Place-Names of Carmarthenshire is the first publication to investigate all major place-names in the historic county of Carmarthen (1536-1974), including the westerly parts of the county transferred to modern Pembrokeshire after 1996. Tracing the history of Welsh place-names casts light upon the ways in which our ancestors lived and how they thought about the world around them. The meaning of place-names, however, is not always easy to determine because their written and spoken forms have often changed over time and particularly when the language in a particular location switched from Welsh to English. Fortunately, Carmarthenshire was not so markedly affected in this respect as many other parts of Wales but it is still easy to be mislead by modern spellings. Illustrated with many images of the county, Place-Names of Carmarthenshire examines more than 920 place-names and features a 1, 000-entry Glossary of place-name elements, personal names and rivers, and is the result of the author’s detailed research in archives and reference libraries.
Tabla de materias
Acknowledgements
List of illustrations
Preface
Introduction:
Carmarthenshire Place-Names: study and survey
Carmarthenshire Place-Names: research and analysis
Map 1 Medieval Carmarthenshire
Map 2 English influence before 1500
Selection of names
Map 3: County boundary 1536-1974
Map 4: Unitary authorites from 2003
Editorial method
Guide to the International Phonetic Alphabet
Abbreviations and Bibliography
Online Databases and Reference Resources
Glossary:
Common Place-Name Elements
Personal Names and Surnames
River-names
A Aberarad to Ashfield
B Babel to Bynea
C Caeo to Cywyn
D Dafen to Dynevor
E East Marsh to Esgob
F Faenor to Furnace
G Ganol to Gwynfe
H Halfpenny Furze to Horeb
I Iddole to Is-morlais
J Johnstown
K Kidwelly to Kingsland
L Lacques to Loughor
M Mabelfyw to Myrtle Hill
N Nant Aeron to Newton
P Pantarfon to Pysgotwr
R Ram to Roche Castle
S Salem to Sylgen
T Tachlouan to Tywi
U Upper Brynaman to Uwch Sawdde
W Waun Baglam to Wysg
Y Ydw to Ystumgwili
List of subscribers
Sobre el autor
Richard Morgan is a former archivist at Powys Archives and Glamorgan Archives. He is the author of Place-Names of Glamorgan (WElsh Academic Press, 2018) and co-authored the Dictionary of the Place-Names of Wales with Professor Hywel Wyn Owen in 2007.