St Davids Tourism, Wales United Kingdom
St Davids Tourism, Tourist places in St Davids, Sightseeing, St Davids Travel Guide, Holiday Packages, weekend getaways, places near St Davids, reviews, map and trips
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St Davids Fast Facts
- State: Wales
- District: Wales
- Famous for/as:
- Population: 1,797
- Language: English
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- Pincode:
- STDCode: 01437
St Davids, United Kingdom Overview
St Davids (or St David's, Welsh: Tyddewi), is a city and community (full name St David's and the Cathedral Close) in Pembrokeshire, Wales. Lying on the River Alun on St David's Peninsula, it is Britain's smallest city in terms of both size and population, the final resting place of Saint David, the country's patron saint, and the de facto ecclesiastical capital of Wales.
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St Davids, United Kingdom History
Tradition states that Dewi (Saint David) was born to Saint Non at what is now St Non's, just to the south of the city, in about AD 500. It is also said that he was baptised at Porthclais, now the city's port and was brought up by his mother at Llanon.
In the 6th Century Dewi founded a monastery and church at Glyn Rhosyn (Rose Vale) on the banks of the river Alun. The area was originally known in the Welsh language as Mynyw and to the Romans as Menevia. The monastic brotherhood that Dewi founded was very strict — besides praying and celebrating masses, they cultivated the land and carried out many crafts, including beekeeping, in order to feed themselves and the many pilgrims and travellers who needed lodgings. They also fed and clothed the poor and needy. The settlement that grew up around the monastery was called Tyddewi meaning David's home. In 519 the archbishopric of Caerleon in the county of Monmouth was transferred to Mynyw, which was renamed St Davids in honour of the archbishop and saint by whom the transfer was accomplished. The original cathedral built on the site was often plundered by the Vikings and was finally burnt and destroyed in 1087. The present cathedral was built by the Normans and contained many relics including the remains of St. David. It was visited by many pilgrims, many of whom were nobles and kings including; William the conqueror in 1077, Henry II in 1171, and Edward I and Queen Eleanor in 1284. Pope Calixtus II decreed that two pilgrimages to St David's were equivalent to one to Rome ("Roma semel quantum dat bis Menevia tantum"). Because of this, a vast income was raised from visiting pilgrims in the Middle Ages. Pilgrimages later fell out of favour due to practices such as the selling of indulgencies and the income from them faded away.