(7) “Adam Price * * * a former lawmaker who set up a technology company in Wales”
The Welsh surname Price: “Anglicized form of Welsh ap Rhys ‘son of Rhys’ (see Reece). This is one of the commonest of Welsh surnames”
(8) “Unlike Scotland, whose Parliament voted to join England three centuries ago, Wales was conquered in 1282. The Scots kept their own legal system, schools, universities, church and, with it all, a strong civic identity distinct from England’s. Welsh institutions were swallowed whole; the Welsh dragon, which flutters proudly and ubiquitously on the high street in Caernarfon, is nowhere to be seen in the Union Jack. ‘We were England’s first colony,’ said Eirian James, [female] owner of Palas Print, a local bookstore with mainly Welsh-language fare. * * * But in 1997, after Scotland voted to have its own Parliament, the tiniest majority of Welsh voters followed suit and approved the creation of a more modest Welsh assembly. By 2011, two in three of those voters wanted to extend the assembly’s lawmaking powers.”
Scottish Parliament
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_Parliament
("For the national legislative body before 1707, see Parliament of Scotland”)
(9) “Caernarfon Castle, up the street from Palas Print, was built by Edward I of England who killed Llewellyn, the last native prince of Wales, and declared his own firstborn son the Prince of Wales. That tradition still grates with some Welsh people. When Prince Charles was invested in Caernarfon Castle in 1969, militants tried to blow up his train.
(a) Llywelyn ap Gruffudd
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Llywelyn_ap_Gruffudd
(c 1223 – 1282; (the last) Prince [or head] of Wales 1258-1282; a son of Gruffudd, the eldest son of Llywelyn the Great; killed on Dec 11, 1282 in Battle of Orewin Bridge at Builth Wells, by force of Edward I of England)
(b) pronunciation: Llywelyn ap Gruffudd
www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/llywelyn-ap-gruffudd
(c) Prince of Wales
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_of_Wales
(The tradition of investing the heir-apparent of the monarch with the title of "Prince of Wales" is usually considered to have begun in 1301, when King Edward I of England invested his son Edward Caernarfon [born at Caernarfon; future Edward II] with the title at a Parliament held in Lincoln)
(10) “The local poet Gerallt Lloyd Owen”
The Welsh surname Owen is “from the Welsh personal name Owain.”
Dictionary of American Family Names
(11) “Jerry Hunter, a professor at Bangor University”
(a) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bangor_University
(in the city of Bangor, Wales; chartered in 1885; public)
(b) Bangor, Gwynedd
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bangor,_Gwynedd
(Bangor itself is an old Welsh word for a wattled enclosure)
(c) wattle (construction)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wattle_(construction)
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