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Pembrokeshire

Pembrokeshire (/ˈpɛmbrʊkʃɪər, -ʃər/ PEM-bruuk-sheer, -⁠shər; Welsh: Sir Benfro [siːr ˈbɛnvrɔ]) is a county in the south-west of Wales. It is bordered by Carmarthenshire to the east, Ceredigion to the northeast, and is otherwise surrounded by the sea.[note 1] Haverfordwest is the largest town and administrative headquarters of Pembrokeshire County Council.

Pembrokeshire
Sir Benfro (Welsh)
Tenby in southeast Pembrokeshire
Pembrokeshire's location in Wales
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
CountryWales
Preserved countyDyfed
Admin HQHaverfordwest
Largest townHaverfordwest
Government
 • TypePembrokeshire County Council
 • ControlIndependent
 • MPs
 • MSs
Area
 • Total610 sq mi (1,590 km2)
 • Rank5th largest Welsh county
Population
 (2021)
 • Total123,669
 • RankRanked 13th in Wales[1]
 • Density200/sq mi (76/km2)
  • Rank19th
 • Ethnicity
99.2% White
Welsh language
 • RankRanked 8th
 • Speakers17.2%
Geocode00NS (ONS)
W06000009 (GSS)
ISO 3166 codeGB-PEM

The county is generally sparsely populated and rural, with an area of 200 square miles (520 km2) and a population of 123,400. After Haverfordwest, the largest settlements are Milford Haven (13,907), Pembroke Dock (9,753), and Pembroke (7,552). St Davids (1,841) is a city, the smallest by population in the UK. Welsh is spoken by 17.2 percent of the population, and for historic reasons is more widely spoken in the north of the county than in the south.

Pembrokeshire's coast is its most dramatic geographic feature, created by the complex geology of the area. It is a varied landscape which includes high sea cliffs, wide sandy beaches, the large natural harbour of Milford Haven, and several offshore islands which are home to seabird colonies. Most of it is protected by Pembrokeshire Coast National Park, and can be hiked on the 190-mile (310 km) Pembrokeshire Coast Path. The interior of Pembrokeshire is relatively flat and gently undulating, with the exception of the Preseli Mountains in the north.

There are many prehistoric sites in Pembrokeshire, particularly in the Preseli Mountains. During the Middle Ages several castles were built by the Normans, such as Pembroke and Cilgerran, and St David's Cathedral became an important pilgrimage site. During the Industrial Revolution the county remained relatively rural, with the exception of Milford Haven, which was developed as a port and Royal Navy dockyard. It is now the UK's third-largest port, primarily because of its two liquefied natural gas terminals. The economy of the county is now focused on agriculture, oil and gas, and tourism.

Settlements edit

See List of places in Pembrokeshire for a comprehensive list of settlements in Pembrokeshire.

The county town is Haverfordwest. Other towns include Pembroke, Pembroke Dock, Milford Haven, Fishguard, Tenby, Narberth, Neyland and Newport. In the west of the county, St Davids is the United Kingdom's smallest city in terms of both size and population (1,841 in 2011). Saundersfoot is the most populous village (more than 2,500 inhabitants)[2] in Pembrokeshire. Less than 4 per cent of the county, according to CORINE, is built-on or green urban.[3]

Geography edit

Climate edit

Milford Haven
Climate chart (explanation)
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Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
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Source: The Met Office
Imperial conversion
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Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches

There are three weather stations in Pembrokeshire: at Tenby, Milford Haven and Penycwm, all on the coast. Milford Haven enjoys a mild climate and Tenby shows a similar range of temperatures throughout the year,[4] while at Penycwm, on the west coast and 100m above sea level, temperatures are slightly lower.[5]

The county has on average the highest coastal winter temperatures in Wales due to its proximity to the relatively warm Atlantic Ocean. Inland, average temperatures tend to fall 0.5 °C for each 100 metres increase in height.[6]

The air pollution rating of Pembrokeshire is "Good", the lowest rating.[7]

Geology edit

The rocks in the county were formed between 600 and 290 million years ago. More recent rock formations were eroded when sea levels rose 80 million years ago, at the end of the Cretaceous Period. Around 60 million years ago, the Pembrokeshire landmass emerged through a combination of uplift and falling sea levels; the youngest rocks, from the Carboniferous Period, contain the Pembrokeshire Coalfield.[8] The landscape was subject to considerable change as a result of ice ages; about 20,000 years ago the area was scraped clean of soil and vegetation by the ice sheet; subsequently, meltwater deepened the existing river valleys.[9][10] While Pembrokeshire is not usually a seismically active area, in August 1892 there was a series of pronounced activities (maximum intensity: 7) over a six-day period.[11]: 184 

Coastline and landscape edit

 
Pembrokeshire Coast National Park shown in green

The Pembrokeshire coastline includes numerous bays and sandy beaches. The Pembrokeshire Coast National Park, the only park in the UK established primarily because of its coastline,[12][13] occupies more than a third of the county. The park contains the Pembrokeshire Coast Path, a near-continuous 186-mile (299 km) long-distance trail from Amroth, by the Carmarthenshire border in the southeast, to St Dogmaels just down the River Teifi estuary from Cardigan, Ceredigion, in the north.[14] The National Trust owns 60 miles (97 km) of Pembrokeshire's coast.[15] Nowhere in the county is more than 10 miles (16 km) from tidal water. The large estuary and natural harbour of Milford Haven cuts deep into the coast; this inlet is formed by the confluence of the Western Cleddau (which flows through Haverfordwest), the Eastern Cleddau, and rivers Cresswell[16] and Carew. Since 1975, the estuary has been bridged by the Cleddau Bridge,[17] a toll bridge carrying the A477 between Neyland and Pembroke Dock. Large bays are Newport Bay, Fishguard Bay, St Bride's Bay and western Carmarthen Bay. There are several small islands off the Pembrokeshire coast, the largest of which are Ramsey, Grassholm, Skokholm, Skomer and Caldey.[18] The seas around Skomer and Skokholm, and some other areas off the Pembrokeshire coast are Marine protected areas.[19]

There are many known shipwrecks off the Pembrokeshire coast with many more undiscovered.[20][21] A Viking wreck off The Smalls has protected status.[22] The county has six lifeboat stations, the earliest of which was established in 1822; in 2015 a quarter of all Royal National Lifeboat Institution Welsh rescues took place off the Pembrokeshire coast.[23]

 
View from the bluestone quarry to other peaks in the Preselis

Pembrokeshire's diverse range of geological features was a key factor in the establishment of the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park and a number of sites of special scientific interest (SSSIs).[24] In the north of the county are the Preseli Mountains, a wide stretch of high moorland supporting sheep farming and some forestry, with many prehistoric sites and the probable source of the bluestones used in the construction of the inner circle of Stonehenge in England.[25] The highest point is Foel Cwmcerwyn at 1,759 feet (536 m), which is also the highest point in Pembrokeshire. Elsewhere in the county most of the land (86 per cent according to CORINE) is used for farming, compared with 60 per cent for Wales as a whole.[3]

Wildlife edit

Pembrokeshire's wildlife is diverse, with marine, estuary, ancient woodland, moorland and farmland habitats.[26][27] The county has a number of seasonal seabird breeding sites, including for razorbill, guillemot, puffin and Manx shearwater,[28] and rare endemic species such as the red-billed chough;[29]: 133–135  Grassholm has a large gannet colony.[30] Seals,[31] several species of whales (including a rare humpback whale sighting in 2021[32]), dolphins and porpoises can be seen off the Pembrokeshire coast; whale-watching boat trips are frequent, particularly during the summer months.[33] An appeal for otter sightings in 2014 yielded more than 100 responses,[34] and a rare visit by a walrus occurred in the spring of 2021.[35]

Pembrokeshire is one of the few places in the UK that is home to the rare Southern damselfly, Coenagrion mercuriale, which is found at several locations in the county, and whose numbers have been boosted by conservation work over a number of years.[36]

History edit

 
Pentre Ifan neolithic burial chamber

Human habitation of the region that is now Pembrokeshire extends back to between 125,000 and 70,000 years[37]: 3  and there are numerous prehistoric sites such as Pentre Ifan, and neolithic remains (12,000 to 6,500 years ago), more of which were revealed in an aerial survey during the 2018 heatwave;[38] in the same year, a 1st-century Celtic chariot burial was discovered, the first such find in Wales.[39][40] There may have been dairy farming in Neolithic times.[41]

Roman period edit

 
Map dated 1450-75 based on Ptolemy's "Geography" written c. 150

There is little evidence of Roman occupation in what is now Pembrokeshire. Ptolemy's Geography, written c. 150, mentioned some coastal places, two of which have been identified as the River Teifi and what is now St Davids Head, but most Roman writers did not mention the area; there may have been a Roman settlement near St Davids and a road from Bath, but this comes from a 14th-century writer. Any evidence for villas or Roman building materials reported by mediaeval or later writers has not been verified, though some remains near Dale were tentatively identified as Roman in character by topographer Richard Fenton in his Historical Tour of 1810. Fenton stated that he had "...reason to be of opinion that they had not colonized Pembrokeshire till near the decline of their empire in Britain".[42]: 144 

Part of a possible Roman road is noted by CADW near Llanddewi Velfrey,[43] and another near Wiston.[44] Wiston is also the location of the first Roman fort discovered in Pembrokeshire, investigated in 2013.[45]

Some artefacts, including coins and weapons, have been found, but it is not clear whether these belonged to Romans or to a Romanised population. Welsh tradition has it that Magnus Maximus founded Haverfordwest, and took a large force of local men on campaign in Gaul in 383 which, together with the reduction of Roman forces in south Wales, left a defensive vacuum which was filled by incomers from Ireland.[46]: 37–51 

Sub-Roman period edit

 
Dyfed, after the late 7th century, showing its seven cantrefi

Between 350 and 400, an Irish tribe known as the Déisi settled in the region known to the Romans as Demetae.[37]: 52, 17, 30, 34  The Déisi merged with the local Welsh, with the regional name underlying Demetae evolving into Dyfed, which existed as an independent petty kingdom from the 5th century.[37]: 52, 72, 85, 87  In 904, Hywel Dda married Elen (died 943),[47] daughter of the king of Dyfed Llywarch ap Hyfaidd, and merged Dyfed with his own maternal inheritance of Seisyllwg, forming the new realm of Deheubarth ("southern district"). Between the Roman and Norman periods, the region was subjected to raids from Vikings, who established settlements and trading posts at Haverfordwest, Fishguard, Caldey Island and elsewhere.[37]: 81–85 [42]: 135–136 

Norman period and Middle Ages edit

Dyfed remained an integral province of Deheubarth, but this was contested by invading Normans and Flemings who arrived between 1067 and 1111.[37]: 98  The region became known as Pembroke (sometimes archaic "Penbroke"[48]: 53–230 ), after the Norman castle built in the cantref of Penfro. In 1136, Prince Owain Gwynedd at Crug Mawr near Cardigan met and destroyed a 3,000-strong Norman/Flemish army and incorporated Deheubarth into Gwynedd.[49]: 80–85 [37]: 124  Norman/Flemish influence never fully recovered in West Wales.[50]: 79  In 1138, the county of Pembrokeshire was named as a county palatine. Rhys ap Gruffydd, the son of Owain Gwynedd's daughter Gwenllian, re-established Welsh control over much of the region and threatened to retake all of Pembrokeshire, but died in 1197. After Deheubarth was split by a dynastic feud, Llywelyn the Great almost succeeded in retaking the region of Pembroke between 1216 and his death in 1240.[37]: 106, 112, 114  In 1284 the Statute of Rhuddlan was enacted to introduce the English common law system to Wales,[51] heralding 100 years of peace, but had little effect on those areas already established under the Marcher Lords, such as Cemais in the north of the county.[46]: 176 

 
Pembroke Castle, birthplace of Henry VII

Henry Tudor, born at Pembroke Castle in 1457, landed an army in Pembrokeshire in 1485 and marched to Cardigan.[46]: 223  Rallying support, he continued to Leicestershire and defeated the larger army of Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field. As Henry VII, he became the first monarch of the House of Tudor, which ruled England until 1603.[52]: 337–379 

 
Hand-drawn map of Pembrokeshire by Christopher Saxton from 1577

Tudor and Stuart periods edit

The Laws in Wales Act 1535 effectively abolished the powers of the Marcher Lords and divided the county into seven hundreds, roughly corresponding to the seven pre-Norman cantrefi of Dyfed.[46]: 247 [53] The hundreds were (clockwise from the northeast): Cilgerran, Cemais, Dewisland, Roose, Castlemartin, Narberth and Dungleddy and each was divided into civil parishes;[54] a 1578 map in the British Library is the earliest known to show parishes and chapelries in Pembrokeshire.[55] The Elizabethan era brought renewed prosperity to the county through an opening up of rural industries, including agriculture, mining and fishing, with exports to England and Ireland, though the formerly staple woollen industry had all but disappeared.[46]: 310 

During the First English Civil War (1642–1646) the county gave strong support to the Roundheads (Parliamentarians), in contrast to the rest of Wales, which was staunchly Royalist. In spite of this, an incident in Pembrokeshire triggered the opening shots of the Second English Civil War when local units of the New Model Army mutinied. Oliver Cromwell defeated the uprising at the Siege of Pembroke in July 1648.[56]: 437–438  On 13 August 1649, the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland began when New Model Army forces sailed from Milford Haven.[57]

18th and 19th centuries edit

 
1819 Ordnance Survey map of north and west Pembrokeshire

In 1720, Emmanuel Bowen[58] described Pembrokeshire as having five market towns, 45 parishes and about 4,329 houses, with an area of 420,000 acres (1,700 km2). In 1791 a petition was presented to the House of Commons concerning the poor state of many of the county's roads, pointing out that repairs could not be made compulsory by the law as it stood. The petition was referred to committee.[59]: 178  People applying for poor relief were often put to work mending roads. Workhouses were poorly documented. Under the Poor Laws, costs and provisions were kept to a minimum, but the emphasis was often on helping people to be self-employed. While the Poor Laws provided a significant means of support, there were many charitable and benefit societies.[60] After the Battle of Fishguard, the failed French invasion of 1797, 500 French prisoners were held at Golden Hill Farm, Pembroke.[61] From 1820 to 1878 one of the county's prisons, with a capacity of 86, was in the grounds of Haverfordwest Castle.[62] In 1831, the area of the county was calculated to be 345,600 acres (1,399 km2) with a population of 81,424.[58]

It was not until nearly the end of the 19th century that mains water was provided to rural south Pembrokeshire by means of a reservoir at Rosebush and cast iron water pipes throughout the district.[63]

20th century edit

 
Pembrokeshire County War Memorial, near County Hall

Throughout much of the 20th century (1911 to 1961) the population density in the county remained stable while it rose in England and Wales as a whole.[64] There was considerable military activity in Pembrokeshire and offshore in the 20th century: a naval base at Milford Haven because German U-boats were active off the coast in World War I[65] and, in World War II, military exercises in the Preseli Mountains and a number of military airfields.[66] The wartime increase in air activity saw a number of aircraft accidents and fatalities, often due to unfamiliarity with the terrain.[67] From 1943 to 1944, 5,000 soldiers from the United States Army's 110th Infantry Regiment were based in the county, preparing for D-Day.[68][69] Military and industrial targets in the county were subjected to bombing during World War II.[70] After the end of the war, German prisoners of war were accommodated in Pembrokeshire, the largest prison being at Haverfordwest, housing 600.[71] The County of Pembroke War Memorial in Haverfordwest carries the names of 1,200 of those that perished in World War I.[72]

In 1972, a second reservoir for south Pembrokeshire, at Llys y Fran, was completed.[73]

Demography edit

 
Proportion of Welsh speakers (Wales 2011 census) in Pembrokeshire (county border shown by white line)

Population edit

Pembrokeshire's population was 122,439 at the 2011 census,[74] increasing marginally to 123,400 at the 2021 census. 66.4 per cent of residents were born in Wales, while 27.5 per cent were born in England.[75]

Language edit

The 2021 census recorded that Welsh is spoken by 17.2 per cent of the population, a fall from 19.2 per cent in 2011.[75] As a result of differential immigration over hundreds of years, such as the influx of Flemish people,[76] the south of the county has fewer Welsh-speaking inhabitants (about 15 per cent) than the north (about 50 per cent). The rough line that can be drawn between the two regions, illustrated by the map, is known as the Landsker Line, and the area south of the line has been termed "Little England Beyond Wales". The first objective, statistically based description of this demarcation was made in the 1960s,[77]: 7–29  but the distinction was remarked upon as early as 1603 by George Owen of Henllys.[78] A 21st century introduction of Welsh place names for villages which had previously been known locally only by their English names has caused some controversy.[79]

Religion edit

In 1851, a religious census of Pembrokeshire showed that of 70 per cent of the population, 53 per cent were nonconformists and 17 per cent Church of England (now Church in Wales, in the Diocese of St Davids).[80] The 2001 census for Preseli Pembrokeshire constituency showed that 74 per cent were Christian and 25 per cent of no religion (or not stated), with other religions totalling less than 1 per cent. This approximated to the figures for the whole of Wales.[81] By 2021, 43 per cent reported "no religion", while 48.8 per cent described themselves as Christian. 6.6 per cent did not state their religion, and the remainder represented a number of other religions combined.[75]

Ethnicity edit

In 2001, Preseli Pembrokeshire constituency was 99 per cent white European, marginally lower than in 1991, compared with 98 per cent for the whole of Wales. 71 per cent identified their place of birth as Wales and 26 per cent as from elsewhere in the UK.[81] In 2021, 52.7 per cent of residents identified as "Welsh only", a slight decrease since 2011.[75]

Governance, politics and public services edit

 
The Shire Hall, Haverfordwest

Under the Local Government Act 1888, an elected county council was set up to take over the functions of the Pembrokeshire Quarter Sessions. It was based at the Shire Hall, Haverfordwest.[82] This and the administrative county of Pembrokeshire were abolished under the Local Government Act 1972, with Pembrokeshire forming two districts of the new county of Dyfed: South Pembrokeshire and Preseli – the split being made at the request of local authorities in the area.[83] In 1996, under the Local Government (Wales) Act 1994, the county of Dyfed was broken up into its constituent parts, and Pembrokeshire has been a unitary authority since then.[84] A new County Hall was built in 1999 in Haverfordwest and serves as the county council's headquarters. In 2017 Pembrokeshire County Council had 60 members and no political party in overall control; there were 34 independent councillors.[85] In 2009, the question of county names and Royal Mail postal addresses was raised in the Westminster parliament; it was argued that Royal Mail's continued use of the county address Dyfed was causing concern and confusion in the Pembrokeshire business community.[84] The Royal Mail has subsequently ceased requiring county names to be used in postal addresses. In 2018, Pembrokeshire County Council increased council tax by 12.5 per cent, the largest increase since 2004, but the county's council tax remains the lowest in Wales.[86] The county is part of the Swansea Bay City Region.

 
County Hall, Haverfordwest

The Pembrokeshire (Communities) Order 2011 established the most recent arrangement of communities (the successors to civil parishes) in the county which have their own councils; see the foot of this page for a list of communities.[87]

Since 2010, Pembrokeshire has returned two Conservative MPs to the Parliament of the United Kingdom at Westminster: Stephen Crabb for Preseli Pembrokeshire and Simon Hart for South Pembrokeshire which is represented jointly with West Carmarthenshire.[88] The corresponding Members of the Senedd (MSs) returned to the Senedd (Welsh Parliament) in Cardiff are Paul Davies and Samuel Kurtz respectively, both Conservatives.[89]

Pembrokeshire is served by the Mid and West Wales Fire and Rescue Service[90] and Dyfed-Powys Police.[91]

Transport edit

 
Cleddau Bridge

There are no motorways in Pembrokeshire; the nearest is the M4 motorway from London which terminates at the Pont Abraham services in Carmarthenshire some 46 miles (74 km) from Haverfordwest. The A40 crosses Pembrokeshire from the border with Carmarthenshire westwards to Haverfordwest, then northwards to Fishguard.[92] The A477 from St. Clears to Pembroke Dock is 24 miles (39 km) long, of which only 2 miles (3.2 km) are dual carriageway. The Cleddau Bridge, toll-free from 28 March 2019,[93] carries the A477 across the Cleddau Estuary. The A478 traverses eastern Pembrokeshire from Tenby in the south to Cardigan, Ceredigion in the north, a distance of 30 miles (48 km). The A487 is the other major route, running northwest from Haverfordwest to St Davids, then northeast following the coast, through Fishguard and Newport, to the boundary with Ceredigion at Cardigan.[92] Owing to length restrictions in Fishguard, some freight vehicles are not permitted to travel northeast from Fishguard but must take a longer route via Haverfordwest and Narberth.[94] The B4329 former turnpike runs from Eglwyswrw in the north to Haverfordwest across the Preselis.[95]

The main towns in the county are covered by regular bus and train services operated by First Cymru (under their "Western Welsh" livery), Transport for Wales Rail and sometimes Great Western Railway respectively, and many villages by local bus services, or community or education transport.[96]

Pembrokeshire is served by rail via the West Wales Lines from Swansea. Direct trains from Milford Haven run to Manchester Piccadilly. Branch lines terminate at Pembroke Dock, Milford Haven and Fishguard, linking with ferries to Ireland from Pembroke Dock and Fishguard.[97] Seasonal ferry services operate from Tenby to Caldey Island,[98] from St Justinians (St Davids) to Ramsey Island[99] and Grassholm Island,[100] and from Martin's Haven to Skomer Island.[101] Haverfordwest (Withybush) Airport provides general aviation services.[102]

Economy edit

Pembrokeshire's economy now relies heavily on tourism; agriculture, once its most important industry with associated activities such as milling, is still significant. Mining of slate and coal had largely ceased by the 20th century. Since the 1950s, petrochemical and liquid natural gas industries have developed along the Milford Haven Waterway and the county has attracted other major ventures. In 2016, Stephen Crabb, then Welsh Secretary, commented in a government press release: "...with a buoyant local economy, Pembrokeshire is punching above its weight across the UK."[103]

In August 2019, the Pembrokeshire County Show celebrated 60 years at Haverfordwest Showground. The organisers anticipated 100,000 visitors, the largest three-day such event in Wales at the time. It showcased agriculture, food and drink, a rugby club, entertainment, with the star attraction a motorcycle display team.[104]

Agriculture edit

Until the 12th century, a great extent of Pembrokeshire was virgin woodland. Clearance in the lowland south began under Anglo-Flemish colonisation and under mediaeval tenancies in other areas. Such was the extent of development that by the 16th century there was a shortage of timber in the county. Little is known about mediaeval farming methods, but much arable land was continuously cropped and only occasionally ploughed. By the 18th century, many of the centuries-old open field systems had been enclosed, and much of the land was arable or rough pasture in a ratio of about 1:3.[105]

 
Solva Woollen Mill

Kelly's Directory of 1910 gave a snapshot of the agriculture of Pembrokeshire: 57,343 acres (23,206 ha) were cropped (almost half under oats and a quarter barley), there were 37,535 acres (15,190 ha) of grass and clover and 213,387 acres (86,355 ha) of permanent pasture (of which a third was for hay). There were 128,865 acres (52,150 ha) of mountain or heathland used for grazing, with 10,000 acres (4,000 ha) of managed or unmanaged woodland. Estimates of livestock included 17,810 horses, 92,386 cattle, 157,973 sheep and 31,673 pigs. Of 5,981 agricultural holdings, more than half were between 5 and 50 acres.[106]

Pembrokeshire had a flourishing wool industry.[107] There are still working woollen mills at Solva and Tregwynt.[108] One of the last few watermills in Wales producing flour is in St Dogmaels.[109]

Pembrokeshire has good soil and benefits from the Gulf Stream, which provides a mild climate and a longer growing season than other parts of Wales.[110]: 142  Pembrokeshire's mild climate means that crops such as its new potatoes (which have protected geographical status under European law)[111] often arrive in British shops earlier in the year than produce from other parts of the UK. Other principal arable crops are oilseed rape, wheat and barley, while the main non-arable activities are dairy farming for milk and cheese, beef production and sheep farming.[112]

The county lends its name to the Pembroke Welsh Corgi, a herding dog whose lineage can be traced back to the 12th century,[113]: 6  but which in 2015 was designated as a "vulnerable" breed.[114]

Since 2006, Pembrokeshire Local Action Network for Enterprise and Development (PLANED) has provided a forum to promote an integrated approach to rural development, in which communities, public sector and voluntary partners and specialist interest groups come together to influence policy and promote projects aimed at sustainable agriculture. Sub-groups include promoting food and farming in schools and shortening supply chains.[115]

Fishing edit

 
Milford Haven dock, 2009

With Pembrokeshire's extensive coastal areas and tidal river estuaries, fishing was an important industry at least from the 16th century. Many ports and villages were dependent on the fishing.[116] The former large sea fishing industry around Milford Haven is now greatly reduced, although limited commercial fishing still takes place. At its peak, Milford was landing over 40,000 tons of fish a year.[116] Pembrokeshire Fish Week is a biennial event[117] which in 2014 attracted 31,000 visitors and generated £3 million for the local economy.[118]

Mining edit

Slate quarrying was a significant industry in the 19th and early 20th centuries with quarrying taking place at about 100 locations throughout the county.[119] Over 50 coal workings in the Pembrokeshire Coalfield were in existence between the 14th and 20th centuries,[120] with the last coal mine, at Kilgetty, closing in 1950.[8][121] Pembrokeshire has 61 disused coal tips; only one of these is in Category C (carrying a potential safety risk), but its location has not been disclosed.[122]

Oil, gas and renewable energy edit

 
Pembroke Power Station in 2013

There are two oil refineries, two liquified natural gas (LNG) terminals and the 2,000 MW gas-fired Pembroke Power Station (opened in 2012) at Milford Haven. The LNG terminals on the north side of the river, just outside Milford Haven were opened in 2008;[123] a 196-mile (315 km) pipeline connecting Milford Haven to Tirley in Gloucestershire was completed in 2007.[124] The two oil refineries are operated by Chevron (formerly Texaco) producing 214,000 bbl/d (34,000 m3/d) and Murco (formerly Amoco/Elf) producing 108,000 bbl/d (17,200 m3/d); the latter was sold to Puma Energy in 2015 with the intention of converting it to a storage facility.[125] At the peak, there were a total of five refineries served from around the Haven: the Esso refinery operated from 1960 to 1983, was demolished in the late 1980s and the site converted into the South Hook LNG terminal; the Gulf Refinery operated from 1968 to 1997 and the site now incorporates the Dragon LNG terminal; BP had an oil terminal at Angle Bay which served its refinery at Llandarcy and operated between 1961 and 1985.[126]

The Pembrokeshire Coast National Park Authority has identified a number of areas in which renewable energy can be, and has been, generated in the county.[127] Following several years of planning after the initial impact studies begun in 2011,[128] the first submarine turbine of three was installed in Ramsey Sound in December 2015.[129] The cumulative impact of single and multiple wind turbines is not without controversy[130] and was the subject of a comprehensive assessment in 2013.[131] In 2011 the first solar energy farm in Wales was installed at Rhosygilwen, Rhoshill with 10,000 panels in a field of 6 acres (2.4 ha), generating 1 MW.[132]

Tourism edit

 
Barafundle Beach, a recipient of both the 2019 Seaside and Green Coastal awards

Pembrokeshire's tourism portal is Visit Pembrokeshire, run by Pembrokeshire County Council.[133] In 2015 4.3 million tourists visited the county, staying for an average of 5.24 days, spending £585 million; the tourism industry supported 11,834 jobs.[134] Many of Pembrokeshire's beaches have won awards,[135] including Poppit Sands and Newport Sands.[136] In 2018, Pembrokeshire received the most coast awards in Wales, with 56 Blue Flag, Green Coast or Seaside Awards.[137][138] In the 2019 Wales Coast Awards, 39 Pembrokeshire beaches were recognised, including 11 awarded Blue Flag status.[139]

The Pembrokeshire coastline is a major draw to tourists; in 2011 National Geographic Traveller magazine voted the Pembrokeshire Coast the second best in the world and in 2015 the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park was listed among the top five parks in the world by a travel writer for the Huffington Post.[140] Countryfile Magazine readers voted the Pembrokeshire Coast the top UK holiday destination in 2018,[141] and in 2019 Consumers' Association members placed Tenby and St Davids in the top three best value beach destinations in Britain.[142] With few large urban areas, Pembrokeshire is a "dark sky" destination.[143] The many wrecks off the Pembrokeshire coast attract divers.[21] The decade from 2012 saw significant, increasing numbers of Atlantic bluefin tuna, not seen since the 1960s, and now seen by some as an opportunity to encourage tourist sport fishing.[144]

The county has a number of theme and animal parks (examples are Folly Farm Adventure Park and Zoo, Manor House Wildlife Park, Blue Lagoon Water Park and Oakwood Theme Park), museums and other visitor attractions including Castell Henllys reconstructed Iron Age fort, Tenby Lifeboat Station and Milford Haven's Torch Theatre.[133] There are 21 marked cycle trails around the county.[145]

Pembrokeshire Destination Management Plan for 2020 to 2025 sets out the scope and priorities to grow tourism in Pembrokeshire by increasing its value by 10 per cent in the five years, and to make Pembrokeshire a top five UK destination.[146]

Culture edit

Flag edit

The flag of Pembrokeshire is a yellow cross on a blue field; in the centre of the cross is a green pentagon bearing a red and white Tudor rose, divided quarterly and counterchanged, the inner and outer roses having alternating red and white quarters.[147][148]

Physical heritage edit

 
St Davids Cathedral

Pembrokeshire has more than 1,600 listed buildings, ranging from mud huts to castles, and including bridges and other ancient and modern structures, under the auspices of Cadw and the County Council.[149] The National Monuments Record of Wales of the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales identifies nearly 6,000 sites in Pembrokeshire as worthy of study, preservation and recording, including prehistoric and modern buildings, wrecks and natural features.[150] There are 10 National Trust properties in Pembrokeshire.[151]

The arts and media edit

Music festivals in Pembrokeshire include those at St Davids, Fishguard (folk, jazz and the International Music Festival) and Tenby (Blues Festival).[152] Milford Haven's Torch Theatre produces drama, screens films and holds exhibitions of art and crafts,[153] and there is a theatre-cinema in Fishguard (Theatr Gwaun)[154] and a cinema in Haverfordwest.[155] There are museums and art galleries in several locations in the county, including Scolton Manor, Narberth, Tenby, Milford Haven and Fishguard;[156] in Fishguard, the 100 feet (30 m) long Last Invasion Tapestry, commemorating the Battle of Fishguard in 1797, is on display.[157] The Llangwm Literary Festival is a literary festival held in Llangwm.[158]

Pembrokeshire's coastal landscape and wealth of historic buildings has made it a popular location choice for film and television, including Moby Dick at Fishguard, and the final two Harry Potter films at Freshwater West. Others include:

Year Film title Location Ref.
1940 The Thief of Bagdad Freshwater West [159]
1956 Moby Dick Fishguard [160]
1961 Fury at Smugglers' Bay Abereiddy [161]
1968 The Lion in Winter Pembroke Castle, Marloes Sands, Milford Haven [160]
1972 Under Milk Wood Fishguard [160]
1977 Jabberwocky Pembroke Castle & Bosherston [162]
1994 Dragonworld Manorbier [163]
1994 The Lifeboat (BBC TV) Pembrokeshire Coast [164]
1998 Basil Tenby, Manorbier, Bosherston [165]
2003 Baltic Storm Fishguard [166]
2003 I Capture The Castle Manorbier Castle [167]
2008 The Edge of Love Tenby & Laugharne [160]
2010 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1 Freshwater West [160]
2010 Robin Hood Freshwater West [168]: 34 
2010 Third Star Barafundle Bay, Stackpole Estate [169]
2011 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 Freshwater West [170]: 52 
2012 Snow White and the Huntsman Marloes Sands [171]
2015 Under Milk Wood Solva [172]
2015 The Bad Education Movie Pembroke Castle [173]
2016 Their Finest Trecwn, Haverfordwest, Cresswell Quay, Freshwater West, Porthgain [174]
2016 Me Before You Pembroke, Pembroke Castle [175]
2020 The Pembrokeshire Murders (TV series) Goodwick, Fishguard, Freshwater East, coast path [176][177]
2021 The Toll Dale, Preseli Mountains, Rosebush, Scolton Manor [178]

There are seven local newspapers based in Pembrokeshire: the Western Telegraph (the largest in Pembrokeshire), The Milford Mercury, Tenby Observer, Pembroke Observer, County Echo and The Pembrokeshire Herald (founded 2013.[179] The Milford Mercury (circulation 3,681) and Western Telegraph (circulation 19,582) are part of the Newsquest group. Radio Pembrokeshire, and several other West Wales radio stations, were broadcast from Narberth until 2016, when they were relocated to the Vale of Glamorgan, while retaining satellite offices at Narberth and Milford Marina.[180][181]

Sport edit

As the national sport of Wales, rugby union is widely played throughout the county at both town and village level. Haverfordwest RFC, founded in 1875, is a feeder club for Llanelli Scarlets. Village team Crymych RFC in 2014 plays in WRU Division One West.[182] There are numerous football clubs in the county, playing in five leagues.[183]

Triathlon event Ironman Wales has been held in Pembrokeshire since 2011, contributing £3.7 million to the local economy, and the county committed in 2017 to host the event for a further five years.[184] Ras Beca, a mixed road, fell and cross country race attracting UK-wide competitors, has been held in the Preselis annually since 1977. The record of 32 minutes 5 seconds has stood since 1995.[185] Pembrokeshire Harriers athletics club was formed in 2001 by the amalgamation of Cleddau Athletic Club (established 1970) and Preseli Harriers (1989) and is based in Haverfordwest.[186]

The annual Tour of Pembrokeshire road-cycling event takes place over routes of optional length.[187] The 4th Tour, in April 2015, attracted 1,600 riders including Olympic gold medallist Chris Boardman[188] and there were 1,500 entrants to the 2016 event.[189] Part of Route 47 of the Celtic Trail cycle route is in Pembrokeshire. The Llys y Fran Hillclimb is an annual event run by Swansea Motor Club,[190] and there are several other county motoring events held each year.[191]

Abereiddy's Blue Lagoon was the venue for a round of the Red Bull Cliff Diving World Series in 2012,[192] 2013,[193] and 2016;[194] the Welsh Surfing Federation has held the Welsh National Surfing Championships at Freshwater West for several years,[195] and Llys y Fran Country Park hosted the Welsh Dragonboat Championships from 2014 to 2017.[196][197]

While not at major league level, cricket is played throughout the county and many villages such as Lamphey, Creselly, Llangwm, Llechryd and Crymych field teams in minor leagues under the umbrella of the Cricket Board of Wales.[198]

Notable people edit

 
Henry VII (1505)

From mediaeval times, Rhys ap Gruffydd (c. 1132-1197), ruler of the kingdom of Deheubarth, was buried in St Davids Cathedral.[199] and Gerald of Wales was born c. 1146 at Manorbier Castle.[200] Henry Tudor (later Henry VII) was born in 1457 at Pembroke Castle.[201]

The pirate Bartholomew Roberts (Black Bart) (Welsh: Barti Ddu) was born in Casnewydd Bach, between Fishguard and Haverfordwest in 1682.[202]

In later military history, Jemima Nicholas, heroine of the so-called "last invasion of Britain" in 1797, was from Fishguard,[203] Lieutenant General Sir Thomas Picton GCB, born in Haverfordwest, was killed at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815[204] and Private Thomas Collins is believed to be the only Pembrokeshire man that fought in the Battle of Rorke's Drift in 1879.[205]

In the arts, siblings Gwen and Augustus John were both born in Pembrokeshire,[206]: 251–252  as was the novelist Sarah Waters;[207] singer Connie Fisher grew up in Pembrokeshire.[208] The actor Christian Bale was born in Haverfordwest.[209]

Stephen Crabb, a former Secretary of State for Work and Pensions and Secretary of State for Wales, was brought up in Pembrokeshire and is one of the county's two Members of Parliament,[210] the other being Simon Hart,[88] who served as Secretary of State for Wales from 2019 to 2022.[211][212]

Education and health edit

A comprehensive review of education in Pembrokeshire was carried out in 2014 with a number of options for discussion in 2015.[213] In 2018 there were 58 primary schools, eight secondary schools (two for ages 3 to 16) and one special school, in all providing education for more than 18,300 pupils. These include 15 Welsh medium primary schools in the county, three dual stream schools and two transition schools; four primary schools are classified as English Welsh schools (English medium schools with significant use of Welsh). In 2017/18, 22 per cent of seven-year-old pupils were educated through the medium of Welsh. This figure was expected to rise to 25 per cent by 2019/20.[214] In 2019, there were two fewer primary schools. The local authority's education budget for 2019/2020 was £88 million, equating to £4,856 per pupil. A February 2020 report by schools' inspection body Estyn, however, considered the local authority's performance in education provision "a significant concern".[215]

Pembrokeshire has had a branch of the University of the Third Age (U3A) since 1991 and has a wide range of groups.[216][217][218]

 
Withybush General Hospital, Haverfordwest

Health services in the county are provided by Hywel Dda University Health Board which also provides for Ceredigion and Carmarthenshire. The county's principal hospital is Withybush General Hospital in Haverfordwest,[219] with local hospitals in Tenby[220] and Pembroke Dock.[221] In November 2018, the health board informed Pembrokeshire's Community Health Council that the county had 38 full-time and 34 part-time GPs.[222]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Clockwise from Carmarthen Bay: Bristol Channel, Celtic Sea/Atlantic Ocean, St George's Channel/Irish Sea. There are no clearly-defined boundaries between these bodies of water.

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Further reading edit

  • Awbery, G. M. (1986). Pembrokeshire Welsh, A Phonological Study (First ed.). Cardiff: National Museum of Wales. ASIN B000S54DVE.
  • Charles, B. G. (1992). The Place-Names of Pembrokeshire (2 Volumes) (First ed.). Cardiff: National Museum of Wales. ISBN 978-0-907158-58-5.
  • Charles-Jones, Caroline (2001). Historic Pembrokeshire Homes and Their Families: The Francis Jones. Illustrations by Leon Olin & David H. White Jr. (2nd Revised ed.). Dinas: Brawdy Books. ISBN 978-0-9528344-5-8.
  • Davies, E.; et al. (1987). Pembrokeshire County History. Vol. 1. Pembrokeshire Historical Society. ISBN 978-0-903771-16-0.
  • Davies, B. S. (1997). Pembrokeshire Limekilns (2nd Revised ed.). St Davids: Merrivale Publications. ISBN 978-0-9515207-7-2.
  • Dillon, Myles (1977). "The Irish settlements in Wales". Celtica. Vol. 12. Dublin: Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. pp. 1–11.
  • Downes, John (2011). Folds, Faults and Fossils: Exploring geology in Pembrokeshire. Pwllheli: Llygad Gwalch Cyf. ISBN 978-1-84524-172-8.
  • Fudge, Pam (2014). South West Wales Through the Lens of Harry Squibbs Pembrokeshire. Vol. 2. Stroud: Amberley Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4456-3435-7.
  • Harris, P. Valentine (2011). South Pembrokeshire Dialect And Place Names. Tenby: H. G. Walters. ISBN 978-1-4474-1940-2 – via Gebert Press, Plano, TX.
  • James, J. Ivor (1968). Molleston Baptist Church-Reflections on the Founders' Tercentenary (First ed.). Carmarthen: V.G. Lodwick & Sons Ltd. ASIN B00J1IHH9Y.
  • Jenkins, J. Geraint (2016). Pembrokeshire, its present and its past Explored. Pwllheli: Llygad Gwalch Cyf. ISBN 978-1-84524-246-6.
  • John, Brian S. (1998). The Geology of Pembrokeshire. Cardigan: Abercastle Publications. ISBN 978-1-872887-20-3.
  • Jones, Francis (1996). Innes-Smith, Robert (ed.). Historic Houses of Pembrokeshire and Their Families (First ed.). Dinas: Brawdy Books. ISBN 978-0-9528344-0-3.
  • Lloyd, Thomas; Orbach, Julian; Scourfield, Robert (2004). Pembrokeshire: The Buildings of Wales (Pevsner Architectural Guides: Buildings of Wales) (First ed.). New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-10178-2.
  • Lockley, Ronald Mathias (1969). The Regional Books: Pembrokeshire (2nd ed.). London: Robert Hale. ISBN 978-0-7091-0781-1.
  • Owen, George of Henllys (1796) [First published 1603]. A History of Pembrokeshire. With additions and observations by John Lewis of Manarnawan. London. pp. 53–230 – via Cambrian Register, Volume 2.
  • Thornhill-Timmins, H. (1895). Nooks and Corners of Pembrokeshire. London: Elliot Stock.
  • Willison, Christine (2013). Pembrokeshire Folk Tales. Stroud: The History Press. ISBN 978-0-7524-6565-4.

External links edit

  • Historical information about Pembrokeshire on GENUKI
  • Pembrokeshire County Council
  • Visit Pembrokeshire (official council tourism website)
  • Pembrokeshire Cultural Services (archives, libraries, museums)
  • Pembrokeshire Historical Society: Pembrokeshire Antiquarians
  • 19th century Ordnance Survey maps, page 1 and page 2
  • List of documents and collections held at Pembrokeshire Archives and Local Studies
  • Iolo's Pembrokeshire: BBC Documentary series by Iolo Williams

51°50′42″N 4°50′32″W / 51.84500°N 4.84222°W / 51.84500; -4.84222

pembrokeshire, ɪər, bruuk, sheer, shər, welsh, benfro, siːr, ˈbɛnvrɔ, county, south, west, wales, bordered, carmarthenshire, east, ceredigion, northeast, otherwise, surrounded, note, haverfordwest, largest, town, administrative, headquarters, county, council, . Pembrokeshire ˈ p ɛ m b r ʊ k ʃ ɪer ʃ er PEM bruuk sheer sher Welsh Sir Benfro siːr ˈbɛnvrɔ is a county in the south west of Wales It is bordered by Carmarthenshire to the east Ceredigion to the northeast and is otherwise surrounded by the sea note 1 Haverfordwest is the largest town and administrative headquarters of Pembrokeshire County Council Pembrokeshire Sir Benfro Welsh CountyTenby in southeast PembrokeshireFlagPembrokeshire s location in WalesSovereign stateUnited KingdomCountryWalesPreserved countyDyfedAdmin HQHaverfordwestLargest townHaverfordwestGovernment TypePembrokeshire County Council ControlIndependent MPsSimon Hart Con Stephen Crabb Con MSsSamuel Kurtz Con Paul Davies Con Constituency Mid and West Wales Regional Area Total610 sq mi 1 590 km2 Rank5th largest Welsh countyPopulation 2021 Total123 669 RankRanked 13th in Wales 1 Density200 sq mi 76 km2 Rank19th Ethnicity99 2 WhiteWelsh language RankRanked 8th Speakers17 2 Geocode00NS ONS W06000009 GSS ISO 3166 codeGB PEMThe county is generally sparsely populated and rural with an area of 200 square miles 520 km2 and a population of 123 400 After Haverfordwest the largest settlements are Milford Haven 13 907 Pembroke Dock 9 753 and Pembroke 7 552 St Davids 1 841 is a city the smallest by population in the UK Welsh is spoken by 17 2 percent of the population and for historic reasons is more widely spoken in the north of the county than in the south Pembrokeshire s coast is its most dramatic geographic feature created by the complex geology of the area It is a varied landscape which includes high sea cliffs wide sandy beaches the large natural harbour of Milford Haven and several offshore islands which are home to seabird colonies Most of it is protected by Pembrokeshire Coast National Park and can be hiked on the 190 mile 310 km Pembrokeshire Coast Path The interior of Pembrokeshire is relatively flat and gently undulating with the exception of the Preseli Mountains in the north There are many prehistoric sites in Pembrokeshire particularly in the Preseli Mountains During the Middle Ages several castles were built by the Normans such as Pembroke and Cilgerran and St David s Cathedral became an important pilgrimage site During the Industrial Revolution the county remained relatively rural with the exception of Milford Haven which was developed as a port and Royal Navy dockyard It is now the UK s third largest port primarily because of its two liquefied natural gas terminals The economy of the county is now focused on agriculture oil and gas and tourism Contents 1 Settlements 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 2 2 Geology 2 3 Coastline and landscape 2 4 Wildlife 3 History 3 1 Roman period 3 2 Sub Roman period 3 3 Norman period and Middle Ages 3 4 Tudor and Stuart periods 3 5 18th and 19th centuries 3 6 20th century 4 Demography 4 1 Population 4 2 Language 4 3 Religion 4 4 Ethnicity 5 Governance politics and public services 6 Transport 7 Economy 7 1 Agriculture 7 2 Fishing 7 3 Mining 7 4 Oil gas and renewable energy 7 5 Tourism 8 Culture 8 1 Flag 8 2 Physical heritage 8 3 The arts and media 8 4 Sport 9 Notable people 10 Education and health 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksSettlements editSee List of places in Pembrokeshire for a comprehensive list of settlements in Pembrokeshire The county town is Haverfordwest Other towns include Pembroke Pembroke Dock Milford Haven Fishguard Tenby Narberth Neyland and Newport In the west of the county St Davids is the United Kingdom s smallest city in terms of both size and population 1 841 in 2011 Saundersfoot is the most populous village more than 2 500 inhabitants 2 in Pembrokeshire Less than 4 per cent of the county according to CORINE is built on or green urban 3 Geography editClimate edit Milford HavenClimate chart explanation J F M A M J J A S O N D 115 9 3 90 8 3 87 10 4 61 12 5 52 15 7 67 17 10 53 20 12 93 19 12 102 17 10 131 14 8 130 11 5 126 10 5 Average max and min temperatures in C Precipitation totals in mmSource The Met OfficeImperial conversionJFMAMJJASOND 4 5 47 38 3 5 46 37 3 4 49 39 2 4 54 41 2 59 45 2 6 63 50 2 1 68 54 3 7 66 54 4 63 50 5 2 57 46 5 1 52 42 5 49 41 Average max and min temperatures in F Precipitation totals in inchesThere are three weather stations in Pembrokeshire at Tenby Milford Haven and Penycwm all on the coast Milford Haven enjoys a mild climate and Tenby shows a similar range of temperatures throughout the year 4 while at Penycwm on the west coast and 100m above sea level temperatures are slightly lower 5 The county has on average the highest coastal winter temperatures in Wales due to its proximity to the relatively warm Atlantic Ocean Inland average temperatures tend to fall 0 5 C for each 100 metres increase in height 6 The air pollution rating of Pembrokeshire is Good the lowest rating 7 Geology edit The rocks in the county were formed between 600 and 290 million years ago More recent rock formations were eroded when sea levels rose 80 million years ago at the end of the Cretaceous Period Around 60 million years ago the Pembrokeshire landmass emerged through a combination of uplift and falling sea levels the youngest rocks from the Carboniferous Period contain the Pembrokeshire Coalfield 8 The landscape was subject to considerable change as a result of ice ages about 20 000 years ago the area was scraped clean of soil and vegetation by the ice sheet subsequently meltwater deepened the existing river valleys 9 10 While Pembrokeshire is not usually a seismically active area in August 1892 there was a series of pronounced activities maximum intensity 7 over a six day period 11 184 Coastline and landscape edit nbsp Pembrokeshire Coast National Park shown in greenThe Pembrokeshire coastline includes numerous bays and sandy beaches The Pembrokeshire Coast National Park the only park in the UK established primarily because of its coastline 12 13 occupies more than a third of the county The park contains the Pembrokeshire Coast Path a near continuous 186 mile 299 km long distance trail from Amroth by the Carmarthenshire border in the southeast to St Dogmaels just down the River Teifi estuary from Cardigan Ceredigion in the north 14 The National Trust owns 60 miles 97 km of Pembrokeshire s coast 15 Nowhere in the county is more than 10 miles 16 km from tidal water The large estuary and natural harbour of Milford Haven cuts deep into the coast this inlet is formed by the confluence of the Western Cleddau which flows through Haverfordwest the Eastern Cleddau and rivers Cresswell 16 and Carew Since 1975 the estuary has been bridged by the Cleddau Bridge 17 a toll bridge carrying the A477 between Neyland and Pembroke Dock Large bays are Newport Bay Fishguard Bay St Bride s Bay and western Carmarthen Bay There are several small islands off the Pembrokeshire coast the largest of which are Ramsey Grassholm Skokholm Skomer and Caldey 18 The seas around Skomer and Skokholm and some other areas off the Pembrokeshire coast are Marine protected areas 19 There are many known shipwrecks off the Pembrokeshire coast with many more undiscovered 20 21 A Viking wreck off The Smalls has protected status 22 The county has six lifeboat stations the earliest of which was established in 1822 in 2015 a quarter of all Royal National Lifeboat Institution Welsh rescues took place off the Pembrokeshire coast 23 nbsp View from the bluestone quarry to other peaks in the PreselisPembrokeshire s diverse range of geological features was a key factor in the establishment of the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park and a number of sites of special scientific interest SSSIs 24 In the north of the county are the Preseli Mountains a wide stretch of high moorland supporting sheep farming and some forestry with many prehistoric sites and the probable source of the bluestones used in the construction of the inner circle of Stonehenge in England 25 The highest point is Foel Cwmcerwyn at 1 759 feet 536 m which is also the highest point in Pembrokeshire Elsewhere in the county most of the land 86 per cent according to CORINE is used for farming compared with 60 per cent for Wales as a whole 3 Wildlife edit Pembrokeshire s wildlife is diverse with marine estuary ancient woodland moorland and farmland habitats 26 27 The county has a number of seasonal seabird breeding sites including for razorbill guillemot puffin and Manx shearwater 28 and rare endemic species such as the red billed chough 29 133 135 Grassholm has a large gannet colony 30 Seals 31 several species of whales including a rare humpback whale sighting in 2021 32 dolphins and porpoises can be seen off the Pembrokeshire coast whale watching boat trips are frequent particularly during the summer months 33 An appeal for otter sightings in 2014 yielded more than 100 responses 34 and a rare visit by a walrus occurred in the spring of 2021 35 Pembrokeshire is one of the few places in the UK that is home to the rare Southern damselfly Coenagrion mercuriale which is found at several locations in the county and whose numbers have been boosted by conservation work over a number of years 36 History edit nbsp Pentre Ifan neolithic burial chamberHuman habitation of the region that is now Pembrokeshire extends back to between 125 000 and 70 000 years 37 3 and there are numerous prehistoric sites such as Pentre Ifan and neolithic remains 12 000 to 6 500 years ago more of which were revealed in an aerial survey during the 2018 heatwave 38 in the same year a 1st century Celtic chariot burial was discovered the first such find in Wales 39 40 There may have been dairy farming in Neolithic times 41 Roman period edit nbsp Map dated 1450 75 based on Ptolemy s Geography written c 150There is little evidence of Roman occupation in what is now Pembrokeshire Ptolemy s Geography written c 150 mentioned some coastal places two of which have been identified as the River Teifi and what is now St Davids Head but most Roman writers did not mention the area there may have been a Roman settlement near St Davids and a road from Bath but this comes from a 14th century writer Any evidence for villas or Roman building materials reported by mediaeval or later writers has not been verified though some remains near Dale were tentatively identified as Roman in character by topographer Richard Fenton in his Historical Tour of 1810 Fenton stated that he had reason to be of opinion that they had not colonized Pembrokeshire till near the decline of their empire in Britain 42 144 Part of a possible Roman road is noted by CADW near Llanddewi Velfrey 43 and another near Wiston 44 Wiston is also the location of the first Roman fort discovered in Pembrokeshire investigated in 2013 45 Some artefacts including coins and weapons have been found but it is not clear whether these belonged to Romans or to a Romanised population Welsh tradition has it that Magnus Maximus founded Haverfordwest and took a large force of local men on campaign in Gaul in 383 which together with the reduction of Roman forces in south Wales left a defensive vacuum which was filled by incomers from Ireland 46 37 51 Sub Roman period edit nbsp Dyfed after the late 7th century showing its seven cantrefiBetween 350 and 400 an Irish tribe known as the Deisi settled in the region known to the Romans as Demetae 37 52 17 30 34 The Deisi merged with the local Welsh with the regional name underlying Demetae evolving into Dyfed which existed as an independent petty kingdom from the 5th century 37 52 72 85 87 In 904 Hywel Dda married Elen died 943 47 daughter of the king of Dyfed Llywarch ap Hyfaidd and merged Dyfed with his own maternal inheritance of Seisyllwg forming the new realm of Deheubarth southern district Between the Roman and Norman periods the region was subjected to raids from Vikings who established settlements and trading posts at Haverfordwest Fishguard Caldey Island and elsewhere 37 81 85 42 135 136 Norman period and Middle Ages edit Main article Norman invasion of Wales Dyfed remained an integral province of Deheubarth but this was contested by invading Normans and Flemings who arrived between 1067 and 1111 37 98 The region became known as Pembroke sometimes archaic Penbroke 48 53 230 after the Norman castle built in the cantref of Penfro In 1136 Prince Owain Gwynedd at Crug Mawr near Cardigan met and destroyed a 3 000 strong Norman Flemish army and incorporated Deheubarth into Gwynedd 49 80 85 37 124 Norman Flemish influence never fully recovered in West Wales 50 79 In 1138 the county of Pembrokeshire was named as a county palatine Rhys ap Gruffydd the son of Owain Gwynedd s daughter Gwenllian re established Welsh control over much of the region and threatened to retake all of Pembrokeshire but died in 1197 After Deheubarth was split by a dynastic feud Llywelyn the Great almost succeeded in retaking the region of Pembroke between 1216 and his death in 1240 37 106 112 114 In 1284 the Statute of Rhuddlan was enacted to introduce the English common law system to Wales 51 heralding 100 years of peace but had little effect on those areas already established under the Marcher Lords such as Cemais in the north of the county 46 176 nbsp Pembroke Castle birthplace of Henry VIIHenry Tudor born at Pembroke Castle in 1457 landed an army in Pembrokeshire in 1485 and marched to Cardigan 46 223 Rallying support he continued to Leicestershire and defeated the larger army of Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field As Henry VII he became the first monarch of the House of Tudor which ruled England until 1603 52 337 379 nbsp Hand drawn map of Pembrokeshire by Christopher Saxton from 1577Tudor and Stuart periods edit The Laws in Wales Act 1535 effectively abolished the powers of the Marcher Lords and divided the county into seven hundreds roughly corresponding to the seven pre Norman cantrefi of Dyfed 46 247 53 The hundreds were clockwise from the northeast Cilgerran Cemais Dewisland Roose Castlemartin Narberth and Dungleddy and each was divided into civil parishes 54 a 1578 map in the British Library is the earliest known to show parishes and chapelries in Pembrokeshire 55 The Elizabethan era brought renewed prosperity to the county through an opening up of rural industries including agriculture mining and fishing with exports to England and Ireland though the formerly staple woollen industry had all but disappeared 46 310 During the First English Civil War 1642 1646 the county gave strong support to the Roundheads Parliamentarians in contrast to the rest of Wales which was staunchly Royalist In spite of this an incident in Pembrokeshire triggered the opening shots of the Second English Civil War when local units of the New Model Army mutinied Oliver Cromwell defeated the uprising at the Siege of Pembroke in July 1648 56 437 438 On 13 August 1649 the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland began when New Model Army forces sailed from Milford Haven 57 18th and 19th centuries edit nbsp 1819 Ordnance Survey map of north and west PembrokeshireIn 1720 Emmanuel Bowen 58 described Pembrokeshire as having five market towns 45 parishes and about 4 329 houses with an area of 420 000 acres 1 700 km2 In 1791 a petition was presented to the House of Commons concerning the poor state of many of the county s roads pointing out that repairs could not be made compulsory by the law as it stood The petition was referred to committee 59 178 People applying for poor relief were often put to work mending roads Workhouses were poorly documented Under the Poor Laws costs and provisions were kept to a minimum but the emphasis was often on helping people to be self employed While the Poor Laws provided a significant means of support there were many charitable and benefit societies 60 After the Battle of Fishguard the failed French invasion of 1797 500 French prisoners were held at Golden Hill Farm Pembroke 61 From 1820 to 1878 one of the county s prisons with a capacity of 86 was in the grounds of Haverfordwest Castle 62 In 1831 the area of the county was calculated to be 345 600 acres 1 399 km2 with a population of 81 424 58 It was not until nearly the end of the 19th century that mains water was provided to rural south Pembrokeshire by means of a reservoir at Rosebush and cast iron water pipes throughout the district 63 20th century edit nbsp Pembrokeshire County War Memorial near County HallThroughout much of the 20th century 1911 to 1961 the population density in the county remained stable while it rose in England and Wales as a whole 64 There was considerable military activity in Pembrokeshire and offshore in the 20th century a naval base at Milford Haven because German U boats were active off the coast in World War I 65 and in World War II military exercises in the Preseli Mountains and a number of military airfields 66 The wartime increase in air activity saw a number of aircraft accidents and fatalities often due to unfamiliarity with the terrain 67 From 1943 to 1944 5 000 soldiers from the United States Army s 110th Infantry Regiment were based in the county preparing for D Day 68 69 Military and industrial targets in the county were subjected to bombing during World War II 70 After the end of the war German prisoners of war were accommodated in Pembrokeshire the largest prison being at Haverfordwest housing 600 71 The County of Pembroke War Memorial in Haverfordwest carries the names of 1 200 of those that perished in World War I 72 In 1972 a second reservoir for south Pembrokeshire at Llys y Fran was completed 73 Demography edit nbsp Proportion of Welsh speakers Wales 2011 census in Pembrokeshire county border shown by white line Population edit Pembrokeshire s population was 122 439 at the 2011 census 74 increasing marginally to 123 400 at the 2021 census 66 4 per cent of residents were born in Wales while 27 5 per cent were born in England 75 Language edit The 2021 census recorded that Welsh is spoken by 17 2 per cent of the population a fall from 19 2 per cent in 2011 75 As a result of differential immigration over hundreds of years such as the influx of Flemish people 76 the south of the county has fewer Welsh speaking inhabitants about 15 per cent than the north about 50 per cent The rough line that can be drawn between the two regions illustrated by the map is known as the Landsker Line and the area south of the line has been termed Little England Beyond Wales The first objective statistically based description of this demarcation was made in the 1960s 77 7 29 but the distinction was remarked upon as early as 1603 by George Owen of Henllys 78 A 21st century introduction of Welsh place names for villages which had previously been known locally only by their English names has caused some controversy 79 Religion edit In 1851 a religious census of Pembrokeshire showed that of 70 per cent of the population 53 per cent were nonconformists and 17 per cent Church of England now Church in Wales in the Diocese of St Davids 80 The 2001 census for Preseli Pembrokeshire constituency showed that 74 per cent were Christian and 25 per cent of no religion or not stated with other religions totalling less than 1 per cent This approximated to the figures for the whole of Wales 81 By 2021 43 per cent reported no religion while 48 8 per cent described themselves as Christian 6 6 per cent did not state their religion and the remainder represented a number of other religions combined 75 Ethnicity edit In 2001 Preseli Pembrokeshire constituency was 99 per cent white European marginally lower than in 1991 compared with 98 per cent for the whole of Wales 71 per cent identified their place of birth as Wales and 26 per cent as from elsewhere in the UK 81 In 2021 52 7 per cent of residents identified as Welsh only a slight decrease since 2011 75 Governance politics and public services edit nbsp The Shire Hall HaverfordwestUnder the Local Government Act 1888 an elected county council was set up to take over the functions of the Pembrokeshire Quarter Sessions It was based at the Shire Hall Haverfordwest 82 This and the administrative county of Pembrokeshire were abolished under the Local Government Act 1972 with Pembrokeshire forming two districts of the new county of Dyfed South Pembrokeshire and Preseli the split being made at the request of local authorities in the area 83 In 1996 under the Local Government Wales Act 1994 the county of Dyfed was broken up into its constituent parts and Pembrokeshire has been a unitary authority since then 84 A new County Hall was built in 1999 in Haverfordwest and serves as the county council s headquarters In 2017 Pembrokeshire County Council had 60 members and no political party in overall control there were 34 independent councillors 85 In 2009 the question of county names and Royal Mail postal addresses was raised in the Westminster parliament it was argued that Royal Mail s continued use of the county address Dyfed was causing concern and confusion in the Pembrokeshire business community 84 The Royal Mail has subsequently ceased requiring county names to be used in postal addresses In 2018 Pembrokeshire County Council increased council tax by 12 5 per cent the largest increase since 2004 but the county s council tax remains the lowest in Wales 86 The county is part of the Swansea Bay City Region nbsp County Hall HaverfordwestThe Pembrokeshire Communities Order 2011 established the most recent arrangement of communities the successors to civil parishes in the county which have their own councils see the foot of this page for a list of communities 87 Since 2010 Pembrokeshire has returned two Conservative MPs to the Parliament of the United Kingdom at Westminster Stephen Crabb for Preseli Pembrokeshire and Simon Hart for South Pembrokeshire which is represented jointly with West Carmarthenshire 88 The corresponding Members of the Senedd MSs returned to the Senedd Welsh Parliament in Cardiff are Paul Davies and Samuel Kurtz respectively both Conservatives 89 Pembrokeshire is served by the Mid and West Wales Fire and Rescue Service 90 and Dyfed Powys Police 91 Transport edit nbsp Cleddau BridgeThere are no motorways in Pembrokeshire the nearest is the M4 motorway from London which terminates at the Pont Abraham services in Carmarthenshire some 46 miles 74 km from Haverfordwest The A40 crosses Pembrokeshire from the border with Carmarthenshire westwards to Haverfordwest then northwards to Fishguard 92 The A477 from St Clears to Pembroke Dock is 24 miles 39 km long of which only 2 miles 3 2 km are dual carriageway The Cleddau Bridge toll free from 28 March 2019 93 carries the A477 across the Cleddau Estuary The A478 traverses eastern Pembrokeshire from Tenby in the south to Cardigan Ceredigion in the north a distance of 30 miles 48 km The A487 is the other major route running northwest from Haverfordwest to St Davids then northeast following the coast through Fishguard and Newport to the boundary with Ceredigion at Cardigan 92 Owing to length restrictions in Fishguard some freight vehicles are not permitted to travel northeast from Fishguard but must take a longer route via Haverfordwest and Narberth 94 The B4329 former turnpike runs from Eglwyswrw in the north to Haverfordwest across the Preselis 95 The main towns in the county are covered by regular bus and train services operated by First Cymru under their Western Welsh livery Transport for Wales Rail and sometimes Great Western Railway respectively and many villages by local bus services or community or education transport 96 Pembrokeshire is served by rail via the West Wales Lines from Swansea Direct trains from Milford Haven run to Manchester Piccadilly Branch lines terminate at Pembroke Dock Milford Haven and Fishguard linking with ferries to Ireland from Pembroke Dock and Fishguard 97 Seasonal ferry services operate from Tenby to Caldey Island 98 from St Justinians St Davids to Ramsey Island 99 and Grassholm Island 100 and from Martin s Haven to Skomer Island 101 Haverfordwest Withybush Airport provides general aviation services 102 Economy editPembrokeshire s economy now relies heavily on tourism agriculture once its most important industry with associated activities such as milling is still significant Mining of slate and coal had largely ceased by the 20th century Since the 1950s petrochemical and liquid natural gas industries have developed along the Milford Haven Waterway and the county has attracted other major ventures In 2016 Stephen Crabb then Welsh Secretary commented in a government press release with a buoyant local economy Pembrokeshire is punching above its weight across the UK 103 In August 2019 the Pembrokeshire County Show celebrated 60 years at Haverfordwest Showground The organisers anticipated 100 000 visitors the largest three day such event in Wales at the time It showcased agriculture food and drink a rugby club entertainment with the star attraction a motorcycle display team 104 Agriculture edit Until the 12th century a great extent of Pembrokeshire was virgin woodland Clearance in the lowland south began under Anglo Flemish colonisation and under mediaeval tenancies in other areas Such was the extent of development that by the 16th century there was a shortage of timber in the county Little is known about mediaeval farming methods but much arable land was continuously cropped and only occasionally ploughed By the 18th century many of the centuries old open field systems had been enclosed and much of the land was arable or rough pasture in a ratio of about 1 3 105 nbsp Solva Woollen MillKelly s Directory of 1910 gave a snapshot of the agriculture of Pembrokeshire 57 343 acres 23 206 ha were cropped almost half under oats and a quarter barley there were 37 535 acres 15 190 ha of grass and clover and 213 387 acres 86 355 ha of permanent pasture of which a third was for hay There were 128 865 acres 52 150 ha of mountain or heathland used for grazing with 10 000 acres 4 000 ha of managed or unmanaged woodland Estimates of livestock included 17 810 horses 92 386 cattle 157 973 sheep and 31 673 pigs Of 5 981 agricultural holdings more than half were between 5 and 50 acres 106 Pembrokeshire had a flourishing wool industry 107 There are still working woollen mills at Solva and Tregwynt 108 One of the last few watermills in Wales producing flour is in St Dogmaels 109 Pembrokeshire has good soil and benefits from the Gulf Stream which provides a mild climate and a longer growing season than other parts of Wales 110 142 Pembrokeshire s mild climate means that crops such as its new potatoes which have protected geographical status under European law 111 often arrive in British shops earlier in the year than produce from other parts of the UK Other principal arable crops are oilseed rape wheat and barley while the main non arable activities are dairy farming for milk and cheese beef production and sheep farming 112 The county lends its name to the Pembroke Welsh Corgi a herding dog whose lineage can be traced back to the 12th century 113 6 but which in 2015 was designated as a vulnerable breed 114 Since 2006 Pembrokeshire Local Action Network for Enterprise and Development PLANED has provided a forum to promote an integrated approach to rural development in which communities public sector and voluntary partners and specialist interest groups come together to influence policy and promote projects aimed at sustainable agriculture Sub groups include promoting food and farming in schools and shortening supply chains 115 Fishing edit nbsp Milford Haven dock 2009With Pembrokeshire s extensive coastal areas and tidal river estuaries fishing was an important industry at least from the 16th century Many ports and villages were dependent on the fishing 116 The former large sea fishing industry around Milford Haven is now greatly reduced although limited commercial fishing still takes place At its peak Milford was landing over 40 000 tons of fish a year 116 Pembrokeshire Fish Week is a biennial event 117 which in 2014 attracted 31 000 visitors and generated 3 million for the local economy 118 Mining edit Slate quarrying was a significant industry in the 19th and early 20th centuries with quarrying taking place at about 100 locations throughout the county 119 Over 50 coal workings in the Pembrokeshire Coalfield were in existence between the 14th and 20th centuries 120 with the last coal mine at Kilgetty closing in 1950 8 121 Pembrokeshire has 61 disused coal tips only one of these is in Category C carrying a potential safety risk but its location has not been disclosed 122 Oil gas and renewable energy edit nbsp Pembroke Power Station in 2013There are two oil refineries two liquified natural gas LNG terminals and the 2 000 MW gas fired Pembroke Power Station opened in 2012 at Milford Haven The LNG terminals on the north side of the river just outside Milford Haven were opened in 2008 123 a 196 mile 315 km pipeline connecting Milford Haven to Tirley in Gloucestershire was completed in 2007 124 The two oil refineries are operated by Chevron formerly Texaco producing 214 000 bbl d 34 000 m3 d and Murco formerly Amoco Elf producing 108 000 bbl d 17 200 m3 d the latter was sold to Puma Energy in 2015 with the intention of converting it to a storage facility 125 At the peak there were a total of five refineries served from around the Haven the Esso refinery operated from 1960 to 1983 was demolished in the late 1980s and the site converted into the South Hook LNG terminal the Gulf Refinery operated from 1968 to 1997 and the site now incorporates the Dragon LNG terminal BP had an oil terminal at Angle Bay which served its refinery at Llandarcy and operated between 1961 and 1985 126 The Pembrokeshire Coast National Park Authority has identified a number of areas in which renewable energy can be and has been generated in the county 127 Following several years of planning after the initial impact studies begun in 2011 128 the first submarine turbine of three was installed in Ramsey Sound in December 2015 129 The cumulative impact of single and multiple wind turbines is not without controversy 130 and was the subject of a comprehensive assessment in 2013 131 In 2011 the first solar energy farm in Wales was installed at Rhosygilwen Rhoshill with 10 000 panels in a field of 6 acres 2 4 ha generating 1 MW 132 Tourism edit nbsp Barafundle Beach a recipient of both the 2019 Seaside and Green Coastal awardsPembrokeshire s tourism portal is Visit Pembrokeshire run by Pembrokeshire County Council 133 In 2015 4 3 million tourists visited the county staying for an average of 5 24 days spending 585 million the tourism industry supported 11 834 jobs 134 Many of Pembrokeshire s beaches have won awards 135 including Poppit Sands and Newport Sands 136 In 2018 Pembrokeshire received the most coast awards in Wales with 56 Blue Flag Green Coast or Seaside Awards 137 138 In the 2019 Wales Coast Awards 39 Pembrokeshire beaches were recognised including 11 awarded Blue Flag status 139 The Pembrokeshire coastline is a major draw to tourists in 2011 National Geographic Traveller magazine voted the Pembrokeshire Coast the second best in the world and in 2015 the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park was listed among the top five parks in the world by a travel writer for the Huffington Post 140 Countryfile Magazine readers voted the Pembrokeshire Coast the top UK holiday destination in 2018 141 and in 2019 Consumers Association members placed Tenby and St Davids in the top three best value beach destinations in Britain 142 With few large urban areas Pembrokeshire is a dark sky destination 143 The many wrecks off the Pembrokeshire coast attract divers 21 The decade from 2012 saw significant increasing numbers of Atlantic bluefin tuna not seen since the 1960s and now seen by some as an opportunity to encourage tourist sport fishing 144 The county has a number of theme and animal parks examples are Folly Farm Adventure Park and Zoo Manor House Wildlife Park Blue Lagoon Water Park and Oakwood Theme Park museums and other visitor attractions including Castell Henllys reconstructed Iron Age fort Tenby Lifeboat Station and Milford Haven s Torch Theatre 133 There are 21 marked cycle trails around the county 145 Pembrokeshire Destination Management Plan for 2020 to 2025 sets out the scope and priorities to grow tourism in Pembrokeshire by increasing its value by 10 per cent in the five years and to make Pembrokeshire a top five UK destination 146 Culture editFlag edit The flag of Pembrokeshire is a yellow cross on a blue field in the centre of the cross is a green pentagon bearing a red and white Tudor rose divided quarterly and counterchanged the inner and outer roses having alternating red and white quarters 147 148 Physical heritage edit nbsp St Davids CathedralPembrokeshire has more than 1 600 listed buildings ranging from mud huts to castles and including bridges and other ancient and modern structures under the auspices of Cadw and the County Council 149 The National Monuments Record of Wales of the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales identifies nearly 6 000 sites in Pembrokeshire as worthy of study preservation and recording including prehistoric and modern buildings wrecks and natural features 150 There are 10 National Trust properties in Pembrokeshire 151 The arts and media edit Music festivals in Pembrokeshire include those at St Davids Fishguard folk jazz and the International Music Festival and Tenby Blues Festival 152 Milford Haven s Torch Theatre produces drama screens films and holds exhibitions of art and crafts 153 and there is a theatre cinema in Fishguard Theatr Gwaun 154 and a cinema in Haverfordwest 155 There are museums and art galleries in several locations in the county including Scolton Manor Narberth Tenby Milford Haven and Fishguard 156 in Fishguard the 100 feet 30 m long Last Invasion Tapestry commemorating the Battle of Fishguard in 1797 is on display 157 The Llangwm Literary Festival is a literary festival held in Llangwm 158 Pembrokeshire s coastal landscape and wealth of historic buildings has made it a popular location choice for film and television including Moby Dick at Fishguard and the final two Harry Potter films at Freshwater West Others include Year Film title Location Ref 1940 The Thief of Bagdad Freshwater West 159 1956 Moby Dick Fishguard 160 1961 Fury at Smugglers Bay Abereiddy 161 1968 The Lion in Winter Pembroke Castle Marloes Sands Milford Haven 160 1972 Under Milk Wood Fishguard 160 1977 Jabberwocky Pembroke Castle amp Bosherston 162 1994 Dragonworld Manorbier 163 1994 The Lifeboat BBC TV Pembrokeshire Coast 164 1998 Basil Tenby Manorbier Bosherston 165 2003 Baltic Storm Fishguard 166 2003 I Capture The Castle Manorbier Castle 167 2008 The Edge of Love Tenby amp Laugharne 160 2010 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1 Freshwater West 160 2010 Robin Hood Freshwater West 168 34 2010 Third Star Barafundle Bay Stackpole Estate 169 2011 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 Freshwater West 170 52 2012 Snow White and the Huntsman Marloes Sands 171 2015 Under Milk Wood Solva 172 2015 The Bad Education Movie Pembroke Castle 173 2016 Their Finest Trecwn Haverfordwest Cresswell Quay Freshwater West Porthgain 174 2016 Me Before You Pembroke Pembroke Castle 175 2020 The Pembrokeshire Murders TV series Goodwick Fishguard Freshwater East coast path 176 177 2021 The Toll Dale Preseli Mountains Rosebush Scolton Manor 178 There are seven local newspapers based in Pembrokeshire the Western Telegraph the largest in Pembrokeshire The Milford Mercury Tenby Observer Pembroke Observer County Echo and The Pembrokeshire Herald founded 2013 179 The Milford Mercury circulation 3 681 and Western Telegraph circulation 19 582 are part of the Newsquest group Radio Pembrokeshire and several other West Wales radio stations were broadcast from Narberth until 2016 when they were relocated to the Vale of Glamorgan while retaining satellite offices at Narberth and Milford Marina 180 181 Sport edit As the national sport of Wales rugby union is widely played throughout the county at both town and village level Haverfordwest RFC founded in 1875 is a feeder club for Llanelli Scarlets Village team Crymych RFC in 2014 plays in WRU Division One West 182 There are numerous football clubs in the county playing in five leagues 183 Triathlon event Ironman Wales has been held in Pembrokeshire since 2011 contributing 3 7 million to the local economy and the county committed in 2017 to host the event for a further five years 184 Ras Beca a mixed road fell and cross country race attracting UK wide competitors has been held in the Preselis annually since 1977 The record of 32 minutes 5 seconds has stood since 1995 185 Pembrokeshire Harriers athletics club was formed in 2001 by the amalgamation of Cleddau Athletic Club established 1970 and Preseli Harriers 1989 and is based in Haverfordwest 186 The annual Tour of Pembrokeshire road cycling event takes place over routes of optional length 187 The 4th Tour in April 2015 attracted 1 600 riders including Olympic gold medallist Chris Boardman 188 and there were 1 500 entrants to the 2016 event 189 Part of Route 47 of the Celtic Trail cycle route is in Pembrokeshire The Llys y Fran Hillclimb is an annual event run by Swansea Motor Club 190 and there are several other county motoring events held each year 191 Abereiddy s Blue Lagoon was the venue for a round of the Red Bull Cliff Diving World Series in 2012 192 2013 193 and 2016 194 the Welsh Surfing Federation has held the Welsh National Surfing Championships at Freshwater West for several years 195 and Llys y Fran Country Park hosted the Welsh Dragonboat Championships from 2014 to 2017 196 197 While not at major league level cricket is played throughout the county and many villages such as Lamphey Creselly Llangwm Llechryd and Crymych field teams in minor leagues under the umbrella of the Cricket Board of Wales 198 Notable people edit nbsp Henry VII 1505 From mediaeval times Rhys ap Gruffydd c 1132 1197 ruler of the kingdom of Deheubarth was buried in St Davids Cathedral 199 and Gerald of Wales was born c 1146 at Manorbier Castle 200 Henry Tudor later Henry VII was born in 1457 at Pembroke Castle 201 The pirate Bartholomew Roberts Black Bart Welsh Barti Ddu was born in Casnewydd Bach between Fishguard and Haverfordwest in 1682 202 In later military history Jemima Nicholas heroine of the so called last invasion of Britain in 1797 was from Fishguard 203 Lieutenant General Sir Thomas Picton GCB born in Haverfordwest was killed at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815 204 and Private Thomas Collins is believed to be the only Pembrokeshire man that fought in the Battle of Rorke s Drift in 1879 205 In the arts siblings Gwen and Augustus John were both born in Pembrokeshire 206 251 252 as was the novelist Sarah Waters 207 singer Connie Fisher grew up in Pembrokeshire 208 The actor Christian Bale was born in Haverfordwest 209 Stephen Crabb a former Secretary of State for Work and Pensions and Secretary of State for Wales was brought up in Pembrokeshire and is one of the county s two Members of Parliament 210 the other being Simon Hart 88 who served as Secretary of State for Wales from 2019 to 2022 211 212 Education and health editSee also List of schools in Pembrokeshire A comprehensive review of education in Pembrokeshire was carried out in 2014 with a number of options for discussion in 2015 213 In 2018 there were 58 primary schools eight secondary schools two for ages 3 to 16 and one special school in all providing education for more than 18 300 pupils These include 15 Welsh medium primary schools in the county three dual stream schools and two transition schools four primary schools are classified as English Welsh schools English medium schools with significant use of Welsh In 2017 18 22 per cent of seven year old pupils were educated through the medium of Welsh This figure was expected to rise to 25 per cent by 2019 20 214 In 2019 there were two fewer primary schools The local authority s education budget for 2019 2020 was 88 million equating to 4 856 per pupil A February 2020 report by schools inspection body Estyn however considered the local authority s performance in education provision a significant concern 215 Pembrokeshire has had a branch of the University of the Third Age U3A since 1991 and has a wide range of groups 216 217 218 nbsp Withybush General Hospital HaverfordwestHealth services in the county are provided by Hywel Dda University Health Board which also provides for Ceredigion and Carmarthenshire The county s principal hospital is Withybush General Hospital in Haverfordwest 219 with local hospitals in Tenby 220 and Pembroke Dock 221 In November 2018 the health board informed Pembrokeshire s Community Health Council that the county had 38 full time and 34 part time GPs 222 See also editList of national parks of England and Wales List of castles in Pembrokeshire List of Scheduled prehistoric Monuments in north Pembrokeshire List of Scheduled prehistoric Monuments in south Pembrokeshire List of Scheduled Roman to modern Monuments in Pembrokeshire List of Lord Lieutenants of Pembrokeshire List of Custodes Rotulorum of Pembrokeshire List of High Sheriffs of Pembrokeshire List of MPs for the former county of Pembrokeshire Cuisine of PembrokeshireNotes edit Clockwise from Carmarthen Bay Bristol Channel Celtic Sea Atlantic Ocean St George s Channel Irish Sea There are no clearly defined boundaries between these bodies of water References edit Mid Year Population Estimates UK June 2021 Office for National Statistics 21 December 2022 Retrieved 18 October 2023 Saundersfoot Ward and community population 2011 UK Census Data Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 21 April 2011 a b Easton Mark 9 November 2017 How much of your area is built on BBC News Retrieved 9 November 2017 Tenby climate information Met Office Retrieved 4 December 2017 Penycwm climate information Met Office Retrieved 4 December 2017 Wales Climate Met Office Retrieved 6 December 2017 Pollution hotspots revealed Check your area BBC News 10 January 2018 Retrieved 10 January 2018 a b Coal Mining Pembrokeshire Virtual Museum Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 29 April 2014 Geology Pembrokeshire Virtual Museum Archived from the original on 6 April 2015 Retrieved 29 March 2015 Howells Sid Geological History of Pembrokeshire pembrokeshireonline co uk Retrieved 21 June 2016 Davison Charles 2009 1924 A History of British Earthquakes Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 14099 7 Retrieved 29 March 2015 Exploring the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park Visit Wales Retrieved 23 January 2022 Pembrokeshire Coast National Park Wales National Geographic 2 November 2017 Retrieved 23 January 2022 Pembrokeshire Coast Path nationaltrail co uk National Trails Retrieved 4 March 2019 40K cash boost for Pembrokeshire conservation project BBC News 27 January 2018 Retrieved 28 January 2018 River Cresswell Pembrokeshire Coast National Park Authority Retrieved 21 June 2014 Cleddau Bridge Hansard 8 December 1994 Retrieved 2 February 2018 Pembrokeshire s Islands Pembrokeshire Coast National Park Authority Retrieved 29 January 2018 Skomer Skokholm and the Seas off Pembrokeshire Retrieved 5 May 2019 Prior Neil 26 October 2014 Pembrokeshire has thousands of undiscovered wrecks diver BBC News Retrieved 6 December 2014 a b Wrecks around Pembrokeshire Dive Pembrokeshire UK Retrieved 4 May 2015 Hayward Will 6 January 2018 The hidden wrecks of Wales that you never knew were there Wales online Retrieved 11 January 2018 Quarter of all 2015 Welsh lifeboat rescues were off Pembrokeshire Milford amp West Wales Mercury 27 January 2016 Retrieved 27 January 2016 Pembrokeshire s geology Pembrokeshire Coast National Park Authority Retrieved 29 March 2015 Mynydd Preseli Dyfed Archaeological Trust Retrieved 28 November 2016 Pembrokeshire The Wildlife Trust of South and West Wales Retrieved 25 January 2015 Davies Andy 10 July 2012 Top 10 wildlife spots in Pembrokeshire in pictures The Guardian Retrieved 25 January 2015 Seasonal seabirds Pembrokeshire Coast National Park Authority Retrieved 3 February 2018 Madge Steve Burn Hilary 1994 Crows and jays a guide to the crows jays and magpies of the world London Christopher Helm A amp C Black ISBN 978 0 7136 3999 5 Grassholm Island Visit Pembrokeshire Retrieved 8 November 2018 Seal watching in Pembrokeshire Visit Pembrokeshire Retrieved 1 June 2016 Humpback whale spotted off Pembrokeshire coast BBC News 14 August 2021 Retrieved 14 August 2021 Whale and Dolphin watching in Pembrokeshire Visit Pembrokeshire Retrieved 1 June 2016 100 otters spotted on Pembrokeshire coast after appeal BBC News 17 June 2014 Retrieved 1 June 2016 Walrus spotted in Wales BBC News 20 March 2021 Retrieved 20 March 2021 Southern damselfly 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August 2019 a b c d e Laws Edward 1888 The History of Little England Beyond Wales London George Bell The Chronicle of the Princes Archaeologia Cambrensis 4 10 25 1864 Retrieved 2 February 2019 Pughe William Owen 1799 Cambrian Register for the Year 1796 Vol II London E amp T Williams Retrieved 7 May 2015 Lloyd J E 2004 A History of Wales From the Norman Invasion to the Edwardian Conquest New York Barnes amp Noble ASIN B01FKW4P94 Warner Philip 1997 Famous Welsh Battles New York Barnes amp Noble ASIN B01K3MUPM2 Francis Jones 1969 The Princes and Principality of Wales University of Wales Press ISBN 9780900768200 Retrieved 2 March 2011 Davies Norman 2000 The Isles A History London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 69283 7 Laws in Wales Act 1535 repealed 21 12 1993 c 26 statutelaw gov uk The National Archive 2010 Retrieved 28 November 2016 Pembrokeshire Hundreds and Parishes GENUKI UK amp Ireland Genealogy Retrieved 16 October 2016 Penbrok comitat British Library Retrieved 28 April 2019 Royle Trevor 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Heritage of Pembrokeshire Compiled by local historians Planed Retrieved 22 June 2014 Military aircraft crash sites in south west Wales PDF Dyfed Archaeological Trust Retrieved 5 May 2019 Pembrokeshire memorial plan for US D Day servicemen BBC News 19 March 2019 Retrieved 19 March 2019 D Day Pembrokeshire memorial unveiled for US soldiers BBC News 22 October 2019 Retrieved 23 October 2019 Air Raids Pembrokeshire Virtual Museum Archived from the original on 12 December 2014 Retrieved 12 December 2014 German Prisoners of War in Pembrokeshire Western Telegraph 19 November 2013 Retrieved 13 February 2018 Pembrokeshire Historical Society The story behind the Pembrokeshire County Great War Monument at Haverfordwest 12 December 2016 Retrieved 19 February 2021 Llys y Fran Reservoir and Country Park Retrieved 4 July 2014 Pembrokeshire UK Census data Retrieved 16 December 2017 a b c d How life has changed in Pembrokeshire Census 2021 Office for National Statistics Retrieved 4 June 2023 The Flemish Colonists in Wales BBC Legacies Retrieved 30 December 2018 John Brian 1972 The Linguistic Significance of the Pembrokeshire Landsker The Pembrokeshire Historian Haverfordwest The Pembrokeshire Community Council 4 Retrieved 22 February 2019 Owen George 1994 Miles Dillwyn ed The Description of Pembrokeshire First ed Llandysul Gomer Press ISBN 978 1 85902 120 0 Lynch David 26 June 2018 Concerns over new standard place name spellings for Pembrokeshire villages Western Telegraph Retrieved 30 December 2018 Jones Ray 2017 The 1851 Religious Census in Pembrokeshire Pembrokeshire Historical Society Retrieved 19 December 2017 a b 2001 Census of Population for Preseli Pembrokeshire PDF Research Paper 03 044 Assembly Wales April 2003 Retrieved 19 December 2017 Cadw The Shire Hall 12110 National Historic Assets of Wales Retrieved 5 October 2021 Wood Bruce 1976 The Process of Local Government Reform 1966 1974 London Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 0 04 350052 1 a b Westminster Hall Debate Pembrokeshire Royal Mail Database Hansard 23 June 2009 Column 218WH Retrieved 5 February 2017 Your Councillors Pembrokeshire County Council Retrieved 18 December 2017 Monthly bin collection Conwy council warns of tax hike BBC News 26 September 2018 Retrieved 26 September 2018 The Pembrokeshire Communities Order 2011 legislation gov uk The National Archive 7 March 2011 2011 No 683 W 101 Retrieved 18 December 2017 a b All change in Carmarthen and Pembrokeshire BBC News 7 May 2010 Election 2010 Retrieved 18 December 2017 Jones Ciaran 6 May 2016 Assembly Election 2016 The full list of Welsh AMs WalesOnline Retrieved 18 December 2017 Mid and West Wales Fire and Rescue Service Retrieved 5 August 2019 Dyfed Powys Police Retrieved 5 August 2019 a b Pembrokeshire Map Pembrokeshire Microsoft Retrieved 31 January 2018 Neil Prior 28 March 2019 Cleddau Bridge toll free after 44 years BBC News Retrieved 28 March 2019 Humfrey Anwen 27 June 2010 Lower Town Fishguard still blighted by lorry chaos Western Telegraph Retrieved 31 January 2018 Pembrokeshire Map Landranger ed Ordnance Survey 2007 145 157 158 Public transport Pembrokeshire County Council Retrieved 24 March 2016 Route Map Transport for Wales Retrieved 3 March 2019 Caldey Island Tenby Guide Retrieved 1 February 2018 Ramsey Island Visit Pembrokeshire Retrieved 1 February 2018 Grassholm Island Visit Pembrokeshire Retrieved 1 February 2018 Skomer Island Visit Pembrokeshire Retrieved 1 February 2018 Haverfordwest EGFE NATS Aeronautical Information Service Retrieved 16 October 2016 Crabb Stephen 18 March 2016 Pembrokeshire is punching above its weight with a strong local economy gov uk Office of the Sectretary of State for Wales Retrieved 17 February 2018 Pembrokeshire County Show gets underway in the sun Western Telegraph 13 August 2019 Retrieved 30 August 2019 Pembrokeshire Farming c1580 1620 GENUKI UK amp Ireland Genealogy Archived from the original on 13 December 2014 Retrieved 12 December 2014 Agricultural Statistics 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shake up Western Telegraph 22 January 2015 Retrieved 25 January 2015 Pembrokeshire Schools Pembrokeshire County Council 28 April 2017 Retrieved 4 September 2018 Abbie Wightwick 12 February 2020 Schools in Pembrokeshire are a significant concern says inspections body Estyn Wales Online Retrieved 14 February 2020 Searle Ian 16 June 2011 Education the age of uncertainty The Independent Archived from the original on 25 May 2022 Retrieved 25 January 2015 U3A Pembrokeshire Retrieved 14 February 2020 Pembrokeshire County Council Lifelong learning 20 July 2017 Retrieved 14 February 2020 Withybush General Hospital Haverfordwest wales nhs uk University Health Board 2 January 2019 Retrieved 29 November 2016 Tenby Cottage Hospital PDF wales nhs uk Pembrokeshire and Derwen NHS Trust March 2006 Retrieved 29 November 2016 South Pembrokeshire Hospital wales nhs uk University Health Board 3 October 2018 Retrieved 4 March 2019 Pressure on GP surgeries in Pembrokeshire Tivyside Advertiser 14 November 2018 Retrieved 14 November 2018 Further reading editAwbery G M 1986 Pembrokeshire Welsh A Phonological Study First ed Cardiff National Museum of Wales ASIN B000S54DVE Charles B G 1992 The Place Names of Pembrokeshire 2 Volumes First ed Cardiff National Museum of Wales ISBN 978 0 907158 58 5 Charles Jones Caroline 2001 Historic Pembrokeshire Homes and Their Families The Francis Jones Illustrations by Leon Olin amp David H White Jr 2nd Revised ed Dinas Brawdy Books ISBN 978 0 9528344 5 8 Davies E et al 1987 Pembrokeshire County History Vol 1 Pembrokeshire Historical Society ISBN 978 0 903771 16 0 Davies B S 1997 Pembrokeshire Limekilns 2nd Revised ed St Davids Merrivale Publications ISBN 978 0 9515207 7 2 Dillon Myles 1977 The Irish settlements in Wales Celtica Vol 12 Dublin Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies pp 1 11 Downes John 2011 Folds Faults and Fossils Exploring geology in Pembrokeshire Pwllheli Llygad Gwalch Cyf ISBN 978 1 84524 172 8 Fudge Pam 2014 South West Wales Through the Lens of Harry Squibbs Pembrokeshire Vol 2 Stroud Amberley Publishing ISBN 978 1 4456 3435 7 Harris P Valentine 2011 South Pembrokeshire Dialect And Place Names Tenby H G Walters ISBN 978 1 4474 1940 2 via Gebert Press Plano TX James J Ivor 1968 Molleston Baptist Church Reflections on the Founders Tercentenary First ed Carmarthen V G Lodwick amp Sons Ltd ASIN B00J1IHH9Y Jenkins J Geraint 2016 Pembrokeshire its present and its past Explored Pwllheli Llygad Gwalch Cyf ISBN 978 1 84524 246 6 John Brian S 1998 The Geology of Pembrokeshire Cardigan Abercastle Publications ISBN 978 1 872887 20 3 Jones Francis 1996 Innes Smith Robert ed Historic Houses of Pembrokeshire and Their Families First ed Dinas Brawdy Books ISBN 978 0 9528344 0 3 Lloyd Thomas Orbach Julian Scourfield Robert 2004 Pembrokeshire The Buildings of Wales Pevsner Architectural Guides Buildings of Wales First ed New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10178 2 Lockley Ronald Mathias 1969 The Regional Books Pembrokeshire 2nd ed London Robert Hale ISBN 978 0 7091 0781 1 Owen George of Henllys 1796 First published 1603 A History of Pembrokeshire With additions and observations by John Lewis of Manarnawan London pp 53 230 via Cambrian Register Volume 2 Thornhill Timmins H 1895 Nooks and Corners of Pembrokeshire London Elliot Stock Willison Christine 2013 Pembrokeshire Folk Tales Stroud The History Press ISBN 978 0 7524 6565 4 External links edit nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Pembrokeshire nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pembrokeshire Historical information about Pembrokeshire on GENUKI Pembrokeshire County Council Visit Pembrokeshire official council tourism website Pembrokeshire Cultural Services archives libraries museums Pembrokeshire Historical Society Pembrokeshire Antiquarians 19th century Ordnance Survey maps page 1 and page 2 List of documents and collections held at Pembrokeshire Archives and Local Studies Iolo s Pembrokeshire BBC Documentary series by Iolo Williams 51 50 42 N 4 50 32 W 51 84500 N 4 84222 W 51 84500 4 84222 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pembrokeshire amp oldid 1189317173, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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