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Carmarthen Sports

For all your sports services, from winter sports to badminton, UFindUs has a vast range of listings available. The sports and fitness directory lists a variety of sporting establishments locally and all around the UK. The UFindUs user friendly sports directory provides you with relevant information on a range of sporting events and services including trophies and medals, water sports, tennis and skating. Our sites for sports and fitness in the UK incorporate football clubs and motor sport up to martial arts and horse riding. The sports category also focuses on golfing, fitness equipment and climbing. You will discover a rapid and efficient service with the UFindUs directory and all the sports and services sites listed will supply you with all the necessary information you need to know about the services they offer as well as the essential contact details.

About Carmarthen - show infohide info

When Britannia was a Roman province, Carmarthen was the civitas known as Moridunum (meaning sea fort) of the Celtic tribe known as the Demetae. Carmarthen is possibly the oldest town in Wales and was recorded by Ptolemy and in the Antonine Itinerary. The roman fort can be seen still and is believed to date from AD75-77. The strategic importance of Carmarthen was such that the Norman William fitz Baldwin built a castle probably around 1094. The existing castle site is known to have been used since 1105. The castle was destroyed by Llywelyn the Great in 1215. In 1223 the castle was rebuilt and permission was received to wall the town (a murage). Carmarthen was probably the first mediaeval walled town in Wales. In 1405 the town was taken and the castle was sacked by Owain Glyndwr. In the 16th and 17th centuries the dominant business of Carmarthen was still agriculture and related trades including woollen manufacture. In the mid 18th century the iron and coal trades became much more important although Carmarthen never developed Ironworks on the scale of Dowlais or Merthyr Tydfil. Modern day Carmarthen is a midsized town of around 20,000 people. It is served by rail links through Swansea to Cardiff. Carmarthen has a large amount of surviving history including the roman amphitheatre and the castle. The Gwili Railway, a section of the former railway line to Aberystwyth, has been re-opened as a steam powered railway for tourists. It is the site of Trinity College Carmarthen. Carmarthen has a large proportion of Welsh speakers, with the county of Carmarthenshire as a whole boasting the largest population of such by number (the largest Welsh-speaking population by proportion is in Gwynedd). Although Carmarthen is on navigable water the harbour sees no commercial use, in part due to the treacherous approaches.

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