Monmouth

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is about the Welsh town of Monmouth. For other uses, see Monmouth (disambiguation).
Monmouth
Statistics
Population: 8,547
Ordnance Survey
OS grid reference: Maps for SO505125
Administration
Principal area: Monmouthshire
Constituent country: Wales
Sovereign state: United Kingdom
Other
Police force: Gwent Police
Ceremonial county: Gwent
Historic county: Monmouthshire
Post office and telephone
Post town: MONMOUTH
Postal district: NP25
Dialling code: 01600
Politics
UK Parliament: Monmouth
European Parliament: Wales
Wales
Map sources for Monmouth at grid reference SO505125
Map sources for Monmouth at grid reference SO505125

Monmouth (Welsh: Trefynwy) is a town in south Wales, county town of the traditional county of Monmouthshire. It is situated where the River Monnow meets the River Wye.

Monmouth boasts a 13th-century stone gated bridge, unique in Britain as it is the only preserved bridge of its design remaining. After centuries of waiting a second bridge over the Monnow was finally opened on March 15, 2004, thus allowing the old bridge to become pedestrianised. This project has, however, meant the demolition of the old cattle market, thus Monmouth is no longer the market town it has traditionally been; however, a farmers' market selling local produce is still held.

Monmouth is very much a town of schools. Apart from the comprehensive school with over 1600 pupils, there are two independent schools - Monmouth School and Haberdashers' Monmouth School for Girls. There are also several state primary schools, with most areas served by both infants' and juniors' Schools.

The annual Monmouth Show has been held each year (traditionally on the last Thursday of August) since 1919 (when it was called the Monmouthshire County Show), though its history can be traced back further, to May 30th 1857, when the eighth Duke of Beaufort and Sir Charles Morgan M.P. put up the funds for a Monmouth Cattle Show, and even prior to that there had been an agricultural society in existence in the town dating back to the 1790s, which held ploughing competitions.

Monmouth is twinned with Carbonne, France and Waldbronn, Germany.

Contents

[edit] History

Monmouth dates back to the times of the Roman occupation of Britain. The Romans called it Blestium, and modern local historians have found items of pottery and coinage that date from that period.

The town appears in the Domesday Book, and for the eleventh and twelfth centuries the town and surrounding areas were ruled by French lords after the conquest of England by William the Conqueror in 1066. During this time, Monmouth Castle was built, holding views over the surrounding area. A Benedictine priory was also created in 1101[1], and it was from here that Geoffrey of Monmouth wrote his Historia Regum Britanniae (History of the Kings of Britain). A fortified bridge was built during the thirteenth century.

In 1387, Henry V was born in Monmouth Castle. He would win the Battle of Agincourt in 1415. Many parts of Monmouth, including the town's main square, are named after this battle.

In 1605, James I granted Monmouth a town charter by letters patent. The granting of the charter included the charge that the town "at all perpetual future times ... be and remain a town and borough of Peace and Quiet, to the example and terror of the wicked and reward of the good". [2]

[edit] Famous people

Famous people associated with Monmouth include:

  • Henry V, born in Monmouth castle in 1387, who was immortalised in his victory at Agincourt and the square in the centre of town is named after this battle.
  • William Jones, a liveryman of Worshipful Company of Haberdashers and founder of the first of the town's grammar schools. (The second was founded late in the nineteenth century, directly by the Haberdashers' Company.)
  • Lord Nelson, who paid two visits to the town and approved a naval temple on the nearby Kymin Hill. Monmouth is home to a large collection of Nelson material.
  • Charles Rolls, who lived in Monmouth and was co-founder of the Rolls-Royce company and was the first man to make a non-stop double crossing of the English Channel by plane. There is a statue of Charles Rolls in Agincourt Square, so named in recent years to attract tourists to the town by playing on Henry V's association.

[edit] Etymology

It is generally believed Monmouth is a contraction of 'Monnow-Mouth'. Dispite this the name is generally pronounced more akin to the Welsh Mynwy (Monnow) and so the pronunciation of mouth is changed to give monmuth (c.f. myn-mydd). This is the pronunciation used by all those who live in the area. During the latter part of the 20th century, as with many places in Wales, a new name Trefynwy was assigned to the town, loosely derived from tref (town) + Mynwy (Monnow).

[edit] References

  1. ^ Monmouth Priory. Retrieved on 2006-02-01.
  2. ^ Monmouth Town Council. Retrieved on 2006-02-01.

[edit] External links

In other languages