the sheriff of Cardiff, William Fitz-Roger de Remu, and Robert Fitz Roger.}} within the vicinity of the ], who received a letter from ] complaining about deprivations they had inflicted on diocesan church property;<ref>{{cite thesis |last1=Jones |first1=Bryn |title=Welsh Contacts With The Papacy Before The Edwardian Conquest, C. 1283 |url=https://research-repository.st-andrews.ac.uk/handle/10023/18284 |website=St Andrews Research Repository|access-date=30 June 2021 |date=2019|doi=10.17630/10023-18284 |hdl=10023/18284 |type=Thesis }}</ref> in the letter, the Pope warns he would confirm ]'s proclamations against them, if they do not rectify matters. The ''Brut'' states that Courtemain appointed a man named Bleddyn ap Cedifor as castellan;<ref name="coexistence" /> Bleddyn was the son of Cedifor ap Gollwyn, descendant and heir of the earlier kings of Dyfed (as opposed to those of Deheubarth).<ref name="coexistence" /><ref>{{cite book |first=R. R. |last=Davies |author-link=Rees Davies |title=The Age of Conquest: Wales, 1063–1415 |year=2000 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford |isbn=0198208782 |page=70 }}</ref> The castle was originally known as Abercorran Castle.<ref name="RCAHMW: Abercorran Castle"/> When Henry I died, ], and Gruffydd, and his sons, ] in particular, gradually reconquered large parts of the former Deheubarth. | |||
Customs associated with the Corporation include the Common walk (also known as beating the bounds), which occurs on Whit Monday every three years. This event is attended by most of the young and firm local population, their number swelled by many visitors. The local ]s open at approx 5.00 in the morning, and following a liquid breakfast the throng commence a trek of some 25 miles around the boundaries of the Corporation lands. At significant historical landmarks a victim is selected to name the place. If they cannot answer, they are hoisted upside down and ceremonially beaten three times on the rear. | |||
In 1154, the Anarchy was resolved when ] became king; two years later, Lord Rhys agreed peace terms with Henry II and prudently<ref name="kingmaker">{{cite book |title=Kingmakers: How Power in England Was Won and Lost on the Welsh Frontier |first=Timothy |last=Venning |year=2017 |location=Stroud |publisher=Amberley |isbn=9781445659404 }}</ref> accepted that he would only rule ],<ref name="kingmaker" /> constructing ] there. Henry II de-mobilised Flemish soldiers who had aided him during the Anarchy, settling them with the other Flemings.<ref name="flem" /> | |||
Laugharne Corporation holds extensive historial records.<ref> Carmarthenshire Archives Service website</ref> | |||
From time to time, however, King Henry had occasion to go to Ireland, or Normandy, which Lord Rhys took as an opportunity to try and expand his own holdings. Returning from Ireland after one such occasion, in 1172, King Henry made peace with Lord Rhys, making him the justiciar of "South Wales" (ie. Deheubarth). By 1247, Laugharne was held by Guy de Bryan; this is the earliest reference to his family possessing the castle,<ref name="avent"/> and his father (also named Guy de Bryan) had only moved the family to Wales in 1219 (from Devon).<ref name="avent"/> Guy de Bryan's descendants continued to hold the castle; his ] was Lord High Admiral of England. The latter's daughter Elizabeth inherited the castle and married an Owen of St Bride's who subsequently took his name – Owen Laugharne – from the castle<ref name="gents">{{cite journal |title=Notices of the castle and ownership of Laugharne, Carmarthenshire |journal=] |year=1839 |volume=12 |page=602 }}</ref> despite ] calling the castle ''Talachar'', and other variations on Laugharne/Talacharn appearing in ancient charters; one anonymous pre-20th-century writer erroneously claimed that Owen Laugharne gave his name to the castle rather than the other way around.<ref name="gents"/> Possession subsequently defaulted to the Crown, and in 1575, ] granted it to ].<ref name="avent"/> In 1644 the castle was garrisoned for the king and taken for Parliament by Major-General ], who subsequently reverted to the king's side.<ref name="Sieges of Laugharne Castle"> by S Lloyd (2013)Report for ] & ]</ref> The population in 1841 was 1,389.<ref>''The National Cyclopaedia of Useful Knowledge'', Vol.III, London, (1847), Charles Knight, p. 1,012.</ref> | |||
==Laugharne |
===Laugharne Corporation=== | ||
The famous Charter of Laugharne, which the Corporation was founded by, came about during a tempestuous time in local Welsh history. Henry II (Plantagenet) held a parley with Rhys ap Gruffydd at Laugharne Castle in 1172. After Henry’s death, Rhys seized St. Clears, Llanstephan and Laugharne, and then lost them again to the crown. In 1215 Llewelyn ap Iorwerth (Llewelyn Mawr) Prince of Gwynedd, renewed the offensive for the Welsh and razed the three strongholds to the ground. King John in the last year of his reign (1216) restored Norman authority and granted the Lordship of Laugharne to Gui de Brienne who had espoused the daughter of the Lord Dynefor. It was de Brienne who granted Laugharne its famous Charter, and it was ratified by Edward I, at some time between 1270-1290. The Charter reads; | |||
Laugharne ] is an almost unique institution and, together with the ], the last surviving ] corporation in the United Kingdom. The Corporation was established in 1291 by Sir Guy de Brian (''{{lang|frm|Gui de Brienne}}''), a ].<ref name=jisc>{{cite web|url=https://archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk/data/gb211-laugharne|title=Laugharne Corporation Records – Archives Hub|website=archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk|access-date=10 February 2019}}</ref> Laugharne Corporation holds extensive historical records.<ref></ref> | |||
''To all the faithful in Christ, to whom this present writing shall come, Gwydo de Brione, the younger eternal salvation in the Lord. Let all of you know that we have granted to our beloved and faithful burgesses of Thalacharn, for us and for our heirs and for our successors, whoever they may be, all the good laws and customs that the burgesses of Carmarthen have up to now used and enjoyed in the time of King John, the grandfather of the Lord Edward I, the son of Henry III, and their predeccessors, Kings of England; preserving the weights and measures that were in the time of Gwydo de Brione, the elder.'' | |||
The Corporation is presided over by the ], wearing his traditional chain of gold ] shells (one added by each portreeve, with his name and date of tenure on the reverse), the aldermen, and the body of ]es. The title of portreeve is conferred annually, with the portreeve being sworn in on the first Monday after Michaelmas at the Big Court. The Corporation holds a ] half-yearly formerly dealing with criminal cases, and a ] every fortnight, dealing with civil suits within the lordship, especially in matters related to land, where administration of the common fields was dealt with.<ref name=jisc/> The Laugharne ] is one of only two surviving and still in use today in Britain. | |||
'In Elizabeth's reign, the lordship passed to ] of Haroldston, a fact for which the inhabitants of Laugharne have had cause to regret. As at ] Perrot modernised the castle, but he was the most unscrupulous "land-grabber" of his age, and in 1574 he induced the burgesses to part with three hundred acres of land in return for an annuity of £9 6s. 8d. The records say that "diverse burgesses of the said towne did not assent to same", and that it was "to the great decaying of many". It would be interesting to know by what methods of bribery or intimidation Sir John was able to accomplish his nefarious purposes.'<ref> Prof. David Williams: Introduction to Laugharne.</ref> | |||
''We have also granted to the same men a free common in all our northern wood, that is to say, in the whole forest of Coydebech, and all that common pasture in the marsh of Thalacharn which is called Menecors along the marks and boundaries as it is perambulated, and also all that free common from the rivulet which is named Mackorellis on proceeding upwards as far as Greensladeshead, and so towards the east over Eynonsdown by the way that leads to Brangweys, and from there to Corranshead and so upwards to Horilake and from there to the top of Tadhill, and so downwards to Passenant’s Lake and so towards the east to the bounds between Moldhill and that carrucate of land that formerly belonged to Rice, the son of William and downwards to the water of the Taf and so to Heming’s well and from there upwards to Horestone and so to Pensernes and from there downwards to Blindwell and so to Rochcomb and so downwards to the ancient whirlpool of the Taf and from there to Howelscroft and so upwards to the Burch and Mere, and so downwards to the long rock which is near our virgate of Thalacharn.'' | |||
] in common land on The Hugdon, a hill to the west of Laugharne<ref>{{cite book|editor1-last=Baker|editor1-first=Alan R. H.|editor2-last=Butlin|editor2-first=Robin A.|title=Studies of Field Systems in the British Isles|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cDM7AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA512|year=1973|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-20121-6|pages=512–514}}</ref>]] | |||
''Also we have granted to the same men one way sixteen feet in which to drive their cattle from the common pasture aforesaid near Passenant’s lake to the water of the Taf.'' | |||
The most senior 76 burgesses get a strang of land on Hugden for life, to be used in a form of mediæval strip-farming. | |||
The chief toast at the Portreeve's feast is "to the immortal memory of Sir Guido de Brian"; then the Recorder must sing the following song: | |||
''Also we have granted to the same men one customary acre in length and breadth for digging turfs where they suitably wish to choose in the Turbary near Passenant’s Lake.'' | |||
{{quote|<poem>When Sir Guy de Brien lived in Laugharne, | |||
A jolly old man was he. | |||
Some pasture land he owned, which he | |||
Divided into three. | |||
Says he "There's Hugdon and the Moor | |||
They will the Commons please; | |||
And all the gentlemen shall have | |||
Their share down on the Lees."<ref>{{cite news|last=Welshman|first=The|date=4 November 1910|title=Llwynog's Notes|url=https://newspapers.library.wales/view/4360291/4360300/40/hugdon|access-date= 12 July 2020}}</ref></poem>}} | |||
==Governance== | |||
''We have also granted to our burgesses aforesaid that they themselves for the transgression or forfeiture of their servants may not lose their own chattels and goods found in the hands of the servants or placed aside anywhere by the servants themselves within our land, as far as they will be able to prove that they are their own. And that, if the aforesaid burgesses, or some among them, within our land have died testate or intestate, neither we nor our heirs shall cause their goods to be confiscated so that their heirs do not have the things themselves entirely, as far as it will be established that the aforesaid chattels were those of the said deceased, provided that then knowledge or confidence may be had concerning the aforesaid heirs.'' | |||
Since 1972, Laugharne Township Community Council has formed the lowest tier of local government for the town, represented by 11 community councillors.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://laugharnetownship-wcc.gov.uk/about-the-council/ |title=About the Council |publisher=Laugharne Township Community Council |access-date=23 July 2022 }}</ref> | |||
For elections to ], Laugharne is covered by the ] electoral ward, which also covers three neighbouring communities. The ward is represented by one county councillor. ] councillor Jane Tremlett has represented the ward since 2004. | |||
''Also we have granted to the same men that no one of them within our land be troubled for the debt of some neighbour, unless he be his debtor or his surety, and that the surety of any one should not be compelled to pay, provided the debtor has wherewith he can pay, and that all off ences committed within their township be corrected according to the judgment of the same people, as has hitherto been accustomed to be done in the borough of Kymarden. We have also granted to the same men, if anyone of them within his township shall have incurred forfeiture towards anyone, he may not be led within the gates of the castle, provided that then he can find good and safe sureties for his standing trial. And that no one of them be compelled to provide his lord, or any bailiff of his, beyond twelve pence, unless he wishes to do it of his own good will, and that no inquisition of affairs of non-burgesses be made by the aforesaid burgesses, but by the freeholders of the country, nor of the burgesses by non-burgesses.'' | |||
== St Martin's Church == | |||
''Also we have granted to the same our burgesses that they themselves choose twice in a year two competent burgesses to the office of our Port- reeve, that is to say one in the next hundred-court after the feast of Saint Michael, the other in the next hundred-court after Easter, by the common consent of the same men and not by our authority or that of someone, a bailiff of ours, to hold the hundred-court and to receive the attachments belonging to the hundred and to receive the rent from the township and the toll. And that the said portreeves pay the aforesaid rent and toll to us or to our aforesaid bailiff, appointed for this purpose, within the township of Thalacharn by Tally.'' | |||
] | |||
The ] of St Martin was built in the 14th century by Guido de Brian, ] of Laugharne.<ref name=megalithic/> The original dedication was to ] as 15th-century records use this dedication. The churchyard, rectangular in shape, has shown evidence of ] burials. Various archaeological finds have been made during grave-digging: a wheel-topped stone; a medieval tile and a fragment of what is believed to be a tomb canopy. The churchyard's 18th- and 19th-century monuments are Grade II ] for their group value.<ref name=Coflein102141/> | |||
The interior has a cross-slab, probably dating from the 9th or 10th century, with a carved ] carved onto it. It has been suggested that the design is of ] origin.<ref name=megalithic>{{cite web |author=Sunny100 |url=http://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=30023 |title=St Martin's Church (Laugharne) |website=] |date=3 October 2011 |access-date=27 December 2018}}{{Self-published source|date=June 2020}}</ref> | |||
''And that they should not have any other duty of buying of exchange, or any other service whatsoever that could harm them within the township or without.'' | |||
The church is today part of the United Benefice of Bro Sancler.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.churchinwales.org.uk/en/structure/deanery/110/|title=Deanery of Bro Cler|access-date=12 August 2020}}</ref> Welsh poet and playwright ] is buried in the churchyard, his grave marked by a white cross.<ref name=megalithic/><ref name=Coflein102141/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.churchinwales.org.uk/structure/places/churches/|title=Churches|first=The Church in|last=Wales|website=The Church in Wales|access-date=27 December 2018|archive-date=13 July 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190713151322/https://www.churchinwales.org.uk/structure/places/churches/|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
''We have also granted to the same men that the aforesaid burgesses be free from every kind of servitude and service of ploughing, harrowing, making hay, reaping, binding corn and of any kind of carting, of repsiring the mill or its pond and from all other kinds of services that could tend to their slavery or their loss within the township and without.'' | |||
==Landmarks== | |||
''And that they go not to the army except to guard their township, as the burgesses of Kymarden do.'' | |||
]]] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
Local attractions include the 12th-century ], ] and the estuary ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.visitwales.com/attraction-search/attraction-search-results/attraction-search-details?id=517482&industry=TEA&location=Laugharne%2c+Carmarthenshire&radius=10&filterIds=&city=&price=&latitude=51.77275&longitude=-4.455275&ref=7F85DBD03BC743B6A2427E6E3C4E3F36|title=Laugharne Castle|website=Visit Wales|publisher=The Welsh Government|access-date=March 22, 2016}}</ref> | |||
Laugharne Township currently has 69 listed buildings and contains several fine examples of ] ] including ] and ] together with ], parts of which date back to the Tudor period. All three properties are grade II* listed and a number of other early ] ]s have also survived.<ref>{{cite web|url = https://britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/wales/laugharne-township-carmarthenshire |title= Listed Buildings in Laugharne Township, Carmarthenshire, Wales|publisher= British Listed Buildings|access-date = 29 July 2020}}</ref> | |||
''We wish also and grant that, if any one in the open day, in the presence of his neighbours, should buy anything, and afterwards that thing should be ill-spoken of, as if stolen, the buyer lose nothing except then that thing, but it shall he sworn on the oath of his neighbours that he did not know that he had bought that thing from a thief.'' | |||
There are a number of landmarks in Laugharne connected with the poet and writer Dylan Thomas. These include the ], where he lived with his family from 1949 to 1953, and now a museum; his writing shed; and the Dylan Thomas Birthday Walk, which was the setting for the work ''Poem in October''.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.visitwales.com/explore/literature/laugharne-famous-attractions|title=Dylan Thomas' Laugharne|website=Visit Wales|publisher=The Welsh Government|access-date=March 22, 2016}}</ref> | |||
''And, that this our grant and the confirmation of our present charter for us and for our heirs and for our successors or assigns, whoever they may be, should remain firm and unshaken for ever, we have strengthened this present charter with the impression of our seal, these men being witnesses. Galfrid de Caunville, Patrick de Cadure, William de Caunvill, Thomas de Roche, Roger Corbet, knights. John Laundry, Walter Malenfant, Mared ab Traharn, Thomas Bonegent, clerk, and others.'' | |||
==In popular culture== | |||
==Customs== | |||
Many scenes in the ] series '']'' (broadcast in Welsh as {{lang|cy|Un Bore Mercher}}) were filmed in and around Laugharne, referred to as ''Abercorran''.<ref> ''walesonline.co.uk''. Retrieved 15 March 2018.</ref> | |||
The cockle industry was once a significant part of the Laugharne economy, and the well-established ] firm Parsons have their origins in Laugharne. Prior to this, fishing in ] was of great importance. | |||
==Laugharne weekend== | |||
The Laugharne accent is interesting, sounding like a mix of ] with Carmarthenshire ]. Many local words and phrases are ]: ''e.g.'', "How art thee maid?". Laugharne is at the eastern end of the south Wales ] and only a minority of its inhabitants have ever spoken Welsh. The language boundary lies a few miles north of Laugharne. | |||
The ], a three-day arts festival held in the spring of 2007, featured writers such as ] and ]. Headline performers since then have included ], ], ] and ]. The Millennium Hall is the main venue and smaller events are held locally such as in the Dylan Thomas Boathouse.<ref> website</ref> | |||
==Notable people== | |||
Architecturally, Laugharne contains many fine examples of ] ]s, including "Great House" and ] a 2* Listed building, with a scattering of earlier ] ]s. | |||
*] (ca.1390 – ca.1455), merchant, landholder, knight and public official of nearby Roche Castle | |||
*] (ca.1395 – ca.1461), prelate and writer, born in Laugharne<ref>{{cite book|last=Lloyd (Ed)|first=Prof. Sir J.E.|title=History of Carmarthenshire|volume=1| date=1939|page=443|url=https://archive.org/details/pecock-lloyd}}</ref> | |||
*] (1528–1592), ], ] and ] to Elizabeth I, lived in Laugharne Castle<ref>{{cite web|title=Church Monument Society: Sir John Perrot|url=https://churchmonumentssociety.org/monument-of-the-month/sir-john-perrot-memorial-eglwys-gymyn-carmarthenshire#_ednref1|access-date=19 June 2020}}</ref> | |||
*] (1553–1594), Elizabethan courtier, soldier and Member of Parliament, lived in Laugharne Castle<ref>Indenture from John God to Sir John Perrot, cited in<br />{{cite journal |title=Notes on the Perrot Family |journal=Archaeologia Cambrensis |date=July 1866 |issue=XLVII |pages=324 |url=https://journals.library.wales/view/2919943/2996958/149#?xywh=-801%2C-1157%2C3813%2C3913 |publisher=Cambrian Archaeological Association |quote=No. 26334. An indenture made 12 Elizabeth, in which John God, merchant tailor of London, makes over to Sir John Perrot the parsonage of Laugharne. (In this document Sir John is described as late of Carew.) }}</ref> | |||
*] (1571–1636), writer and Member of Parliament, lived in Laugharne<ref>{{cite book |last1=Jones |first1=Francis |title=Historic Carmarthenshire Homes & Their Families|date=1997 |publisher=Brawdy Books |page=196|isbn=0952834413|chapter=Westmead, Laugharne |quote="In the latter part of the sixteenth century, the property was owned by Sir John Perrot, who by a deed dated 29 May 1584 settled certain properties on his 'reputed son' James Perrot 'late of Westmede in the County of Carmarthen' }}</ref> | |||
*] (1595–1671), English politician, lived in Laugharne<ref>{{cite book |last1=Davidson |first1=Alan |last2=Thrush |first2=Andrew |editor1-last=Thrush |editor1-first=Andrew |editor2-last=Ferris |editor2-first=John P. |title=The House of Commons, 1604–1629 |date=2010 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1107002258 |chapter=CROWE, Sackville (1595–1671), of Laugharne, Carm.; formerly of Brasted Place, Kent and Mays, Selmeston, Suss.}}<br />Accessed via {{cite web |title=CROWE, Sackville (1595–1671), of Laugharne, Carm.; formerly of Brasted Place, Kent and Mays, Selmeston, Suss. |url=http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1604-1629/member/crowe-sackville-1595-1671 |website=The History of Parliament |access-date=24 June 2020}}</ref> | |||
*] (1607–1675), Parliamentary General; his 1644 siege of the castle, a former family home, left it an uninhabitable ruin<ref name="Sieges of Laugharne Castle"/> | |||
*] (1613–1689), Vicar of Laugharne, ejected by Cromwell. Later ] and ].<ref name=Thomas>{{cite ODNB| url=http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/27244| title= Thomas, William (1613–1689)| last=Roberts |first=Stephen K. |date=October 2005| doi= 10.1093/ref:odnb/27244| access-date=2008-03-16}}</ref> | |||
*] (1632/3–1696), judge who presided over the trial of the ] in 1688, lived in Laugharne<ref>{{cite DWB|last=Roberts|first=Glyn|date=1959|title=POWELL, Sir JOHN (1633–1696), lawyer and judge|access-date=19 Jun 2020|id=s-POWE-JOH-1633}}</ref> | |||
*] (ca.1665 – 1720), lawyer and Member of Parliament, born in Laugharne<ref>{{cite book |first=D. W. |last=Hayton |editor1-first=Eveline |editor1-last=Cruickshanks |editor2-first=Stuart |editor2-last=Handley |editor3-first=D. W. |editor3-last=Hayton |title=The House of Commons, 1690–1715 |date=2002 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=9780521772211 |chapter=POWELL, Sir Thomas, 1st Bt. (c.1665–1720), of Broadway, Laugharne, Carm. and Coldbrook Park, Mon.}}<br />Accessed via {{cite web |title=POWELL, Sir Thomas, 1st Bt. (c.1665–1720), of Broadway, Laugharne, Carm. and Coldbrook Park, Mon. |url=http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1690-1715/member/powell-sir-thomas-1665-1720 |website=The History of Parliament |access-date=24 June 2020}}</ref> | |||
*] (1684–1761), educational pioneer, curate of Laugharne where he also resided in later years<ref>{{cite DWB|first=Clement|last=Mary|date=1959|title=JONES, GRIFFITH (1683–1761), cleric and educational reformer|fewer-links=yes|access-date=19 Jun 2020|id=s-JONE-GRI-1683}}</ref> | |||
*] (1698–1779), also known as Madam Bevan, educationalist and philanthropist, lived in Laugharne<ref>{{cite DWB|first=Clement|last=Mary|date=1959|title=BEVAN, BRIDGET ('Madam Bevan'; 1698 – 1779), philanthropist and educationist|fewer-links=yes|access-date=19 Jun 2020|id=s-BEVA-BRI-1698}}</ref> | |||
*] (1713–1799), clergyman, economist and political writer; ], born in Laugharne<ref>{{cite DWB|first1=J. F.|last1=Rees|author-link1=James Frederick Rees|first2=R. T.|last2=Jenkins|author-link2=Robert Thomas Jenkins|date=1959|title=TUCKER, JOSIAH (1712–1799), cleric and economist|fewer-links=yes|access-date=19 Jun 2020|id=s-TUCK-JOS-1712}}</ref> | |||
*] (1723–1796), Methodist leader and publisher of Welsh language bibles, born at West Marsh Farm in Laugharne<ref> 1836 Tithe Map (extract) NLW</ref> | |||
*] (1759–1797), writer, philosopher, and advocate of women's rights, lived in Laugharne as a child<ref>{{cite book |last1=Johnson |first1=Claudia L. |author-link=Claudia L. Johnson |title=The Cambridge Companion to Mary Wollstonecraft |date=2006 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=9780511998812 |page=xv |url=http://assets.cambridge.org/97805217/83439/frontmatter/9780521783439_frontmatter.pdf}}</ref> | |||
*] (1795–1875), author and traveller, born in Laugharne<ref name=StJohn>{{cite ODNB| url=http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/27244| title= St John, James Augustus (1795–1875)|last=Spilsbury|first=S.V.|date=October 2005| doi= 10.1093/ref:odnb/27244| access-date=2008-03-16}}</ref> | |||
*] (1814-1896), architect, archaeologist, art historian and author, lived at the Glanymor Estate from 1866 until his death <ref name="DNB">{{cite DNBSupp|wstitle=Falkener, Edward|volume=2}}</ref> | |||
*] (1826–1895), Australian politician, lived at Castle House in Laugharne<ref name=qpbio>{{cite web|title=Wienholt, Arnold (Snr)|url=http://www.parliament.qld.gov.au/members/former/bio?id=4006381019|publisher=]|access-date=5 September 2015}}</ref> | |||
*] (1833–1904), Australian politician, lived at Castle House in Laugharne<ref name=adb>{{Cite AuDB|id2=wienholt-edward-4956 |title=Wienholt, Edward (1833–1904)|volume=6|year=1976|first=D.B.|last=Waterson|access-date=29 January 2015}}</ref> | |||
*] (1849–1941), nun, born in Laugharne<ref name=odnb>Julia Bolton Holloway, 'Mason, (Frances) Agnes (1849–1941)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 </ref> | |||
*] (1861–1952), Australian naval commander, born in Laugharne<ref name=Mercury>{{cite news|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article27129252|title=Former R.A.N. Man Dies at Hobart|newspaper=]|volume=CLXXII|issue=25,593|location=Tasmania|date=31 December 1952|page=7}}</ref> | |||
*] (1883–1970), inspector of schools and author, lived at ] in Laugharne from 1943 until his death<ref>{{cite DWB|last=James|first=Mary Auronwy |date=2001|title=REES, Caleb (1883–1970),inspector of schools and author |fewer-links=yes|access-date=6 Aug 2020|id=s2-REES-CAL-1883}}</ref> | |||
*] (1884–1974), soldier, recipient of the ], born in Laugharne<ref></ref> | |||
*] (1886–1948), Professor of Engineering at University College Cardiff and at the University of Leeds, born in Laugharne<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Evans |first1=R. H. |title=Prof. W. T. David |journal=Nature |date=July 1948 |volume=162 |issue=4105 |page=15 |doi=10.1038/162015a0 |bibcode=1948Natur.162...15E |doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
*] (1890-1969), violist, professor of violin and viola at the ], born in Laugharne | |||
*] (1900–1976), writer, lived at ], instrumental in Dylan Thomas moving to Laugharne<ref>{{cite web |title=Dylan Thomas' Laugharne |url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/arts/sites/dylan-thomas/pages/laugharne.shtml |website=Wales Arts |publisher=BBC |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131213232238/http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/arts/sites/dylan-thomas/pages/laugharne.shtml |archive-date=13 December 2013 |date=6 November 2008}}</ref> | |||
*] (1914–1953), poet, lived in Laugharne and is buried in the churchyard<ref>{{cite book |last1=Ferris |first1=Paul |title=Dylan Thomas, A Biography |year=1989 |publisher=Paragon House |location=New York |isbn=978-1-55778-215-1|page=239}}</ref> | |||
*] (1918–1987), the Anglican ] and ], born in Laugharne | |||
*] (1922–1995), novelist, poet and critic, wrote Booker Prize winner '']'' while living in Cliff House, Laugharne.<ref> Laugharne</ref> | |||
*] (1939–2021), writer, former politician and bookshop owner, lived in Laugharne<ref>{{cite web |last1=Beale |first1=Nigel |title=George Tremlett on Dylan and Caitlin Thomas |url=http://thebibliofile.ca/george-tremett-on-dylan-and-caitlin-thomas |website=The Biblio File}}{{Self-published source|date=June 2020}}</ref> | |||
*] (1943–2009), poet, writer and translator of Italian poetry; the second child and only daughter of ] | |||
*] (born 1960), rugby union and rugby league player, born in Laugharne<ref>{{cite web|title=Rugby in Wales: Laugharne FC|url=http://www.rugbyinwales.co.uk/laugharne/index.htm|access-date=22 June 2020}}</ref> | |||
==Notes== | |||
Attractions in the town include the 12th-century ], the ] and the ] of the estuary. | |||
{{Reflist|group=notes}} | |||
During the ], over 300 men and women of Laugharne and her surrounding villages volunteered to fight in His Majesty’s Forces, 54 of these lost their lives. They are buried or commemorated all over the world, from Belgium to India. In ] a further 20 men were lost from Laugharne. These men, alongside their compatriots from Carmarthenshire are remembered in perpetuity on the website | |||
==The Laugharne Weekend== | |||
Each year in the spring, Laugharne hosts a three day arts festival, the ]. | |||
The festival's was inaugurated in 2007 featuring writers such as ] and ]. | |||
Headline performers since the have included ], ], ] and ]. | |||
Although the town's Millennium Hall was used as the main venue, smaller events were hosted by local venues including ]'s Boathouse.<ref> website</ref> | |||
==Notable natives== | |||
The first Welsh soldier to win the Victoria Cross during the Great War of 1914-1918, Private ], VC of the 2nd Battalion, Welsh Regiment, was born at Newbridge Road, Laugharne on 13 March 1884. | |||
The Australian pastoralist and politician ] was born at Laugharne on 22 January 1826.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://adbonline.anu.edu.au/biogs/A060429b.htm |title=Wienholt, Arnold (1826 - 1895) |first=D.B. |last=Waterson |work=Australian Dictionary of Biography, Online Edition |publisher=Australian National University |location=Canberra |accessdate=27 May 2011 |issn=1833-7538 }}</ref> His brother ], another Australian politician, was also born at Laugharne, on 28 March 1833.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://adbonline.anu.edu.au/biogs/A060540b.htm |title=Wienholt, Edward (1833 - 1904) |first=D.B. |last=Waterson |work=Australian Dictionary of Biography, Online Edition |publisher=Australian National University |location=Canberra |accessdate=27 May 2011 |issn=1833-7538 }}</ref> | |||
The author and traveller ] was born at Laugharne on 24 September 1795. | |||
The clergyman and one-time Dean of Gloucester ] was born at Laugharne in December 1713. | |||
The one-time director of the Johnson Space Centre ] is the son of Bridget Gibby, of Laugharne. Bridget was working in London when she met George's father, Sam Abbey, and the couple married before moving to Seattle, where George was born on 21 August 1932. | |||
], Australian naval commander, and hero of the capture of German New Guinea during the Great War, was born at Laugharne in 1861. His son, Arthur Edward Bathurst Beresford, was killed in France during the Great War. | |||
] was one of the outstanding outside halves in Wales during the early 1980s, playing for Laugharne, Bridgend, Llanelli and Wales, before turning professional with Hull KR. He was born at Laugharne on 11 November 1960. | |||
], known as Madam Bevan, was an educator, who was the main benefactor to the work of ], the father of the modern schooling system in Wales. She died at Laugharne in 1779. | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
The Laugharne Corporation now has its own official web site which gives more details about the town and can be found by visiting http://www.laugharne.info | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
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Latest revision as of 13:33, 21 December 2024
Town in Carmarthenshire, WalesHuman settlement in Wales
Laugharne
| |
---|---|
Laugharne from the castle | |
LaugharneLocation within Carmarthenshire | |
Population | 1,222 |
OS grid reference | SN301109 |
Community | |
Principal area | |
Preserved county | |
Country | Wales |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | CARMARTHEN |
Postcode district | SA33 |
Dialling code | 01994 |
Police | Dyfed-Powys |
Fire | Mid and West Wales |
Ambulance | Welsh |
UK Parliament | |
51°46′10″N 4°27′47″W / 51.7694°N 4.4631°W / 51.7694; -4.4631 Map of the Laugharne Township community |
Laugharne /ˈlɑːrn/ (Welsh: Talacharn) is a town on the south coast of Carmarthenshire, Wales, lying on the estuary of the River Tâf.
The ancient borough of Laugharne Township (Welsh: Treflan Lacharn) with its Corporation and Charter is a unique survival in Wales. In a predominantly English-speaking area, just on the Landsker Line, the community is bordered by those of Llanddowror, St Clears, Llangynog and Llansteffan. It had a population at the 2021 census of 1,100.
Laugharne Township electoral ward also includes the communities of Eglwyscummin, Pendine and Llanddowror.
Dylan Thomas, who lived in Laugharne from 1949 until his death in 1953, famously described it as a "timeless, mild, beguiling island of a town". It is generally accepted as the inspiration for the fictional town of Llareggub in Under Milk Wood. Thomas confirmed on two occasions that his play was based on Laugharne although topographically it is also similar to New Quay where he briefly lived.
History
Throughout much of the Prehistoric period, human activity in the Laugharne area was centred on Coygan Bluff, a steep-sided limestone peninsula overlooking the now submerged coastal plain to the south. A natural cave on the southeast face of the promontory was excavated five times between 1865 and 1965 yielding significant evidence that its chambers acted as a temporary shelter for groups of hunter-gatherers moving through the landscape over 50,000 years ago and later material in the form of flint tools indicating an extended series of occupations from the Mesolithic and Neolithic periods. These discoveries suggest that the Township is probably the oldest still-inhabited settlement in Wales. Contemporary artefacts from the Mousterian period have also been found at nearby Paviland and Long Hole caves along with older hominin remains at Bontnewydd but, unlike at Laugharne, the communities associated with them are long vanished.
In the 4th century BC, a promontory fort was built at the summit of the hill. During the Bronze Age, Coygan camp is recorded as the site of an open settlement with funerary and ritual activity shown by a short-cist contracted inhumation. Further finds at a nearby round barrow on Laugharne Burrows together with Beaker burials at Plashett and Orchard Park confirm a more permanent community. Excavation in the 1960s of the defended enclosure on Coygan revealed two huts contemporary with the defensive bank and ditch and a significant quantity of pottery recovered dating to the late 3rd century AD indicating that the site was occupied deep into the Romano-British period. Another significant Iron Age settlement has also been identified at Glan-y-Mor Fort in the north of the township.
The Laugharne hoard of over 2000 coins and Roman bath remains found at Island House, together with the substantial Romano-British group of imported 6th-century finewares, coinage and glass from Coygan Camp, described as "one of the richest from a native settlement in south-west Wales", are all part of a concentration of traditional 'Roman' finds in the area. As evidence of activity from the period is generally scarce, these discoveries confirm the site as one of importance and suggest that it continued to be a high status settlement well beyond the Roman occupation. A 6th-century inscribed stone lies within Llansadwrnen church to the north, considered to be an outlying burial site of the more important secular settlement on Coygan. Laugharne Church, which contains a 9th-century Celtic slab stone and where a long cist grave cemetery has also been recorded, is thought to be a more likely early ecclesiastical site in the immediate area.
In the Early Middle Ages Laugharne was the main settlement in the area and home to the Lords of Laugharne. It was a commote of Gwarthaf, the largest of the seven cantrefi of the Kingdom of Dyfed in southwest Wales, later to be ruled by the Princes of Deheuberth. In 1093, Deheubarth was seized by the Normans following Rhys ap Tewdwr's death. In the early 12th century, grants of lands were made to Flemings by King Henry I when their country was flooded. In 1116, when Gruffydd ap Rhys (the son and heir of Rhys ap Tewdwr) returned from self-imposed exile, the king arranged for the land to be fortified against him; according to the Brut y Tywysogyon, Robert Courtemain constructed a castle at Laugharne in that year (this is the earliest reference to any castle at or near Laugharne). Courtemain may be the Robertus cum tortis manibus (English: Robert with twisted hands) mentioned in the Book of Llandaff, as one of a number of specifically named Norman magnates within the vicinity of the Llandaff diocese, who received a letter from Pope Callixtus II complaining about deprivations they had inflicted on diocesan church property; in the letter, the Pope warns he would confirm Bishop Urban's proclamations against them, if they do not rectify matters. The Brut states that Courtemain appointed a man named Bleddyn ap Cedifor as castellan; Bleddyn was the son of Cedifor ap Gollwyn, descendant and heir of the earlier kings of Dyfed (as opposed to those of Deheubarth). The castle was originally known as Abercorran Castle. When Henry I died, Anarchy occurred, and Gruffydd, and his sons, Lord Rhys in particular, gradually reconquered large parts of the former Deheubarth.
In 1154, the Anarchy was resolved when Henry II became king; two years later, Lord Rhys agreed peace terms with Henry II and prudently accepted that he would only rule Cantref Mawr, constructing Dinefwr Castle there. Henry II de-mobilised Flemish soldiers who had aided him during the Anarchy, settling them with the other Flemings. From time to time, however, King Henry had occasion to go to Ireland, or Normandy, which Lord Rhys took as an opportunity to try and expand his own holdings. Returning from Ireland after one such occasion, in 1172, King Henry made peace with Lord Rhys, making him the justiciar of "South Wales" (ie. Deheubarth). By 1247, Laugharne was held by Guy de Bryan; this is the earliest reference to his family possessing the castle, and his father (also named Guy de Bryan) had only moved the family to Wales in 1219 (from Devon). Guy de Bryan's descendants continued to hold the castle; his namesake great-grandson was Lord High Admiral of England. The latter's daughter Elizabeth inherited the castle and married an Owen of St Bride's who subsequently took his name – Owen Laugharne – from the castle despite Gerald of Wales calling the castle Talachar, and other variations on Laugharne/Talacharn appearing in ancient charters; one anonymous pre-20th-century writer erroneously claimed that Owen Laugharne gave his name to the castle rather than the other way around. Possession subsequently defaulted to the Crown, and in 1575, Queen Elizabeth granted it to Sir John Perrot. In 1644 the castle was garrisoned for the king and taken for Parliament by Major-General Rowland Laugharne, who subsequently reverted to the king's side. The population in 1841 was 1,389.
Laugharne Corporation
Laugharne Corporation is an almost unique institution and, together with the City of London Corporation, the last surviving mediæval corporation in the United Kingdom. The Corporation was established in 1291 by Sir Guy de Brian (Gui de Brienne), a Marcher Lord. Laugharne Corporation holds extensive historical records. The Corporation is presided over by the portreeve, wearing his traditional chain of gold cockle shells (one added by each portreeve, with his name and date of tenure on the reverse), the aldermen, and the body of burgesses. The title of portreeve is conferred annually, with the portreeve being sworn in on the first Monday after Michaelmas at the Big Court. The Corporation holds a court leet half-yearly formerly dealing with criminal cases, and a court baron every fortnight, dealing with civil suits within the lordship, especially in matters related to land, where administration of the common fields was dealt with. The Laugharne open-field system is one of only two surviving and still in use today in Britain.
'In Elizabeth's reign, the lordship passed to Sir John Perrott of Haroldston, a fact for which the inhabitants of Laugharne have had cause to regret. As at Carew Perrot modernised the castle, but he was the most unscrupulous "land-grabber" of his age, and in 1574 he induced the burgesses to part with three hundred acres of land in return for an annuity of £9 6s. 8d. The records say that "diverse burgesses of the said towne did not assent to same", and that it was "to the great decaying of many". It would be interesting to know by what methods of bribery or intimidation Sir John was able to accomplish his nefarious purposes.'
The most senior 76 burgesses get a strang of land on Hugden for life, to be used in a form of mediæval strip-farming.
The chief toast at the Portreeve's feast is "to the immortal memory of Sir Guido de Brian"; then the Recorder must sing the following song:
When Sir Guy de Brien lived in Laugharne,
A jolly old man was he.
Some pasture land he owned, which he
Divided into three.
Says he "There's Hugdon and the Moor
They will the Commons please;
And all the gentlemen shall have
Their share down on the Lees."
Governance
Since 1972, Laugharne Township Community Council has formed the lowest tier of local government for the town, represented by 11 community councillors.
For elections to Carmarthenshire County Council, Laugharne is covered by the Laugharne Township electoral ward, which also covers three neighbouring communities. The ward is represented by one county councillor. Independent councillor Jane Tremlett has represented the ward since 2004.
St Martin's Church
The parish church of St Martin was built in the 14th century by Guido de Brian, lord of the manor of Laugharne. The original dedication was to St Michael as 15th-century records use this dedication. The churchyard, rectangular in shape, has shown evidence of Cist burials. Various archaeological finds have been made during grave-digging: a wheel-topped stone; a medieval tile and a fragment of what is believed to be a tomb canopy. The churchyard's 18th- and 19th-century monuments are Grade II listed for their group value.
The interior has a cross-slab, probably dating from the 9th or 10th century, with a carved Celtic design carved onto it. It has been suggested that the design is of Viking origin.
The church is today part of the United Benefice of Bro Sancler. Welsh poet and playwright Dylan Thomas is buried in the churchyard, his grave marked by a white cross.
Landmarks
Local attractions include the 12th-century Laugharne Castle, Laugharne Town Hall and the estuary birdlife.
Laugharne Township currently has 69 listed buildings and contains several fine examples of Georgian townhouses including The Great House and Castle House together with Island House, parts of which date back to the Tudor period. All three properties are grade II* listed and a number of other early vernacular cottages have also survived.
There are a number of landmarks in Laugharne connected with the poet and writer Dylan Thomas. These include the Dylan Thomas Boathouse, where he lived with his family from 1949 to 1953, and now a museum; his writing shed; and the Dylan Thomas Birthday Walk, which was the setting for the work Poem in October.
In popular culture
Many scenes in the BBC Television series Keeping Faith (broadcast in Welsh as Un Bore Mercher) were filmed in and around Laugharne, referred to as Abercorran.
Laugharne weekend
The Laugharne Weekend, a three-day arts festival held in the spring of 2007, featured writers such as Niall Griffiths and Patrick McCabe. Headline performers since then have included Ray Davies, Will Self, Howard Marks and Patti Smith. The Millennium Hall is the main venue and smaller events are held locally such as in the Dylan Thomas Boathouse.
Notable people
- Thomas Rede (ca.1390 – ca.1455), merchant, landholder, knight and public official of nearby Roche Castle
- Reginald Pecock (ca.1395 – ca.1461), prelate and writer, born in Laugharne
- Sir John Perrot (1528–1592), Lord Deputy of Ireland, Lord President of Munster and Privy Councillor to Elizabeth I, lived in Laugharne Castle
- Sir Thomas Perrot (1553–1594), Elizabethan courtier, soldier and Member of Parliament, lived in Laugharne Castle
- Sir James Perrot (1571–1636), writer and Member of Parliament, lived in Laugharne
- Sir Sackville Crowe (1595–1671), English politician, lived in Laugharne
- Rowland Laugharne (1607–1675), Parliamentary General; his 1644 siege of the castle, a former family home, left it an uninhabitable ruin
- Bishop William Thomas (1613–1689), Vicar of Laugharne, ejected by Cromwell. Later Bishop of St Davids and Bishop of Worcester.
- Sir John Powell (1632/3–1696), judge who presided over the trial of the Seven Bishops in 1688, lived in Laugharne
- Sir Thomas Powell (ca.1665 – 1720), lawyer and Member of Parliament, born in Laugharne
- Griffith Jones (1684–1761), educational pioneer, curate of Laugharne where he also resided in later years
- Bridget Bevan (1698–1779), also known as Madam Bevan, educationalist and philanthropist, lived in Laugharne
- Josiah Tucker (1713–1799), clergyman, economist and political writer; Dean of Gloucester, born in Laugharne
- Peter Williams (1723–1796), Methodist leader and publisher of Welsh language bibles, born at West Marsh Farm in Laugharne
- Mary Wollstonecraft (1759–1797), writer, philosopher, and advocate of women's rights, lived in Laugharne as a child
- James Augustus St. John (1795–1875), author and traveller, born in Laugharne
- Edward Falkener (1814-1896), architect, archaeologist, art historian and author, lived at the Glanymor Estate from 1866 until his death
- Arnold Wienholt, Sr. (1826–1895), Australian politician, lived at Castle House in Laugharne
- Edward Wienholt (1833–1904), Australian politician, lived at Castle House in Laugharne
- Agnes Mason (1849–1941), nun, born in Laugharne
- Joseph Arthur Hamilton Beresford (1861–1952), Australian naval commander, born in Laugharne
- Caleb Rees (1883–1970), inspector of schools and author, lived at Island House in Laugharne from 1943 until his death
- William Charles Fuller (1884–1974), soldier, recipient of the Victoria Cross, born in Laugharne
- William Thomas David (1886–1948), Professor of Engineering at University College Cardiff and at the University of Leeds, born in Laugharne
- Raymond Jeremy (1890-1969), violist, professor of violin and viola at the Royal Academy of Music, born in Laugharne
- Richard Hughes (1900–1976), writer, lived at Castle House, instrumental in Dylan Thomas moving to Laugharne
- Dylan Thomas (1914–1953), poet, lived in Laugharne and is buried in the churchyard
- Derrick Childs (1918–1987), the Anglican Bishop of Monmouth and Archbishop of Wales, born in Laugharne
- Sir Kingsley Amis (1922–1995), novelist, poet and critic, wrote Booker Prize winner The Old Devils while living in Cliff House, Laugharne.
- George Tremlett (1939–2021), writer, former politician and bookshop owner, lived in Laugharne
- Aeronwy Thomas (1943–2009), poet, writer and translator of Italian poetry; the second child and only daughter of Dylan Thomas
- Gary Pearce (born 1960), rugby union and rugby league player, born in Laugharne
Notes
- The other named magnates are Walter fitz Richard, Brian Fitz Count, William Fitz-Baldwin (son of Baldwin FitzGilbert), Robert de Chandos (who held Caerleon), Geoffrey de Broi, Pain fitzJohn, Bernard de Neufmarche, Gumbald of Ludlow, Roger de Berkeley (Lord of Dursley, and possible son of Roger I of Tosny), William the sheriff of Cardiff, William Fitz-Roger de Remu, and Robert Fitz Roger.
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