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Dolgellau
Dolgellau is a market community as well as neighborhood in Gwynedd, north-west Wales, resting on the River Wnion, a tributary of the River Mawddach. It is generally the county town of the historical region of Merionethshire (Welsh: Meirionnydd, Sir Feirionnydd), which shed its administrative condition when Gwynedd was developed in 1974. Dolgellau is the major base for mountain climbers of Cadair Idris. Although extremely little, it is the second largest negotiation in Southern Gwynedd after Tywyn. The neighborhood includes Penmaenpool. The name of the community is of unsure beginning, although dôl is Welsh for "field" or "dale", and also (y) gelli (soft anomaly of celli) means "grove" or "spinney", and is common in your area in names for ranches in protected spaces. This would appear to be one of the most likely derivation, providing the translation "Grove Meadow". It has actually likewise been recommended that the name might originate from words cell, suggesting "cell", equating consequently as "Meadow of [monks'] cells", yet this seems less most likely considering the history of the name. The earliest tape-recorded punctuation (from 1253, in the Survey of Merioneth) is "Dolkelew", although a spelling "Dolgethley" dates from 1285. From after that until the 19th century, the majority of spellings were along the lines of "Dôlgelly" "Dolgelley", "Dolgelly" or "Dolgelli" (Owain Glyndwr's scribe wrote "Dolguelli"). Thomas Pennant utilized the form "Dolgelleu" in his Tours of Wales, and also this was the type made use of in the Church Registers in 1723, although it never had much currency. In 1825 the Registers had "Dolgellau", which create Robert Vaughan of Hengwrt embraced in 1836. While this kind might originate from an incorrect etymology, it came to be standard in Welsh and also is now the basic form in both Welsh and English. It was taken on as the main name by the regional rural area council in 1958. Shortly before the closure of the community's railway station it presented indications reviewing variously Dolgelly, Dolgelley as well as Dolgellau.