Online Encyclopedia

HAWARDEN (pronounced Harden, Welsh Pe...

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 93 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HAWARDEN (pronounced Harden, Welsh Penarltg)  , a market-
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town of Flintshire, North Wales, 6 m . W. of Chester, on a height commanding an extensive prospect, connected by a branch with the
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London & North-Western railway . Pop . (1901), 5372 . It lies in a
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coal
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district, with clay beds near . Coarse earthenware, draining tiles and fire-clay bricks are the chief manufactures . The Maudes take the title of viscount from the town . Hawarden castle—built in 1752, added to and altered in the
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Gothic style in 1814—stands in a
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fine wooded park near the old castle of the same name, which William the Conqueror gave to his
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nephew,
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Hugh Lupus . It was taken in 1282 by Dafydd,
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brother of
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Llewelyn, prince of Wales, destroyed by the Parliamentarians in the
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Civil War, and came into the possession of Sergeant Glynne, lord chief justice of England under Cromwell . The last
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baronet,
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Sir Stephen R . Glynne, dying in 1874, Castell Penarlag passed to his brother-in-law, William Ewart Gladstone . St Deiniol church, early
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English, was restored in 18J7 and 1878 .

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grammar school (1606), a Gladstone
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golden-
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wedding fountain (1889), and St Deiniol's
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Hostel (with accommodation for students and an
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Anglican clerical
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warden); west of the church, on Truman's hill. is an old
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British camp .

End of Article: HAWARDEN (pronounced Harden, Welsh Penarltg)
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