Ruthin
Ruthin is the county town of Denbighshire in north Wales and also a neighborhood in the southerly part of the Vale of Clwyd. The older town, the castle as well as St Peter's Square lie on a hillside, yet many more recent components in the flood plain of the River Clwyd. This emerged numerous times in the late 1990s-- flood-control works costing £ 3 million were finished in autumn 2003. Ruthin is skirted by villages such as Pwllglas as well as Rhewl. The name comes from the Welsh words rhudd (red) as well as din (fort), reflecting the colour of the sandstone bedrock, of which the castle was built in 1277-- 1284. The initial name was Castell Coch yng Ngwern-fôr (Red Castle in the Sea Swamps). The mill neighbors. Maen Huail is a signed up ancient monument attributed to the sibling of Gildas as well as King Arthur, located outside Barclays Bank in St Peter's Square. The population at the 2001 Census was 5,218, of whom 47 percent were male as well as 53 percent lady. The ordinary age of the population was 43.0 years and also the population is 98.2 percent "white". According to the 2011 census, 68 percent were birthed in Wales and also 25 percent in England. Welsh speakers make up 42 per cent of the town's population.