Place:Llan Gan West, Pembrokeshire, Wales

Watchers
NameLlan Gan West
TypeCivil parish
Coordinates51.811°N 4.625°W
Located inPembrokeshire, Wales     ( - 1974)
Also located inDyfed, Wales     (1974 - 1996)
Pembrokeshire (principal area), Wales     (1996 - )
See alsoNarberth Rural, Pembrokeshire, Walesrural district 1894-1974
South Pembrokeshire District, Dyfed, Walesdistrict municipality 1974-1996
source: Family History Library Catalog

NOTE: There is also another village called Llangan in northwest Glamorgan. It also has a church dedicated to St. Canna. There are also a number of villages in Pembrokeshire with names very similar to Llan Gan.


Llan Gan East and Llan Gan West are so called because the earlier parish of Llan Gan was divided by the county border between Carmarthenshire and Pembrokeshire. By the Local Government Act, 1888, parishes could no longer belong to two counties. The account in Wilson's Gazetteer quoted below was made when Llan Gan was all one parish.

A Vision of Britain through Time provides the following description of Llan Gan from John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales of 1870-72:

"LLANGAN, a parish in the [registration] district of Narberth and counties of Pembroke[shire] and Carmarthen[shire]; on the river Taff and on the South Wales railway, 2 miles WNW of Whitland [railway] station, and 5½ NE by E of Narberth. I+. contains the village of Camvelin; and its post-town is Whitland, under Narberth. Acres of the Pembroke portion: 194; of the Carmarthen position: 4,758. Real property of the whole: £3,256. Population of the Pembroke portion: 37; of the [Carmarthen] portion: 604. Houses: 6 and 129. The property is divided among a few.
"Whitland Abbey, a modern mansion, on the site of the monastic Abba Landa, is the seat of the Hon. W. Yelverton. The monastic house originated in a cell planted by Paulinus, in the 5th century; was founded, for Cistertian monks, by Bishop Bernard, in 1143; and is now represented by little else than some portions of clustered pillars. TyGwyn-ar-Tav, or the White House of Howel Dha, stood near the monastery's site; consisted of withy rods; and was the place where Howel Dha's 13 wise men, in 926, composed the laws of Wales. The living is a vicarage in the diocese of St. David's. Value: £86. Patron: the Bishop of St. David's. The church is dedicated to St. Canna, and is tolerable."

There is no article in Wikipedia.

Research Tips

  • A 1900 Ordnance Survey map of the historic county of Pembrokeshire is available on the A Vision of Britain through Time website. This shows all the old parishes within their urban and rural districts. Large farms and estates are also marked. On the Narberth Rural District page there is a sketchmap indicating the civil parishes of Narberth Rural District as of 1935.
  • Pembrokeshire Archives has a website with a list of their holdings, as well as historical notes on places in Pembrokeshire. Its address is Prendergast, Haverfordwest, SA61 2PE; Tel No: 01437 775456 or (+44)1437 775456 (out of UK), E-mail: record.office@pembrokeshire.gov.uk
  • GENUKI has a page on each of the old counties of Wales and, under these counties, pages for each of the ecclesiastical parishes within the county. Information is gathered under a number of headings and the amount of information varies from parish to parish. Parish descriptions are based on a gazetteer dated 1835 and thus the emphasis is on ecclesiastical parishes. (Civil parishes were not yet established.) The submitter is very firm about his copyright. This should not stop anyone from reading the material.
  • The GENUKI Pembrokeshire pages include, under Description and Travel close to the bottom of the page, a link "parish map" to a map website showing boundaries and settlements before 1850. On the linked page will be maps of several parishes located close to each other.
  • GENUKI also provides references to other organizations who hold genealogical information for the local area, but there is no guarantee that the website has been kept up to date for every county.
  • FreeBMD provides a link to a list of the civil registration districts for each Welsh county from 1837 to 1996. Civil registration districts changed with varying densities of population and improvements in communication. Most counties and unitary authorities now have only one district. The list helps with providing names for the registration districts listed in the FreeBMD index and also as a guide for where to look for census entries.
  • The FamilySearch Wiki has a series of pages similar to those provided by GENUKI and these have been prepared at a later date. The Wiki may look like Wikipedia but the information has been provided for family historians. There are tables of links between the parishes in the historic counties of Wales and their post-1996 counterparts. This is the only genealogical website found that provides this information universally; others are not as thorough.
  • Some words in Welsh come up time and time again and you may want to know what they mean or how to pronounce them. For example,
    "Eglwys" is a church and the prefix "Llan" is a parish.
    "w" and "y" are used as vowels in Welsh.
    "Ll" is pronounced either "cl" or "hl" or somewhere in between. "dd" sounds like "th".
    The single letter "Y" is "the" and "Yn" means "in".
    "uwch" means "above"; "isod" is "below" or "under";
    "gwch" is "great", "ychydig" is "little";
    "cwm" is a "valley".
In both Welsh and English all these words are commonly used in place names in the UK. Place names are often hyphenated, or two words are combined into one. Entering your problem phrase into Google Search, including the term "meaning in Welsh", will lead you to Google's quick translation guide. I'm no authority; these are just things I have picked up while building up this gazetteer for WeRelate.