Dolwyddelan (English: /ˌdɒlwɪˈðɛlæn/ dol-with-EL-an; Welsh: [ˌdɔlwɪˈðɛlan]; Welsh pronunciation) – in Victorian times, often spelled Dolyddelen[1] – is a village and community in Conwy county borough, Wales, on the main A470 road between Blaenau Ffestiniog and Betws-y-Coed. As a community, the population of Dolwyddelan was recorded in the 2001 Census as 427,[2] and 55.8% of those residents could speak Welsh.[3] The population increased to 474 in the 2011 census with the proportion of Welsh speakers falling to 50.8%.[4]
Dolwyddelan | |
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![]() Part of the village of Dolwyddelan | |
![]() ![]() Dolwyddelan Location within Conwy | |
Population | 474 (2011) |
OS grid reference | SH730511 |
Community |
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Principal area |
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Ceremonial county |
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Country | Wales |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | DOLWYDDELAN |
Postcode district | LL25 |
Dialling code | 01690 |
Police | North Wales |
Fire | North Wales |
Ambulance | Welsh |
UK Parliament |
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Senedd Cymru – Welsh Parliament |
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The spelling of the village's name has varied over the years, though there appear to be two primary spellings with two primary meanings. The common modern spelling "Dolwyddelan" is translated as "Gwyddelan's meadow", referring to Saint Gwyddelan, an Irish missionary of the 6th century, after whom the parish church is named. There is some question as to which came first, the castle or the name. [5] Saint Gwyddelan is believed to have arrived around 600 AD. [6] A variant of this spelling is Dolwyddelen, which was particularly used by the railway between 1880 and 1980.[7]
Before the First World War the alternate spelling "Dolyddelen" was in common use; it is translated as "Elen's meadow",[8] named after Elen Luyddog.[9] Elen's Castle Hotel, which is on the east of the village, is also named after Elen Llyddog.
For many years, Dolwyddelan was part of the Gwydir Estate. The estate was founded in the 16th century and was owned by the Wynn family. The estate was centered on Gwydir Castle and it dominated north Wales. More than 36,000 acres (150 km2) of the country, stretching almost from Blaenau Ffestiniog in the south to the edge of Conwy in the north was part of the estate. In 1678 it passed to the Barons Willoughby de Eresby, based in Lincolnshire, and in 1892 it became the property of Gilbert Heathcote-Drummond-Willoughby, 1st Earl of Ancaster. By the early 19th century the estate largely comprised the parishes of Dolwyddelan (where the Wynns also had an ancestral home), Llanrhychwyn, Trefriw, and Gwydir, totalling some 55 square miles (140 km2).
Much of the estate was under mortgage, and in 1894 Dolwyddelan was sold off.
The village is particularly noted for Dolwyddelan Castle, the reputed birthplace of Prince Llywelyn ab Iorwerth (Llywelyn the Great), although doubt has been cast on this as the stone keep was not built until around 1220.[2] It has better transport links than most villages, with the small Dolwyddelan railway station on the Conwy Valley Line still in operation.
There are two historic hotels in the village:
Nearby mountains include Moel Siabod to the north, Moel Penamnen and Y Ro Wen to the south and, further afield, Snowdon (Yr Wyddfa) lies approximately 10 miles to the west. Carreg Alltrem, a crag used by many rock climbers, can be found about a mile south of the village.
During the Victorian period Dolwyddelan was surrounded by slate quarries.[10] These quarries worked the Nod Glas Formation, which extended across Mid and North Wales. It was primarily a bed of soft, black shale, but in the area of the Dolwyddelan syncline it was partially metamorphisised into slate. The principle quarries were:[11]
Dolwyddelan is included in the Betws-y-Coed electoral ward which is represented by a county councillor on Conwy County Borough Council.
In 1980 Walt Disney used Dolwyddelan Castle and surrounding grounds to film all the external castle scenes in the film Dragonslayer. During the making of Dragonslayer (starring Peter MacNicol) many other scenes were shot in North Wales.[16]
These were men inhabiting this place before the grandfather of Sir John [Wynne] migrated here from Merioneth. The castle was built in the fifth century — very nearly a thousand years before his grandfather moved here, and two hundred years before Saint Gwyddelan was born.
I do not want you to spell the name of my birthplace with the w. Tne name of the place is not derived from St. Gwyddelan... There are many old roads called "Ffyrdd Elen" and a well called "Ffynnon Elen" here, but no place called after St. Gwyddelan. It is evident this place was named Dolyddelen to commemorate Elen Llueddog