date unknown – A planning application is turned down at
Llanrhaeadr, Clwyd, on the grounds that it would be detrimental to the Welsh language. It is the first time such a decision has ever been made.[8]
^"Crown Winners". National Eisteddfod of Wales. Retrieved 16 May 2022.
^
abcdJohn May (1994). Reference Wales. University of Wales Press. p. 202.
ISBN9780708312346.
^Donna R. White (1998). A century of Welsh myth in children's literature. Greenwood Press. p. 152.
ISBN9780313305702.
^Christopher Harvie (2008). A floating commonwealth: politics, culture, and technology on Britain's Atlantic coast, 1860-1930. OUP Oxford. p. 17.
ISBN9780198227830.
^Andrew Duncan (2005). Centre and Periphery in Modern British Poetry. Liverpool University Press. p. x.
ISBN9780853237440.
^Eirwyn George (2012). "Dic Jones". Welsh Lives: Gone But Not Forgotten. Y Lolfa.
ISBN9781847714879.
^British Book News. National Book League. 1986. p. 260.
date unknown – A planning application is turned down at
Llanrhaeadr, Clwyd, on the grounds that it would be detrimental to the Welsh language. It is the first time such a decision has ever been made.[8]
^"Crown Winners". National Eisteddfod of Wales. Retrieved 16 May 2022.
^
abcdJohn May (1994). Reference Wales. University of Wales Press. p. 202.
ISBN9780708312346.
^Donna R. White (1998). A century of Welsh myth in children's literature. Greenwood Press. p. 152.
ISBN9780313305702.
^Christopher Harvie (2008). A floating commonwealth: politics, culture, and technology on Britain's Atlantic coast, 1860-1930. OUP Oxford. p. 17.
ISBN9780198227830.
^Andrew Duncan (2005). Centre and Periphery in Modern British Poetry. Liverpool University Press. p. x.
ISBN9780853237440.
^Eirwyn George (2012). "Dic Jones". Welsh Lives: Gone But Not Forgotten. Y Lolfa.
ISBN9781847714879.
^British Book News. National Book League. 1986. p. 260.