... They are still occupiers of the soil of the district of Pembroke, Haverfordwest, and Tenby, without having learned the Welsh tongue or having lost all traces of their ancestry. The final incorporation of the Welsh and the English into one and the... The Place of the Welsh in the History of Britain - Page 41by William Boyd Dawkins - 1889 - 48 pagesFull view - About this book
| Powys-land Club - 1889 - 492 pages
...Pembrokeshire in the days of William the Conqueror, and were joined by numbers of their countrymen in 1108, " well versed in commerce and woollen manufactories",...together by ties of blood and identity of feeling. ii. Work done by Welsh for the Common Weal. — Let us now examine what the Welsh have done for the... | |
| 1891 - 392 pages
...what they could of the land ; and the final incorporation of the Welsh and English into one people may be said to have ended with the division of the Principality into shires ; and the fusion of the two races has been going on ever since to the mutual advantage... | |
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