- The
Landsker Line (Welsh: Ffin
ieithyddol Sir Benfro) is a term used for the
language border in
Wales between the
largely Welsh-speaking and
largely English-speaking...
-
other areas of
South West Wales. Its
northern boundary is
known as the
Landsker Line. A
number of
writers and scholars,
ancient and modern, have discussed...
- 51°49′08″N 4°36′50″W / 51.819°N 4.614°W / 51.819; -4.614 The
Landsker Borderlands Trail is a
waymarked long
distance footpath in the
United Kingdom...
-
founded around a
Welsh court and
later became a
Norman stronghold on the
Landsker Line. It
became the
headquarters of the
hundred of Narberth. It was once...
- Conquest, and
several Normans encouraged immigration to
their new lands; the
Landsker Line
dividing the
Pembrokeshire "Englishry" and "Welshry" is
still detectable...
-
survival in Wales. In a
predominantly English-speaking area, just on the
Landsker Line, the
community is
bordered by
those of Llanddowror, St Clears, Llangynog...
- Thomas, The
Linguistic Geography of
Wales (Cardiff, 1973)
Welsh language Landsker Line Rhys, John; Brynmor-Jones,
David (1900). The
Welsh People - Chapters...
- (claims in England)
Local governance Other Little England beyond Wales (
Landsker Line) Mach Loop
Senedd electoral regions Y Fro
Gymraeg Geography Politics...
- of
Landsker, East". www.crockford.org.uk.
Retrieved 3
February 2021. "East
Landsker".
Church in Wales.
Retrieved 17
September 2024. "East
Landsker - The...
-
contains a
substantial Norman motte,
which is
often referred to as a "
Landsker castle"
although it lies far to the
south (English) side of that linguistic...