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Home > Town Profiles > Swansea

Swansea

 
City Population 169,880
Council Population 223,301
City Status 1969
Lord Mayor  1981
Anglican Cathedral NO
(But has a Catholic Cathedral)
University Part of the Federal University of Wales since 1920
Football Champions English League (0)
FA Cup (0)
Britain in Bloom Winners 1 Time

Archaeology on the Gower peninsula includes many remains from prehistoric times, passing through Stone Age, Bronze Age, and Iron Age. Prehistoric finds in the Swansea city area proper are rare. The Romans visited the area, as did the Vikings, whose name for the settlement on the river is used in English today.

Following the Norman Conquest, a marcher lordship was created: named Gower, it included land around Swansea Bay as far as the Tawe, and the manor of Kilvey beyond the Tawe as well as the peninsula itself. Swansea was designated its chief town, and subsequently received one of the earlier borough charters in Wales.

Swansea became an important port: some coal and vast amounts of limestone (for fertiliser) were being shipped out from the town by 1550. As the Industrial Revolution reached Wales, the combination of port, local coal, and trading links with the west country, Cornwall and Devon, meant that Swansea was the logical place to site copper smelting works. Smelters were operating by 1720 and proliferated.

Following this, more coal mines (everywhere from Gower to Clyne to Llangyfelach) were opened and smelters (mostly along the Tawe valley) were opened and flourished. Over the next century and a half, works were established to process arsenic, zinc and tin and to create tinplate and pottery. The city expanded rapidly in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and was termed "Copperopolis".

Through the twentieth century, these industries eventually declined, leaving the lower Swansea valley filled with derelict works and mounds of waste products from them. The Lower Swansea Valley Scheme (which still continues) reclaimed much of the land: the present Enterprise Zone exists almost entirely a result of this scheme, and of the many original docks, only those outside the city continue to work as docks: North Dock is now Parc Tawe and South Dock became the Marina.

Little city centre evidence beyond road layout remains from mediaeval Swansea; its industrial importance made it the target of heavy bombing in the war, and the centre was flattened completely.

LOCAL HISTORY AND CIVIC SOCIETIES

Swansea Civic Society Details
Mrs Eileen Walton
Secretary
20 Glanmor Park Road
Sketty
Swansea
SA2 0QG

Phone: 01792 207110

 

 
   
   
   
   
 

 

This page was last updated: 21 Januar 2006

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Town history extracts are taken from Wikipedia and are licensed under GFDL