(Redirected from Welsh self-government)'Welsh nationalism' is a popular political and cultural movement that emerged during the nineteenth-century. It generally seeks independence for Wales outside of the United Kingdom, an aspiration supported by around 1 in 5 of the population of Wales,
[1] and is further defined by a desire to protect and enhance the cultural distinctiveness of Wales.
Conquest

The mediaeval kingdoms of Wales
Through most of its
history before the
Anglo-Norman Conquest, Wales was divided into several kingdoms. From time to time, rulers such as
Hywel Dda and
Rhodri the Great managed to unify many of the kingdoms, but their lands were divided on their deaths. By
1282, only
Gwynedd stood out, whose ruler was accorded the title ''
Prince of Wales''. Following the defeat of
Llywelyn the Last by
Edward I Wales lost its last
independent kingdom and became subject to the
English crown, either directly or indirectly. It retained some vestiges of distinction from its neighbour however, namely the
Welsh language, culture,
law and customs.
Until the victory of
Henry VII at
Bosworth in
1485, the Welsh on many occasions revolted against
English rule in an attempt to gain their independence. The greatest such revolt was that of Welsh nobleman
Owain Glyndŵr, who gained popular support in
1400, and defeated an English force at
Plynlimon in
1401. In response, the English parliament passed repressive measures denying the Welsh the right of assembly. Glyndŵr was proclaimed Prince of Wales, and sought assistance from the
French, but by
1409 his forces were scattered under the attacks of King
Henry IV of England and further repressive measures imposed on the Welsh. Glyndŵr himself vanished, and his final resting place remains a mystery.
Annexation
Throughout the period of conquest the
Welsh poets kept alive the dream of independence. In what was known as the ''canu brud'' (
prophetic poetry), the idea of the coming of a
messiah-like figure, known as ''
Y Mab Darogan'' (The Son of
Destiny), who would not only remove the English yoke but win back the whole of the
Great Britain for the
Brythonic (i.e. Welsh) people. In the Welsh-born
Henry VII the Welsh believed that "the Son of Destiny" had come and there were no more revolts or talk of revolt – the people of Wales became as loyal as any of the King's other subjects.
During the reign of
Henry VIII the
Laws in Wales Acts were passed, formally integrating Wales into the English legal system. The repressive measures against the Welsh that had been in place since the revolt of
Owain Glyndŵr over a century earlier were removed. It also gave political representation at the Westminster Parliament for Wales. Wales continues to share a
legal identity with England to a large degree as the joint entity known simply as ''England'' until
1967 and ''
England and Wales'' since then. The laws also finished the partitioning of Wales into
counties that was begun in 1282 and established local government on the
English model. The laws also had the effect of making
English the language to be used for all official purposes. This excluded most
native Welsh from any formal office unless they adopted English to some degree or other.
On the whole the Welsh who had a way of expressing an opinion welcomed these moves and saw them as further proof that Henry VII and his descendants were the long-awaited sons of destiny and that Wales had regained what it had lost at the conquest of
1282.
Patriotism, or a non-politicised form of nationalism, remained a strong force in Wales with pride in its
language,
customs and
history common amongst all levels of
society.
Revolutionary ideas
Along with the rest of
Europe the effects of the
French Revolution were felt in Wales. It brought to the forefront a small minority of Welsh people who sympathised with
revolutionary ideas: people such as
Richard Price (1723–1791),
Iolo Morganwg (1747–1826), and
Morgan John Rhys (1760–1804).
In the meantime,
counter-revolutionary or even
anti-revolutionary ideas flourished amongst the leaders of the
Welsh Methodist revival, but the consequences of turning Wales into a
nation with a
nonconformist majority was to create a new sense of
Welshness.
Nineteenth century
The rapid industrialisation of parts of Wales, especially
Merthyr Tydfil and adjoining areas, gave rise to strong and
radical Welsh
working class movements which led to the
Merthyr Rising of
1831, the widespread support for
Chartism, and the
Newport Rising of
1839.
With the establishment of the
Presbyterian Church of Wales nonconformism triumphed in Wales, and gradually the previously majority of
conservative voices within it allied themselves with the more radical and
liberal voices within the older
dissenting
churches of the
Baptists and
Congregationalists. This
radicalism was exemplified by the
Congregationalist minister David Rees of
Llanelli who edited the radical
magazine ''Y Diwygiwr'' (= The Reformer) from 1835 until 1865. But he was not a lone voice:
William Rees (also known as,
Gwilym Hiraethog) established the radical ''Yr Amserau'' (= The Times) in 1843, and in the same year
Samuel Roberts also established another radical magazine, ''Y Cronicl'' (= The Chronicle). Both were Congregationalist
pastors.
The growth of radicalism and the gradual
politicisation of Welsh life did not see any successful attempt to establish a separate political vehicle for promoting Welsh nationalism. But voices did appear within the
Liberal Party, which made great gains in Wales in the
nineteenth century with the extension of the
franchise and the tacit support of
Welsh nonconformity. An intended
independence movement,
Cymru Fydd, established on the pattern of
Young Ireland was established in 1886 but was short lived.
For the majority in Wales, however, the important question was not one of independence or self-government, but of the
disestablishment of the
Church of England in Wales. Nevertheless, their non-political nationalism was strong enough to establish
national institiutions such as the
University of Wales in 1893, and the
National Library of Wales and the
National Museum of Wales in 1907.
Treachery of the Blue Books
This feeling of difference was exacerbated by the results of the publication of the "Reports of the
commissioners of enquiry into the state of
education in Wales" in 1847. The reports found the education system in Wales to be in a dreadful state, although they formed this opinion because the Commissioners were exclusively English-speaking while the education system was then largely conducted in Welsh, therefore the Commissioners could not form a realistic opinion of the education system. However, they concluded that the Welsh as a people were dirty, ignorant, lazy, drunk, superstitious, lying, and cheating because they were
Nonconformists and spoke
Welsh. Very quickly, because of its blue covers, the report was labelled ''Brad y Llyfrau Gleision'', or in English, "The
Treachery of the Blue Books".
The influence of European nationalism
Two nineteenth-century figures are associated with the beginnings of Welsh nationalism in the specific political sense,
Michael D. Jones (1822–1898) and
Emrys ap Iwan (1848–1906). Inspired by the
Revolutions of 1848 and the growth of
Irish nationalism they saw that Wales was different from
England in having its own language which the vast majority of its residents spoke and in holding to a nonconformist form of the
Christian religion which faced many disabilities in the face of the
state church. Gradually they started to ask what was the difference between nations like
Ireland and
Hungary, and Wales, weren't they all nations "struggling to be free"?
Twentieth century

Senedd, home to the National Assembly for Wales
Nationalism grew as an influence in
twentieth-century Wales, but not as much as in
eastern Europe, or
Ireland. At various times both the
Labour Party and the
Liberal Party took up the cause of Welsh home rule, or devolution. It was with the establishment of
Plaid Cymru (The Party of Wales) in
1925, however that Welsh independence from the UK was first advocated.
The election of a Labour Government in 1997 included a commitment to hold a
referendum on the establishment of a
Welsh Assembly. The referendum was narrowly won, with Plaid Cymru, the
Liberal Democrats and much of Welsh
civic society supporting the Labour Government's proposals.
Plaid Cymru
Plaid Cymru was founded in the
1920s by the existing organisations ''
Byddin Ymreolwyr Cymru'' and ''
Y Mudiad Cymreig''. Plaid Cymru returned their first
Member of Parliament in 1966 in the
Carmarthen by-election, and today has three such reprentatives, along with 15 Members of the 60 strong
Welsh Assembly (making them narrowly the second-largest party). Traditionally, support for the party is concentrated in the
rural Welsh-speaking areas of north and west Wales, from where all their MPs hail. In the late 1960s and 1990s the party also enjoyed brief surges in support.
Other nationalist parties and movements
★ ''
Cymru Goch'' (= Red Wales) or, "Welsh Socialists". Cymru Goch as the movement was popularly known, was founded in 1987 to fight for a free and
socialist Wales. It published the monthly magazine ''Y Faner Goch'' (= The Red Flag). In 2003, it became part of
Forward Wales.
★
Independent Wales (Welsh: ''Cymru Annibynnol''). A political party founded in 2000 by some former members of
Plaid Cymru under the leadership of
John Humphries, a former journalist and editor of the
Western Mail. The party fought the
2003 National Assembly elections by putting up candidates for the regional seats. Shortly after the election they dissolved. The main reason for its existence was unhappiness with the level of Plaid Cymru's commitment to independence.
★ ''
Cymdeithas yr Iaith Gymraeg'' (= The Welsh Language Society). Established in 1962 by members of Plaid Cymru, it is a
pressure group campaigning for Welsh language rights. It uses
non-violent direct action in its campaigning, and sees itself as part of the
global resistance movement.
★ ''
Cymuned'' (= Community). A pressure group campaigning for Welsh language rights established in 2001, it mainly concentrates its efforts in the western parts of Wales where Welsh is still a living community language. Also sees itself as part of global movements for the
rights of indigenous peoples.
★ ''Cymdeithas Cyfamod y Cymry Rhydd'' (= The Society of the Covenant of the Free Welsh). Established in 1987, again because of unhappiness with the level of Plaid Cymru's commitment to independence. They achieved publicity by producing their own Welsh
passports.
★ ''Mudiad Adfer'' was a splinter group of
Cymdeithas yr Iaith Gymraeg (the Welsh language Society) in the 1970s. Taking its Welsh-only philosophy from the works and teachings of
Emyr Llewelyn, it believed in the creation of "Y Fro Gymraeg" - a
monoglot region based on the existing Welsh language heartlands in the
west of Wales. Adfer slowly disappeared from the scene in the late 1980s.
★ ''Mudiad Rhyddhad Cymru'' (Cymru Liberation Movement): A meeting took place in Flintshire on the 10th January 2004 between representatives of
Balchder Cymru,
Cymru 1400,
Medi 16, and the
RDM. It was agreed during the meeting that all four organisations should amalgamate to form a stronger nationalist / republican movement. It is believed that such a move will strengthen the struggle for an independent Welsh republic. The new movement has been named '
Mudiad Rhyddhad Cymru' (MRC). Aims a. To campaign for an independent Welsh republic; b. To defend Cymru, its language and culture.
Violent nationalism
Though mainstream nationalism in Wales has been constitutional, there have been violent movements associated with it.
In 1952 a small
republican movement, ''Y Gweriniaethwyr'' (= The Republicans), were the first to use violence when they made an unsuccessful attempt to blow up a
pipeline leading from the
Claerwen dam in
mid Wales to
Birmingham.
In the 1960s two movements were established in protest against the drowning of the
Tryweryn valley and the
1969 investiture of
Charles, Prince of Wales:
Mudiad Amddiffyn Cymru (= Welsh Defence Movement, also known as MAC) and the "
Free Wales Army" (also known as FWA). These two movements were responsible for numerous bombing attacks on
water pipelines and
power lines across Wales. On the eve of the investiture two members of MAC, Alwyn Jones and George Taylor, died as the bomb they were planting on the
railway line to be used by the
Royal Train exploded.
The late 1970s and the 1980s saw an organisation calling itself
Meibion Glyndŵr (''the sons of Glyndŵr'') responsible for a spate of
arson attacks against
holiday homes throughout Wales.
See also
★
Irish nationalism
★
Scottish independence
★
Cornish self-government
★
English self-government
★
Breton nationalism ''(
Brittany)''
★
Pan-Celticism
★
Modern Celts
★
Celt
★
Cultural imperialism
★
Celtic Congress
★
Celtic League (political organisation)
★
List of active autonomist and secessionist movements
★
Welsh history
Sources/Bibliography
★ Clewes, Roy (1980), ''To dream of freedom: the struggle of M.A.C. and the Free Wales Army''. Talybont: Y Lolfa. ISBN 0-904864-95-2.
★ Davies, John (Ed.) (1981), ''Cymru'n deffro: hanes y Blaid Genedlaethol, 1925-75''. Talybont: Y Lolfa. ISBN 0-86243-011-9. ''A series of essays on the history of the first fifty years of Plaid Cymru''.
★ Davies, R. R (1997) ''The Revolt of Owain Glyn Dwr''. Oxford, OUP, ISBN 0-19-285336-8.
★ Morgan, K. O. (1971), 'Radicalism and nationalism'. In A. J. Roderick (Ed.), ''Wales through the ages. Vol II: Modern Wales'', pp. 193-200. Llandybïe: Christopher Davies (Publishers) Ltd. ISBN 0-7154-0292-7.
★ Williams, G. A, ''When Was Wales?: A History of the Welsh''. London. Black Raven Press, ISBN 0-85159-003-9
External link
Younger Scots and Welsh may become more likely to support Nationalist parties Economic & Social Research Council