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CARNARVONSHIRE (Welsh Caer'narfon, fo...

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Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 361 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CARNARVONSHIRE (Welsh Caer'narfon, for Caer yn Arfon)  , a county of north Wales, bounded N. by the Irish Sea, E. by the county of Denbigh, S.E. by Merioneth, S. by Tremadoc and Cardigan Bays, S.W. by Carnarvon
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Bay, W. by the Menai Straits (separating the county from Anglesey), and N.W. by Conway Bay .
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Area, 565 sq. m . There is, owing to the changed bed of the Conwy stream, a small detached
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part of the county on the north coast of Denbighshire, stretching inland for some 21 M. between Old Colwyn and Llandulas . About
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half the whole length of the county is a peninsula, Lleyn,
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running south-west into the Irish Sea, and forming Cardigan Bay on the south and Carnarvon Bay on the north . The county is rich in minerals, e.g. lead, copper, some gold . Its slate quarries are many and good . Its mountains include the highest in England and Wales, the
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summit of Snowdon (Wyddfa or Eryri) being 3560 ft . The
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principal mountains occupy the
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middle of the county and include Carnedd
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Llewelyn (3484 ft.), Carnedd Dafydd (3426), Glydyr Fawr (3279) and Glydyr Fach (3262), Elidr Fawr (3029), Moel Siabod (286o), Moel Hebog or Hebawg (2566) . The valleys vary from the wildness of Pont Aberglaslyn
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gorge to .the quiet of Nant Gwynnant . Those of Beddgelert and Llanberis—at the south and north
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base of Snowdon respectively—are famous, while that of the Conwy, from Llanrwst to Conway (Conwy), is well set off by the background of Snowdonia . The largest stream is the Conwy, tidal and navigable for some 12 M. from Deganwy; this rises in Llyn Conwy, in the south-east, divides Carnarvon from Denbigh (running nearly due north) for some 30 m., and falls into the sea at Deganwy . The Seint (wrongly spelled Seiont) is a small stream rising in Snowdon and falling into the sea at Carnarvon, to which it gave its old name Segontium (Kaer Seint yn Arvon in the Mabinogion) .

The

Swallow Falls are near Nant Ffrancon (the stream of the Beaver or Afanc, a mythological animal) . Nant Ffrancon leads north-west from near Capel Curig and Bettws y coed and past Bethesda, reaching the sea in
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Beaumaris Bay . The lakes, numerous and occasionally large, include: Llyn Peris and Llyn Padarn at
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Llanberis, north of Snowdon; Llyn Ogwen, north of Glydyr Fawr; Llyn Cowlyd and Llyn Eigiau, both north of Capel Curig; Llyn Llydaw, on Snowdon; Llyn Cwellyn, west of ,Snowdon; Llyn Gwynnant, east of Snowdon; Llyniau (Nant y lief or) Nantlle, near Llanllyfni; Llyn Conway . The greater part of the county, including the mountainous Snow-don
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district and nearly all the eastern portion of the promontory of Lleyn, is occupied by rocks of Ordovician age, the Arenig,
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Bala and Llandeilo series . These are dark slates and thin-bedded grits with enormous masses of interbedded igneous rocks, lavas and ashes, the product of contemporaneous volcanoes . At the base of Snowdon are Bala grits and slates, above them lie three beds of felspathic porphyry, which are in turn succeeded by a
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great mass of calcareous and sandy volcanic ashes, while upon the summit are the remnants of a
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lava
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sheet . The whole mountain is part of a syncline, the beds dipping into it from the north-west and south-east . Next to the Ordovician, the
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Cambrian rocks are the most important; they are found in three
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separate areas; the largest is in the north-west, and extends from Bangor to Bethesda, through Llyn Cwellyn and Llanwada to the coast near Clynnogfawr . The second area lies west of Tremadoc, which has given its name to the upper division of the Cambrian
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system . The third forms the promontory south of Llanenga . Cambrian slates are extensively quarried at Penrhyn, Llanberis and Dinorwic . Pre-Cambrian schists and igneous rocks occupy a
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strip, from 2 to 3 M. wide, along the coast from Neirn to Bardsey Island .

A very small area of the Denbighshire

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Silurian enters this county near Conway near the eastern border; it comprises Tarannon shale and
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Wenlock beds with
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graptolites . The striking headland of the Great Orme as well as Little Orme's Head is composed of carboniferous
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limestone, containing corals and large Productus shells . A narrow strip of the same formation runs along the Menai Straits for several miles south of the tubular
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bridge . At the
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southern extremity of the limestone a small patch of
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coal
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measures is found . Glacial drift—gravel, boulders and clay—is abundant along the
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northern coast, and in the neighbourhood of Snowdon it is an important feature in the landscape; massive moraines, perched blocks, striated stones and other evidences of ice
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action are
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common . On Moel Trygarn and on the western flanks of Snowdon marine shells have been found in the drift up to an
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elevation of 1400 ft. above sea-level . Blown sand occurs along the coast near Conway, south-west of Carnarvon and on the south coast . Several hollows and pipes in the carboniferous limestone about Orme's Head contain clays and sands of mixed origin, including Upper Carboniferous, Triassic and drift materials . The igneous rocks, especially those of volcanic origin, constitute one of the most striking
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geological features of the county; they comprise felsites, rhyolites,
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quartz porphyries,
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enstatite diabases,
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andesite tuffs, diabases and granite . The
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climate is cold and
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damp in winter, except in the peninsula, Lleyn, and on the mild coast . Arable
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land, but a small proportion of the
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surface, is mostly in the Conwy valley or near the sea . Principal crops are oats, barley and potatoes, with some little wheat .

The valley

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soil (alluvial) is often fertile, chiefly as meadow and enclosed pasture .
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Dairy and sheep-farming occupy most farmers . The small mountain ponies, especially of Llanberr (Conwy Vale), are famous, and Welsh ponies were known for staying power even to Arrian (Cynegetics) . Agriculture still too much follows the old routine, besides losing by the influx of labour into the towns or to the
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mining industry and " set
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works "(stone) . The county is served by the
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London & North-Western railway; its
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terminus is Afon Wen, within 4 M. of Pwllheli . Between these stations plies the Cambrian, which runs along the Cardigan Bay coast and terminates at Pwllheli . The North Wales Narrow Gauge
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line runs from Dinas, south of Carnarvon, to Snowdon Ranger, 4 M. from Beddgelert . The main line of the London & North-Western runs along the northern coast, with branches from
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Llandudno junction to Blaenau Festiniog, along the Denbighshire side of the Conwy stream; from Menai Bridge to Carnarvon (thence continuing to Llanberis, or, by another line, to Afon Wen) . The chief ports are Portmadoc, Pwllheli, Carnarvon,
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Port Dinorwic and Bangor . Near Portmadoc is
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Criccieth, with a castle resorted to by visitors; Pwllheli is also a summer resort, and a
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tramway runs thence to within a short distance of Abelsoch, another favourite watering-place . Nefyn (some 6 m. from Pwllheli), still unserved by
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rail or tram, was the scene of a royal tournament in the 15th century, and is another bathing resort; near are Carreg Llam and Pistyll
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farm (see BARDSEY) . The area of the ancient county is 361,156 acres, with a population in 1901 of 126,883 .

The area of the administrative county is 365,986 acres . The inhabitants practically all speak Welsh (slightly differing, especially in Lleyn, from that of Anglesey) . Over 8o is the percentage in

Carnarvonshire, as against over 90 for Anglesey . The county is divided into two
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parliamentary divisions, south (Eifion) and north (
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Arlon) . The Carnarvon district of boroughs is formed of Bangor city, Carnarvon, Conway, Criccieth, Nefyn and Pwllheli . There are four municipal boroughs: Bangor (pop . 11,269), Carnarvon (976o), Conway (4681) and Pwllheli (3675) . Other urban districts are: Bethesda (5281), Bettws y coed !lo70), Criccieth (1406), Llandudno (9279), Llanfairfechan (2769), Penmaenmawr (3503) and Ynyscynhaiarn (4883) . Carnarvon, where assizes are held, is in the north Wales circuit . Except a few parishes (in and near Llandudno) in St
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Asaph diocese, Carnarvonshire is in the diocese of Bangor, and contains sixty-one ecclesiastical parishes or districts, with parts of four others . Bangor, Carnarvon, Pwllheli and Llandudno are the principal towns, with Criccieth, Nefyn, Portmadoc and Tremadoc . Carnarvonshire was occupied by the Segontiaci, with difficulty subdued by Ostorius Scapula and C .

Suetonius

Paulinus (Paullinus) . From here Agricola crossed to conquer Anglesey . Relics of
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British forts and camps have been discovered . Caerhun (Caer Rhun) and Carnarvon (Caer Seint) are respectively the old Conovium and Segontium of Britannia Secunda . The county was part of Gwynedd
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kingdom, until
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Edward I. in 1277 restricted that to Snowdon proper . The early fortresses at Deganwy, Dinorwic, Dinas Dinlle, &c., and the later castles of Conwy (Conway), Carnarvon, Criccieth and Dolbadarn, bear witness to the warlike character of its inhabitants . See Edw . Breese, Kalendar of Gwynedd (London, 1874) .

End of Article: CARNARVONSHIRE (Welsh Caer'narfon, for Caer yn Arfon)
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