- About Us
- Commissioned pages
- Amroth Heritage Trail
- Bridge 46 to Five Locks Canal Group
- Colwyn Bay: granite postcards
- Deganwy Beach Shelter Restoration
- Eglwysbach Heritage Trail
- Place-names unbundled: Menai Bridge
- Powys War Memorials Project 2014-19
- QR Llanelwy
- Sacred Doorways
- Cof Lechi Caernarfon Slate Plaques
- Holy Island Landscape Partnership
- Further reading
- Media Coverage
- Commissioned pages
- Contact Us
- Feedback
- Site Map
- Our contributors
- The Clwyd Family History Society
- Clwyd-Powys Archaeological Trust
- Coed Cadw, the Woodland Trust
- Discovering Old Welsh Houses Group
- Ffestiniog Railway
- Royal National Institute of Blind People
- Royal National Lifeboat Institution
- The Welsh Place-Name Society
- Wildlife Trust of South and West Wales
- On Anglesey
- In Cardiff
- In Caerphilly county borough
- In Carmarthenshire
- In Ceredigion
- In Conwy county borough
- Colwyn Bay Civic Society
- Llandudno & Colwyn Bay History Society
- Penmaenmawr Historical Society
- Friends of St Julitta's, Capel Curig
- Aberconwy Historical Society
- Home Front museum, Llandudno
- The Pensychnant Foundation
- Llanrwst and District Historical Society
- Deganwy History Group
- Llandudno & Colwyn Bay Tramway Society
- In Denbighshire
- In Flintshire
- In Gwynedd
- In Monmouthshire
- In Neath Porth Talbot county borough
- In Newport
- In Pembrokeshire
- In Powys
- In Swansea
- In Vale of Glamorgan
- In Wrexham
- The History House
- The Snowdonia Society
- The Merchant Navy Association (Wales)
- Western Front Association, South Wales branch
- Dyfed Archaeological Trust
- Gwynedd Archaeological Trust
- Women's Archive Wales
- Welsh Stone Forum
- Accessibility - audio readings
News
Welsh to English via Latin
Feb 9, 2019Point Lynas is a direct equivalent of Trwyn Eilian, but how did this Anglesey headland - noted for its lighthouse - get its English name? The answer lies in the Latinised version of the name of St Eilian, in whose honour ...
[More]Intrusive adverts ... in the 1890s
Feb 2, 2019Irritating ads aren't a modern invention. In the 1890s, many Cardiff residents complained about a long and continuous row of new advertising hoardings along the Glamorganshire Canal facing people in Mill Lane. Although ...
[More]One for the road for 'John the Bottle'
Jan 26, 2019We love Welsh nicknames at HistoryPoints, and the latest one you can discover through our QR codes and website is John y Botel ('John the Bottle'). He was a regular at the Plough Inn in Llandegla, Denbighshire, in the ...
[More]