Cornwall
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
- For places outside the UK called "Cornwall", please see Cornwall (disambiguation).
| Cornwall | |
|---|---|
| Geography | |
| Region: | South West |
| Area: | 3,563 km² |
| Admin HQ: | Truro |
| Borders on: | Devon (cerem.) |
| Demographics | |
| Population: (2002 est.) | 508,412 |
| Density: | 142 / km² |
| Ethnicity: | 99.0% White |
| Politics | |
| Cornwall County Council http://www.cornwall.gov.uk/ | |
| Administration: | All party |
| MPs: |
Candy Atherton Paul Tyler Colin Breed Andrew George Matthew Taylor |
| Districts | |
Cornwall is also a duchy possessed by the Heir Apparent to the British throne as Duke of Cornwall. The modern Duchy of Cornwall operates as a property company owning 2% of the land in Cornwall and a greater acreage elsewhere in Britain.
The modern English name is derived from the tribal name Cornovii and the Anglo-Saxon word wealas meaning "foreigners". Cornovii may mean "horn [i.e. peninsula] people". Wealas is also the origin of the name Wales. [1] Cornwall borders the county of Devon at the River Tamar. Major road links between Cornwall and the rest of Great Britain are the A38 which crosses the Tamar at Plymouth via the Tamar Bridge, and the A30 which crosses the border south of Launceston. A car ferry also links Plymouth with the town of Torpoint on the opposite side of the Hamoaze. A rail bridge built by Isambard Kingdom Brunel (1859) provides the only other major transport link.
Cornwall was the principal source of tin for the civilisations of the ancient Mediterranean, and at one time the Cornish were the world's foremost experts at mining. As Cornwall's reserves of tin began to be exhausted many Cornishmen emigrated to places such as the Americas, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa where their skills were in demand. The tin mines in Cornwall are now economically worked-out at current prices, but the expertise and culture of the Cornish tin miners lives on in a number of places around the world. Several Cornish mining words are in use in English language mining terminology, such as costean, gunnies, and vug.
Although the Cornish people have always had their own distinctive culture, identity and language, Cornwall is now administered as an English county. A number of complex jurisdictional ambiguities remain unresolved, however, and will probably remain so in perpetuity. As an example of the inherent complexity of this ambiguity, Sir George Harrison (Attorney General to the Duchy of Cornwall) during the Crown-v-Duchy Foreshore dispute of 1858 described Cornwall as "A palatine state, extraterritorial to the English Crown".
Cornish surnames are usually prefixed by Pen, Pol or Tre; "By Tre, Pol and Pen ye shall know Cornishmen." The Cornish language is closely related to Welsh and Breton, and less so to Irish and Scots Gaelic. It continued as a living Celtic language until 1777 and the death of Dolly Pentreath, the last person thought to have used only the Cornish language (although this is disputed on a number of counts). The publication of Henry Jenner's "Handbook of the Cornish Language" in 1904 caused a resurgence of interest in the Cornish language and efforts are being made to revive it. Although there has never been a census, there are some 2,000 Cornish speakers, 100-150 of whom are fluent. It has recently been officially recognised by the UK government as a minority language.
Traditionally, the Cornish have been nonconformists, in both religion and politics.
| Saint Piran's Flag |
Cornwall was the setting for the popular series of Poldark books by Winston Graham, and for the television series based on those books.
Towns and villages
- Bodmin Boscastle Bude
- Charlestown Chysauster Ancient Village
- Falmouth Fowey
- Goonhilly
- Hayle Helston Holywell
- Lamorna Lizard Looe Looe Island
- Marazion
- Newlyn Newquay Newtown
- Padstow Penzance Polperro Polruan
- Redruth
- St Austell St Ives St Just
- Truro Tintagel
- Upton
- Werrington
Places of interest
- Bodmin Moor
- Carn Euny
- Chun Castle
- Chun Quoit
- Cornwall Wildlife Trust
- Eden Project
- River Fowey
- Land's End
- Lanyon Quoit
- The Lizard, the most southerly point of Great Britain
- The Lost Gardens of Heligan
- Men-an-Tol
- Minack Theatre
- Penlee House
- Roseland Peninsula
- St Michael's Mount
- Tintagel Castle
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