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  2. Mansion House, Swansea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mansion_House,_Swansea

    The house was originally known as "Brooklands". [3] [4] [5] Richards went on to be the Mayor of Swansea in 1855/56 and again 1862/63. [6] [7] He also served as member of parliament for Cardiganshire from 1868 [8] to 1874. [9] Following Richards' death in 1880, the house was acquired by James Jones who let the building out as the judges' lodgings.

  3. List of standardised Welsh place-names in Swansea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_standardised_Welsh...

    The list of standardised Welsh place-names, for places in Swansea, is a list compiled by the Welsh Language Commissioner to recommend the standardisation of the spelling of Welsh place-names, particularly in the Welsh language and when multiple forms are used, although some place-names in English were also recommended to be matched with the ...

  4. Maesteg House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maesteg_House

    Maesteg House some time in the 1910s. Maesteg House was a manor house built on the south slope of Kilvey Hill, Swansea and from c1840 was the home of the copper industrialist Grenfell family. [1] The building is no longer there, as it was demolished shortly after the First World War to make way for new housing development. [2] [3]

  5. Sketty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sketty

    Sketty Park House was itself demolished c. 1973, but a large Gothic belvedere from its ornamental grounds survives on a tree-covered mound in Saunders Way. Morris's descendant George Lockwood Morris the Wales rugby player lived at Machen Lodge, and his son Cedric Morris the artist and plantsman was born there.

  6. National Waterfront Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Waterfront_Museum

    Consisting of a major new slate and glass building integrated with an existing Grade II listed warehouse (formerly the Swansea Industrial and Maritime Museum), the new museum deals with Wales' history of Industrial Revolution and innovation by combining significant historical artifacts with modern technologies, such as interactive touchscreens and multimedia presentation systems.

  7. Dylan Thomas Centre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dylan_Thomas_Centre

    The building was officially re-opened by the American former President Jimmy Carter and the last Leader of the Swansea City Council, Trevor Burtonshaw, as the Dylan Thomas Centre in 1995. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] In 2012 a large part of the Centre was leased by Swansea's council to the University of Wales with the purpose of using it as a business centre ...

  8. Cuisine of Swansea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuisine_of_Swansea

    The cuisine of Swansea (Welsh: Abertawe) is based on the city's long history and the influence of the surrounding regions of Gower, Carmarthenshire, and Glamorgan, Wales.. The city has a long maritime, industrial, and academic tradition, and people from many different parts of the world have lived, studied, and worked in the ci

  9. Architecture of Wales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Architecture_of_Wales

    The idea of the "Longhouse" or "Tŷ-hir" was first discussed by Iorwerth Peate in his pioneering book The Welsh House (1940). This was the description of a house where both people and beasts were housed together under the same roof, as portrayed in the Medieval Welsh poem Dream of Rhonabwy. Peate thought that the Welsh Longhouse had had a long ...