Tenby
Tenby is a walled seaside town in Pembrokeshire, Wales, on the western side of Carmarthen Bay. Tenby is a city government area. Notable attributes consist of 2 1/2 miles (4.0 kilometres) of sandy beaches and also the Pembrokeshire Coast Path, the 13th century medieval town wall surfaces, consisting of the Five Arcs barbican gatehouse, Tenby Museum as well as Art Gallery, the 15th century St. Mary's Church, as well as the National Trust's Tudor Merchant's House. The community is offered by Tenby railway station. Boats cruise from Tenby's harbour to the overseas monastic Caldey Island. St Catherine's Island is tidal and also has a 19th century Palmerston Fort. With its tactical position on the much west coast of Britain, and also an all-natural sheltered harbour from both the Atlantic Ocean as well as the Irish Sea, Tenby was an all-natural negotiation factor, probably a hillside fort with the mercantile nature of the negotiation potentially establishing under Hiberno-Norse influence. The earliest referral to a negotiation at Tenby remains in "Etmic Dinbych", a rhyme probably from the 9th century, preserved in the 14th century Book of Taliesin.