Famed for its coastal beauty, the Welsh county of Pembrokeshire is also steeped in history, from spectacular castles to the birthplace of the Tudor dynasty.
The sea dominates life in Pembrokeshire. This westerly outpost of Wales reaching out into the Celtic Sea is famed for its beauty: its beaches rank among the world’s best, while the renowned coast path allows unfettered access to its wild headlands, rocky peninsulas, fishing villages, quays, amazing wildlife and more. Yet while a third of the county is designated as Britain’s only coastal national park, that’s far from the whole story.
In fact, Pembrokeshire is a place packed with history every bit as spectacular as its scenery. It is home to more than 50 castles, mysterious prehistoric tombs and Celtic religious shrines – it’s even the birthplace of the Tudors. The county is also characterised by contrast, from the castle-dappled southern lowlands (known as “Little England Beyond Wales”), to the rocky Preseli Mountains in the Welsh-speaking highlands of the north.
With a population of just 2,000 and sitting at the most westerly point, St Davids – Britain’s smallest city – is not only an ideal place to get a taste of this contrast, but it’s also a cultural feast in itself. At its heart is a purple-stoned cathedral built on the site of St David’s 6th-century monastery. St David, the patron Saint of Wales, was buried here in 588 and his tomb can still be seen in the current 13th-century cathedral’s chapel of the Holy Trinity. It has been a hugely important religious site for centuries, as historically it was believed that two pilgrimages to St Davids was the equivalent of one to Rome.
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