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Cardiganshire

Encyclopedia : C : CA : CAR : Cardiganshire



 

Traditional county of Cardiganshire
WalesCardiganshireTrad.png
Geography
Area
- Total
- % Water
Ranked 5th
440,630 acres (1783 km²)
%
County town Cardigan
Chapman code CGN

Cardiganshire (Welsh: ) is a traditional county in Wales that came into being in 1282.

In 1282 Edward I conquered the principality of Wales and divided the area into counties. The name Cardigan was an anglicization of the name for the historic kingdom of Ceredigion.

Geography

Cardiganshire is a maritime county bounded to the west by Cardigan Bay, to the north by Merionethshire, to the east by Montgomeryshire, Radnorshire and Brecknockshire, and to the south by Carmarthenshire and Pembrokeshire. The county has an approximate population of 64,000. The Cambrian Mountains cover much of the east of the county. In the south and west the surface is less elevated. The highest point is Plynlimmon at 2,486 feet (758 m) at which five rivers have their source: the Severn, the Wye, the Dulas, the Llyfnant and Rheidol, the last of which meets the Mynach in a 300 foot (100 m) plunge at the Devil's Bridge chasm. The 50 miles of coastline has many sandy beaches.

The main towns are Aberaeron, Aberystwyth, Cardigan, Lampeter, New Quay, Newcastle Emlyn (partly in Carmarthenshire) and Tregaron. The chief river is the Teifi which forms the border with Carmarthenshire and Pembrokeshire for much of its length. Tourism and agriculture, chiefly hill farming, are the most important industries.

Places of special interest: Ceredigion Museum, Aberystwyth (Grid reference ); Devil's Bridge (Grid reference ); Strata Florda Abbey (Grid reference ); Vale of Rheidol Railway (Grid reference ).

Government

Cardiganshire's county council created in 1889 was abolished in 1974 by the Local Government Act 1972 — and it was succeeded by the district of Ceredigion in the administrative county of Dyfed. This district was split out in 1996 as a unitary authority, and has (bar minor realignments) identical borders to traditional Cardiganshire, and is sometimes known by that name.


| | Traditional counties of Wales

Counties which originate prior to 1889

Anglesey | Brecknockshire | Caernarfonshire | Cardiganshire | Carmarthenshire | Denbighshire | Flintshire | Glamorganshire | Merionethshire | Monmouthshire | Montgomeryshire | Pembrokeshire | Radnorshire

 


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