Posts Tagged ‘Worldwide Renown’

A Few Quick Facts About Swansea Neath – Port Talbot

Saturday, February 13th, 2010


A few quick facts about Swansea Neath-Port Talbot shows a city that has a rich past and which resides in the Welsh Vale of Glamorgan. Over 270,000 people call the area in and around Swansea — which is also its own county — home. Port Talbot, or Neath Port Talbot — is actually a county borough, though anybody living in the area really doesn’t seem to mind what is placed where.

It actually can be a bit confusing to figure out just what Swansea Neath-Port Talbot, Swansea or Swansea Neath really means or if there’s really anything to become all that concerned about, because there are several different variations on the Welsh city, county and county borough along with the wider urban area. For sure, though; there’s much to get out and see in the region.

The city itself lies along Wales’southwestern coast along a stretch of fairly sandy coastline. It is also ranks behind Cardiff in Wales in terms of cities with the most population. In the 19th century, the town was known as ‘Copperopolis’ for the metalworking industries that held sway in the area and which made it a worldwide player in copper at one time.

Historically, humans seem to have been in the area through all of the major ages, including the Bronze Age and the Iron Age as well as the Stone Age. The Romans visited the region on occasion when they held sway in Britannia and the Vikings are the people who gave the town its name, being that Swansea is a variation of an Old Norse name for the town.

As a Viking seaport and as a port throughout its history, the city saw much industry evolve, shipping wool and wines out of its port as well as coal in later centuries. It gained worldwide renown for its copper-working workforce and most industrial scholars would say that the 1700s and 1800s were probably the time of the city’s most important prosperity.

Swansea made sure that it was fully involved in the progress gained during the Industrial Revolution, not only from coal mining but several other heavy industries and the work done around its port. The 20th century hit Swansea hard on several occasions and it was in a period of general decline throughout the entire time, it seems. Nowadays, the city is undergoing an extensive renaissance, though.

The county borough of Neath Port Talbot shouldn’t be confused with Port Talbot or any other of several different variations on the name of the region that has lived extremely close-in with Swansea. Both are a big part of the Welsh Vale of Glamorgan, it has to be said, and both are quite emblematic of the history and sweep of Wales and its part in the United Kingdom.