Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Landsker_Line> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 22 of
22
with 100 items per page.
- Landsker_Line abstract "The Landsker Line is a term commonly used for the language boundary between the Welsh-speaking and English-speaking areas in southwest Wales. The English-speaking areas, located on the south of the Landsker line and known as Little England beyond Wales, are notable for having been English linguistically and culturally for many centuries despite being far from the border with England. The line is noted for being sharp, and for having moved only slightly over the past several centuries.During the 11th and 12th centuries both invaders and defenders built more than fifty castles during a complex period of conflict, effectively to consolidate the line. The southernmost was Laugharne; others included Wiston, Camrose, Narberth, and Roch. These are often referred to as "frontier castles" but they were in fact set back a considerable distance from the frontier itself. In the heart of the Normanised colony, the two great fortresses were at Pembroke and Haverfordwest. There were other fortresses within the colony as well, including Manorbier, Carew and Tenby.The Landsker has changed position many times, first moving north into the foothills of Mynydd Preseli during the military campaigns of the Early Middle Ages, and then moving southwards again in more peaceful times, as the English colonists found that farming and feudalism were difficult to maintain on cold acid soils and exposed hillsides.When historians began to gain interest in the strange linguistic divide which was incredibly sharp in the early part of the 1900s, they started to use the term "landsker." Since then, it has stuck, and remains in common use. Local people may or may not know what the word means, but they certainly all recognize that the language divide stretching from St Bride's Bay to Carmarthen Bay remains very distinct.".
- Landsker_Line thumbnail LandskerMap1901.jpg?width=300.
- Landsker_Line wikiPageExternalLink article_2.shtml.
- Landsker_Line wikiPageID "3660224".
- Landsker_Line wikiPageRevisionID "602897926".
- Landsker_Line hasPhotoCollection Landsker_Line.
- Landsker_Line subject Category:Geography_of_Pembrokeshire.
- Landsker_Line subject Category:Geography_of_Wales.
- Landsker_Line subject Category:History_of_Pembrokeshire.
- Landsker_Line subject Category:History_of_Wales.
- Landsker_Line subject Category:Sociolinguistics.
- Landsker_Line subject Category:Welsh_English.
- Landsker_Line subject Category:Welsh_language.
- Landsker_Line comment "The Landsker Line is a term commonly used for the language boundary between the Welsh-speaking and English-speaking areas in southwest Wales. The English-speaking areas, located on the south of the Landsker line and known as Little England beyond Wales, are notable for having been English linguistically and culturally for many centuries despite being far from the border with England.".
- Landsker_Line label "Landsker Line".
- Landsker_Line sameAs Landsker_Line.
- Landsker_Line sameAs m.09sxbc.
- Landsker_Line sameAs Q3402610.
- Landsker_Line sameAs Q3402610.
- Landsker_Line wasDerivedFrom Landsker_Line?oldid=602897926.
- Landsker_Line depiction LandskerMap1901.jpg.
- Landsker_Line isPrimaryTopicOf Landsker_Line.