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Best Pub Walks in South Pembrokeshire, by Paul Williams, 2008 (ISBN 978-1845240820) Pubs of St Davids, Fishguard and North Pembrokeshire, by Keith Johnson, 2010 (ISBN 978-1906663506) Pembrokeshire Tea Shop Walks, Walks to the best tea shops and cafés in Pembrokeshire, by Dennis Kelsall, 2017 (ISBN 9781908632487)
Consumers are largely students and low income individuals, because it is the cheapest alternative to hamburgers. This meal is usually available in every area across the country. Kota is considered a staple township food in South Africa and is often consumed with a soft drink, usually a cola.
The Milford & West Wales Mercury weekly newspaper covered the Milford Haven and West Pembrokeshire area. It was founded in 1992 and following a merger of its editorial team with that of the Western Telegraph, its local office was closed in 2008. [118] A second newspaper, The Pembrokeshire Herald, covers the Milford Haven and surrounding areas.
Pembroke (/ ˈ p ɛ m b r ʊ k / PEM-bruuk; Welsh: Penfro [3]) is a town and community in Pembrokeshire, Wales, with a population of 7,552.The names of both the town and the county (of which the county town is Haverfordwest) have a common origin; both are derived from the Cantref of Penfro: Pen, 'head' or 'end', and bro, 'region', 'country', 'land', which has been interpreted to mean either ...
The constituency comprises the following areas in Pembrokeshire: [2] [3]. Part of the former Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire. The wards of Amroth and Saundersfoot North, Carew and Jeffreyston, East Williamston, Hundleton, Kilgetty and Begelly, Lampeter Velfrey, Lamphey, Manorbier and Penally, Martletwy, Narberth, Narberth Rural, Pembroke Dock Bufferland, Pembroke Dock Bush, Pembroke ...
GENUKI also has a list of Pembrokeshire place names extracted from Lewis's 1833-44 A Topographical Dictionary of Wales, which link to further sources and historical information. [2] Some are stub articles that need expanding; for a list, see Category:Pembrokeshire geography stubs. For other principal areas in Wales, see List of places in Wales
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The origin of the place name Tufton is not clear. There is a tenuous link with the Tufton Arms in the 1792 marriage of Joseph Foster Barham of Trecwn (who inherited Pembrokeshire property from his mother, Dorothea Vaughan, [1] and whose son Charles Henry was a Pembroke JP) to Lady Caroline Tufton, daughter of Sackville Tufton, 8th Earl of Thanet.