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LLANDUDNO

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Source
Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911) / britannica_1911
License
public_domain
Chunk ID
1911:llandudno:893d0f030f4e
Section
Hash Algorithm
sha256
Stored Hash
53bd259aed6326c59faaf1c4dffe2f72ff15a23d8a3b95e6701437ca3eec7bdc
Computed Hash
53bd259aed6326c59faaf1c4dffe2f72ff15a23d8a3b95e6701437ca3eec7bdc
Normalizer
ggnorm 1.0
Observed
2026-02-08 18:43:21
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Verified Text

llandudno, a seaside resort in the arfon parliamentary division of carnarvonshire, north wales, in a detached portion of the county east of the conwy, on a strip of sandy soil terminating in the massive limestone of great orme's head. pop. of urban district (1901) 9279. the town is reached by the london & north-western railway, and lies 227 m. n.w. of london. a village in 1850, llandudno is to-day one of the most flourishing watering-places in north wales. sheltered by the great orme on the n.w. and by the little orme on the e., it faces a wide bay of the irish sea, and is backed by low sandhills. a marine drive encircles the great orme. the little orme has caverns and abounds in sea birds and rare plants. close to the town are the gloddaeth woods, open to visitors. on the great orme are old circular buildings, an ancient fortress, a "rocking-stone" (_cryd tudno_) and the 7th-century church of st tudno, restored in 1885. druidical and other british antiquities are numerous in the district. at deganwy, or diganwy, 2 m. from llandudno, is a castle, dinas gonwy (conwy fort), known to english historians as gannoc, dating from the 11th or (according to the welsh) earlier than the 9th century.