|
Click on a city, town or village on the map to view holiday accommodation in that place
and the surrounding area. Or to view all listed places in this area, click
here.
|
||||||
| County
Town: Wrexham County Population: 125,000 (estimate) |
||||||
|
Wrexham
has an area of 499 sq km (193 sq miles) most of which is undulating and
urbanised. The southwest of the county is rugged, hilly country covered
in moorland. The narrow strip of land that stretches to the east between
Denbighshire and Powys, comprises of the foothills of Esclusham Mountain,
at the northern end of the Cambrian Mountains.
|
||||||
|
There
are many Stone, Bronze, and Iron Age sites in the upland areas, and there
are some traces of the Roman occupation of this part of Wales. Offa's
Dyke, which passes through the county from north to south, is a reminder
of the struggles between the Welsh and Mercian Kings in the 8th and 9th
centuries. Rival Welsh Princes battled for control until the arrival of
the Normans in the late 11th and early 12th centuries. The Welsh Marches,
as the region is known, remained unstable until the era of Edward I of
England, who established control in the late 13th century.
|
||||||
|
The
town of Wrexham is the commercial centre for north Wales, but the surrounding
area is largely agricultural. Of interest in the area are St Giles Church
in Wrexham town, Erddig, a restored 17th century mansion, Marford, an
early example of a planned village, and Chirk Castle, a fortress completed
in 1310. The area also has a number of museums and visitors' centres,
including the Bersham Ironworks and Heritage Centre, and the Minera Lead
Mines and Country Park.
|
||||||
|
By clicking on an icon below, you can return to the home page, request help or move to the top of this page respectively.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||