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Land & Property information for Llanfair-Fechan / Llanfairfechan and places above it in the hierarchy

Llanfair-Fechan / Llanfairfechan

Details of extant records on Archives Network Wales for the following;

  • Records of Thomas Davies (Cattle Dealer) & Family    "Papers relating to Thomas Davies and family, 1834-1988, including deeds, 1864-1928, relating to properties in Llanfairfechan and Llanrhychwyn......."
  • Llanfairfechan Deeds 1855 November 13 - 1901 March 8      "Material comprises deeds etc, relating to Llanfairfechan properties, including Tyn y Llwyfan, and Maes y Bryn and Llwynysgolog....."

Caernarvonshire

Caernarfonshire Quarter Sessions, private papers  - details of extant records on Archives Network Wales
"Miscellaneous Papers being mainly Wynne, Spicer, and Robinson Papers and Papers of the Tre'r dafarn Estate found among the Quarter Sessions Records........."

See Caernarvonshire Land Tax for a list of records held at Gwynedd Council Caernarfon archives.

Wales

The Welsh Gentry Estates: a Treasure Trove of History - on NLW's blog

Welsh Ruins site

Understanding listing in Wales (CADW) "will help anyone who wants or needs to know why and how buildings are listed. It also explains how to ask for a building to be listed or delisted, and how to request a review of a listing decision. "

Understanding scheduling of monuments in Wales  (CADW) -

Caring for historic landscapes (in Wales) (CADW)

Cof Cymru - National Historic Assets of Wales, "an online service that has been developed by Cadw, Welsh Government’s Historic Environment department. Cof Cymru displays depictions and associated record descriptions of Designated Historic Assets in Wales"

Historic Wales, the map enabled portal for historic environment information in Wales. You can search hundreds of thousands of records of Welsh archaeology, buildings and artefacts.

British Listed Buildings - "an online database of buildings and structures that are listed as being of special architectural and historic interest"

Estate collections at the NLW

"Estate maps (NLW) which developed in England from the 1570s and became more widespread in Wales from the mid-18th century, formed part of the rich and varied accumulations of records which were generated by these estates over the course of their existence.  Many of these records have survived in the hundreds of estate archives (NLW) and solicitors’ collections which have been deposited in repositories such as the National Library, Bangor University Archives and local record offices across Wales." Part of a  blog entry under the #LoveMaps tag by Dr. Shaun Evans, Director of the Institute for the Study of Welsh Estates , an all-Wales research centre based at Bangor University

Further articles by Dr. Shaun Evans, part of a National Library of Wales blog entry under the #LoveMaps tag

  • This place ain’t big enough for the two of us’ – what happens at the boundaries of estates? 
  • Trees and woodlands
  • A 17th century map of Whitlera, Carmarthenshire

The WiciPics project was funded by the Welsh Government and delivered by the National Library of Wales in partnership with Menter Iaith Môn. The project focused on encouraging and enabling local communities to photograph built heritage in their local area, including listed buildings, chapels, monuments and other sites recorded in the National Monuments Record of Wales.

 

UK and Ireland

  • For English and Welsh records see PRO Leaflet: Tithe Records in the National Archives. Scottish records are held at the National Archives of Scotland in Edinburgh.
  • The University of Nottingham provides a detailed set of explanatory pages: Introduction to Deeds.
  • Legal Terms in Land Records is a useful glossary of obscure terms which occur in property deeds.
  • Robin Alston's Country House Database (archived copy) "represents a first attempt at listing country houses in the British Isles from the late medieval period to ca. 1850, together with an index to all the families so far traced as having occupied them".
  • Estate Records held by Kings College, Cambridge.
  • Disused Railway Stations website - a large and growing set of photographs of closed stations, with brief details of each station and a map showing its location.
  • The Trace My House website provides extensive information and guidance for anyone wishing to investigate the history of a house and the people who lived in it.
  • TNA's Research Guide on Houses - "Records relating to the history of houses are kept in a variety of archives. This guide will help you to find out where the information you are looking for might be, and how to go about finding it."
  • British Listed Buildings - "an online database of buildings and structures that are listed as being of special architectural and historic interest".
  • Researching Historic Buildings in the British Isles - a guide.