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Today is the feast day of St Govan
Saint Govan's Head is situated near Bosherston, in the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park.
Saint Govan - Died 586. It is said that Govan was an Irish Monk who travelled to Wales to seek the friends and family of his teacher, Saint David. He was set upon by pirates, but a cliff opened up leaving a gap for him to hide in until the pirates departed. In gratitude, he decided to live on the cliff, to help warn the locals of the impending pirate attacks, living off fish and water from a well. Later in the 14th century, Saint Govan's Chapel was built on the site, under which it is said that Govan is buried.
Born this day, 1856 in Aberdare.
David Alfred Thomas, 1st Viscount Rhondda, coal magnate and liberal politician.
Thomas was the MP for Merthyr and then Cardiff, but his expectations of high office were disappointed following the 1906 General Election, so he concentrated on business, where his energy and flair for innovation swiftly led him to build a commercial empire, that made him his fortune as the owner of the Cambrian Collieries.
He would return to politics as David Lloyd George's emissary to the United States, where in May 1915, he and his daughter, Margaret were travelling to, when they were among the survivors of the Lusitania, when it was torpedoed and sunk, Then in 1916, he became Minister of Food Control, responsible for introducing an efficient system of rationing. Thomas was described as stern and a disciplinarian, but a fair employer and was genuinely respected by the voters of Merthyr.
The Welsh Ornithological Society was founded on 26th March 1988 at a conference in Aberystwyth.
The Welsh Ornithological Society (Cymdeithas Adaryddol Cymru) is an organisation which promotes the study and conservation of birds in Wales. The television presenter Iolo Williams has been the society's president since November 2009.
On March 26th 1952, Wales won their fifth rugby union Grand Slam.
THREE BLIND WOLVES/ SHY AND THE FIGHT/ THE ADELINES/ BROTHERS - DEMPSEYS FOUR BARS - 23RD OF MAY!
By Ceri Shaw, 2013-03-25
Fresh from supporting Frightened Rabbit, Glasgow's Three Blind Wolves will be playing a show for god is in the tv in Cardiff at Dempseys bar on Thursday the 23rd of May as part of their debut album 'SingHallelujahfor the Old Machine' tour!
23rd of May god is in the tv presents Three Blind Wolves with support from multi legged North Walian orch-pop of Shy and the Fight plus the ace female fronted pop of Swansea's The Adelines and opening with Cardiff youngsters Brothers with their 60 inspired sound@ Dempseys Four Bars . More news to follow you can buy tickets in advance here: We Got Tickets
Stadium sized melodies and four-part harmonies without diving headlong into a pool full of cliches MOJO Magazine
http://threeblindwolves.bandcamp.com/
Having been compared to My Morning Jacket and Neil Young, their recent single 'In Here Somewhere' ( ) features Three Blind Wolves warm Americana-tinged sound, yet with a chilling core. Previously released single Parade ( ), which came out back in October 2012 saw the band rise to great success earning them a great amount of respect from ourselves amongst other tastemakers!They are on tour during May in support of the release of their debut album'SingHallelujahfor the Old Machine'!
The band all met playing shows around the Glasgow music scene, Ross Clark (guitar, vocals) was a solo artist and met David Cleary (lead guitar, backing vocals, mandolin) and Kevin Mackay (bass, backing vocals) through their first group Rainbowsheep. They played their first show together in a Japanese noodle bar and their friendship grew from there, playing in clubs, bars, parks and various flats around Glasgow. When it the time came for the friends to form the band properly, Davie and Kevins a long time friend, Fearghas Lyon (drums), joined and they immediately bonded over jamming to Cream and Daft Punk covers; Three Blind Wolves were born and the four boys havent looked back since.
After releasing their mini album Sound of the Storm in 2011, the band quickly gained support from the press. Scotlands answer to Time Out, The List Magazine, hailed them as a countrified Modest Mouse whilst The Skinny Magazine said their debut recalled genre-defining artists like Bright Eyes and more recently Bon Iver. MOJO Magazine also featured their track Emily Rose on a covermount CD and Rolling Stone said they were the Scottish answer to the Decemberists.
Shy and the Fight:
"They're a multi-legged, multi-instrumented scramble up the precipitous slopes of 20-something hearts, driven along by melodies that'd tan your backside if you dared to flag. There's nothing to buck trends here" -Adam Thomas Walton BBC Wales http://shyandthefight.bandcamp.com/
The Adelines
The Adelines are a guitar-driven quartet comprising Jennie Morris on vocals and guitar, Anton Dodwell on guitar, Eddie Russell on bass and Ray Thomas on drums. Formed in 2011 and named after their next door neighbour's cat, they cut their teeth playing house parties in Swansea and pricked ears with their tom-boyish vocals, jangly reverb-guitars and warped pop sensibilities.
http://www.theadelines.com/
Brothers
Four pieces of psychedelic rock who have been brought together due their love of 60s rock and roll, psychedelia, harmonies and melodies. Brothers consist of 3 members; Joel Hurst (guitar and vocals), Joe Conaghan (bass and vocals), Calum Conaghan (guitar, synth, vocals) and Ethan Hurst (drums and percussion). They aim to capture and reinvent 60s and 90s style rock and roll with more complex structures and experimental aspects. https://soundcloud.com/brothers-band-cardif
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This is the first in an occasional series of quizzes based on Brett Hull's Welsh Word Of The day blog which is one of our most valued daily features on AmeriCymru. All the answers can be found on this page:- Welsh Word Of The Day Archive Page
We will be developing more resources for welsh learners in the coming months. Whether you want to learn Welsh the lazy way ( one word a day ) OR embark on a serious and intensive online course we will have the right resource for you. Keep checking back for further developments.
meanwhile try the quiz below. No clues! No prompts! Simply fill in the blanks. Feel free to boast about your score in comments below
1. What is Welsh for 'to learn'?
2. What is Welsh for television?
3. What is Welsh for children?
4. What is Welsh for hotel?
5. What is Welsh for today?
6. What is Welsh for house?
7. What is Welsh for valley?
8. What is Welsh for yellow?
9. What is Welsh for old?
10. What is Welsh for door?
6 new videos added:-
1. Snowdon Summit Cafe and Railway In Winter
2. Table Mountain South Wales Near Crickhowel
More pics of Table Mountain here .
3. Syndicalism And The Riots of 1911 in South Wales a half hour lecture on the Tonypandy Riots , south Wales 1911.
4. Siobhan Owen ~ My Little Welsh Home ~ Ucheldre Centre, Holyhead, Wales Siobhan Owen in concert on Ynys Mon.
5. Welsh Railways, Full Steam Ahead: Part 1 Part 1 of a two part youtube documentary on the restoration of the Welsh Highland Railway .
6. Welsh Railways, Beating Beeching: Part 2 Part 2 of a two part youtube documentary on the restoration of the Welsh Highland Railway .
Enjoy
I read a really interesting article recently about the possible cause of the separation of the Celtic languages into P-Celtic and Q-Celtic forms. Q-Celtic survives today as Irish, Manx and Scots Gaelic, and existed previously as Celt-Iberian, spoken on the Spanish peninsula, among others. P-Celtic, of which Welsh and Breton (I believe) are the only surviving members, also included tongues of other wider-flung areas, including Cumbric (southern Scotland and northern England), Cornish (Cornwall), the enigmatic Pictish (northern Scotland), Gaulish (Gaul - present day France), and some even farther removed, such as Galatian (Turkey), Leponic (Northern Italy), and Noric (Austria and Slovenia). Coincidently (or not), these areas also share a fair number of social structures, religious beliefs, and elements of material culture - in fact, taken with a grain of salt, they paint a fair picture of a wider Welsh tradition, of which modern Wales is the heir.
The article argues that the transition from the proto-IndoEuropean consonant k(w) (to pronounce it, place your lips as if to make a very pronounced and comic Welsh W, but make the hard C sound without moving your lips) to simple K + w (or Qu) was by far an easier transition to make that the one taken by the P-Celtic speakers, who turned into a P instead. Other language (German and Latin for instance) made a similar simple transition. Seeing as it seems to be a much simpler transition, the article argues that we should look for some reason for an otherwise awkward linguistic transition.
Enter the Etruscans, a powerful, metallurgically advanced, but tongue-tied group who migrated into the area at about the time of the split between P- and Q-Celtic (around 1200 BC or so). The article examines evidence that the very influential Etruscans (possible/likely forefathers of much of Roman culture), though having great skill in military organization, and issuing in the iron age in this part of the world, simply had no sounds in their non-IndoEuropean language that corresponded to a K, Q or maybe even W. Whats an Etruscan to do, then, when trying to interact with these proto-Celtic people? Apparently, rather than allowing the k(w) sound to drift backward into no-mans-land and become the unknown K sound, they used something a little further forward and a lot more familiar. They used P instead. The article concludes by pointing to the likelihood that the proto-Celts of the area, taken with these culturally impressive neighbours, likely began to borrow their pronunciation, and as a result, began to create the division we see today.
On March 25th 1807, the Mumbles to Swansea Railroad became the first-fee paying railroad in the world.
At the beginning of the Nineteenth Century there was no road link between Swansea and Oystermouth and the railway's original purpose was to move coal, iron ore, and limestone between the Swansea Canal and Swansea Harbour. Then in 1807, approval was given to carry passengers along the line as well.
It holds the record for the most number of means of being powered used by any railway in the world i.e. horse drawn, sail power, steam power, electric power, petrol and diesel.
Flat Holm Light House became operational on 25th March 1738.
Flat Holm is a limestone island lying in the Bristol Channel and contains Wales' most southerly point of Wales.
A timeline history for Flat Holm;
* The island has a long history of occupation, from Anglo-Saxon and Viking times.
* It was visited by disciples of Saint Cadog in the 6th century.
* In 1835 it was the site of the foundation of the Bristol Channel Mission, which later became the Mission to Seafarers.
* A sanitorium for cholera patients was built in 1896 as the isolation hospital for the port of Cardiff.
* Marconi used Flat Holm to transmit the first wireless signal over open sea to Lavernock in 1897.
* A series of gun emplacements were built in the 1860s to defend the entrances to Cardiff and Bristol ports.
* On the outbreak of World War II, the island was rearmed.
* It is now designated as a Local Nature Reserve, Site of Special Scientific Interest and a Special Protection Area, because of its rare grasslands and plants and also has significant breeding colonies of the Great Black-backed Gull, Lesser Black-backed Gull and Herring Gull.
Sherlock Holmes' most famous case, The Hounds of the Baskervilles was published on March 25th, 1902 and the story may well have a distinct Welsh connection.
Sherlock Holmes's creator, Sir Arthur Conan Doyles's first wife had strong links to Wales and they would have regularly visited Baskerville Hall in Clyro, Powys, It is thought that Conan Doyle may have got the idea for this story from local land owner Black Vaughan, who according to legend,
owned a pack of wild hounds, who he would set on people who annoyed him at nearby Hergest Ridge, sometimes with fatal results.
Born this day, 1915 in Pontyberem
Dorothy Squires - Born as Edna May Squires, was a recording artist, best remembered for her versions of "I'm in the Mood for Love" and "If You Love Me (Really Love Me) and her marriage to Roger Moore. In later life, she was involved in much controversy and bad fortune, which saw houses belonging to her, burned down and flooded. By 1982 she had spent much of her fortune on legal fees.and in 1988, she lost her home in following bankruptcy proceedings. Her last concert was in 1990, to pay her Community Charge.
The Proud Valley starring Paul Robeson and filmed on location in South Wales was premiered on 25th March 1940.
The film tells the story of how a Black American gets work as a miner when he comes to live in Wales and shares the hard way of experienced by the locals in the aftermath of the Great Depression. He becomes a respected member of the community when he joins a male choir and also strives to improve the people's living conditions. He then becomes a hero when he sacrifices his own life in a mining accident, trying to save his colleagues.
On 25th March 1811 Joseph Bailey took over the ironworks at Nantyglo and was instrumental in making it one of the great iron-works of the world.
Bailey from Wakefield in Yorkshire went to work with his uncle Richard Crawshay, the owner Cyfarthfa ironworks in Merthyr. After Richard Crawshay's death in 1810, Bailey inherited a quarter share of Cyfarthfa, which he sold to purchase the old ironworks at Nantyglo.
Bailey became a very wealthy man and purchased estates in Breconshire, Radnorshire, Herefordshire and Glamorganshire. he also became MP for Worcester City and Breconshire.
An Interview With Janet Louise Mancini- Author of 'Finding My Life Through The Children's Home'
By Ceri Shaw, 2013-03-24
Janet: Hello Ceri and everyone here at AmeriCymru. I am very happy to be interviewed here today.
You ask me what I have found. I found a life I never knew I had before my adoption at age 5. After my adopted mother (Alberta Raymond-Mancini) died in August of 2000 I became curious about my birth mother. And so I started a search that would at the time, only take me two months. I was able to find The Children's Home I was placed in by my birth mother, (Mary Margaret Morris-Lener) , the women who worked there and took care of me and my biological family, which I never knew I had. But to this day I still am able to meet relatives I never knew I had. My adopted mother and I were very close and after she died I felt the need to also grieve my birth mother's death, who had died at age 39 and I was only 4 years old when she died. I did not know who she was or anything about her until I started my search. From the time I met her last living sibling, my Aunt Catherine. This took place in 2003
AmeriCymru: Genealogical research scares some people. How easy/difficult haver you found it to trace your family roots?
Janet: My search happened very rapidly. Once I found the women who worked in The Children's Home they knew alot of information about my biological family. In fact one of the women gave me my first picture of my biological father. One of them knew one of my Uncle's. So I was already off on the right foot. I made great strides in my research. I have since learned a lot about my Welsh/Scotch/German and Irish roots. The only information I found online was my biological father's date of death. Then I started listing questions on ancestry.com and genealogy.com. Also local social groups, who I found very friendly and helpful. I spent countless hours searching the microfilm at the Uniontown library.
AmeriCymru: What advice would you give to anyone attempting genealogical research for the first time?
Janet: If you are starting your search expect to spend many hours searching online. I can say from experience it is a lot easier to search now then when I started. Mine was all on foot. Now you can sit at your computer and search genealogy sites for free. It is amazing to me now what is available online. . Once I found something it always lead to another question and I loved every single minute of it and it has become a hobby of mine now.
AmeriCymru: Can to tell us a little about your experiences at the Uniontown children's home?
Janet: From what I can remember from The Children's Home, is that we were like a large family. We were cared for as their own children. We had play time, school time, meal time and went to Sunday School together. We all played together and everyone seemed to get along. I don't remember any family coming to see me. My twin brother and I wee placed in the home together so we were always together. We had been separated from the whole family once we went into the home. So we only had each other.
AmeriCymru: Care to tell us more about the Morris family reunion in 2003?
Janet: When I arrived at the Morris Family Reunion in 2003, you would have thought I was never separated from the family. Morris is my biological mother's maiden name. I had met a cousin on Facebook and about a week later I was ask if I would like to go to the reunion. I said I would love to. I was told it was a potluck dinner. So I brought a cake that said Morris Family Reunion 2003. When I walked into the pavilion everyone greeted me just like family. I had the best time of my life. When I explained to everyone who I was they said your part of the Morris family. I have thought about this quite a bit and realized that is my mother's blood line and that is the connection. I wish I could explain to you what I felt. Even though my mother's has been gone for years it is like I am still connected.
AmeriCymru: Where can people go to read your blog online?
Janet: I started a blog recently and here it is. www.janetlmancini.com
Finding My Life Through The Children's Home
I would appreciate it if you would read it and comment. If you have any questions please feel free to ask me.
AmeriCymru: What's next for Janet Louise Mancini?
Janet: My next step is to have my book published this year. It is my hope to help someone who is thinking of starting their search for roots and to not be afraid of what you will find. You will find good and bad but you make the best of it, decide for yourself how it will affect you and move on.
AmeriCymru: Any final message for the readers and members of Americymru?
Janet: I feel very blest to have had the life I have been given. It was my biological mother's decision to place my twin brother John and I in The Children's Home. She wanted us to have a better life, which we did that she could not provide.
This is how I actually ended up here at AmeriCymru a few years ago, trying to search my Welsh roots. I have met and made many friends here and have learned a wealth of information about the Welch people and culture. I am very greatful for that.
Thank you so much for your time.
Janet Mancini
Born this day, 1944 in Aberystwyth
Stephen Jones FRS , is the best-known genetics expert in Britain and is also a telvision presenter and a prize-winning author on evolution. In 1996 his writing won him the Royal Society Michael Faraday Prize for his wide ranging contributions to the public understanding of science.
On this day 2011, it was announced that Ty Hyll - The Ugly House, now a Grade II listed building, was to become a bee sanctuary.
A history of Tŷ Hyll - The Ugly House (Capel Curig, Snowdonia)
Legend says it was built by two outlawed brothers in the 15th century, based on the old Welsh law of ty unos , which stipulated that if you could build a house and have smoke coming out of the chimney between sunset and sunrise, then you owned the freehold of the land. Then you could also claim the amount of determined by how far an axe from each corner of the building. Given the time constraints, this would often result in a very rough and crude building.
It's thought the building that stands today is an 18th-century renovation of the original, to house the workers of Thomas Telford's link road between London to Holyhead.
In the 1980s, it was empty and falling into rack and ruin until it was bought and restored by the Snowdonia Society who however kept its original external appearance.
In March 1960 the first episode of Tales of the Riverbank, narrated by Welsh actor Johnny Morris, was aired on British television.
Born this day 1972 in Hammersmith (His mother Jackie is Welsh), raised in Newbridge
Joe Calzaghe - former World Champion boxer, who made successful defences of his WBO Super Middleweight title.
Killed in action in Maddalena Harbour, Italy on this day 1943 and posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross in recognition of his achievements during the war and the gallantry of his crew.
John Wallace Linton, born in Malpas, Newport in 1905 , was a submarine commander during the Second World War and whose submarine TURBULENT was fired upon and depth charged near Maddalena Harbour, Italy and was declared ''lost with all hands''.
Born this day, 1957 in Gorseinon
Robbie James , former Wales soccer international, who was a regular member of the Swansea City side that rose from the Fourth Division to the First Division between 1978 and 1981.
His total of 783 English league appearances between 1973 and 1994 is one of the highest of any player in the history of English football. James collapsed and died during a match for Llanelli on 18 February 1998.
Released on 23rd March 1954 Doctor in the House is a British comedy film, directed by Ralph Thomas and produced by Betty Box.
The film starred Donald Houston, a Welsh actor who early in his career starred in the highly successful films "The Blue Lagoon" and "A Run for Your Money" before later in his career, being cast in military roles and comedies such as the Doctor and Carry On series.