Whitland
Whitland is a town and also a community in Carmarthenshire, Wales, pushing the River Tâf. Whitland takes its name from its middle ages Cistercian abbey. The abbey pre-dates Tintern and now is quite a spoil. The "white land" of the name (Latin: Albalanda) may describe the famous Ty Gwyn (English: White House) where Hywel's parliament satisfied, to the monks' unstained woolen cloaks, or to the abbey's sedimentary rock. Whitland was liquified throughout Henry VIII's conversion to a reformed church. Much of its limestone was taken as well as used for various other buildings. The magnificent setup of the spoil and the Abbey's format can still be checked out. An electoral ward of the very same name exists consisting of the Henllanfallteg community with an overall population of 2,272.