Tenby
Tenby is a walled seaside community in Pembrokeshire, Wales, on the western side of Carmarthen Bay. Tenby is a local government area. Noteworthy features consist of 2 1/2 miles (4.0 km) of sandy beaches as well as the Pembrokeshire Coast Path, the 13th century medieval town wall surfaces, consisting of the Five Arches barbican lodge, Tenby Museum and also Art Gallery, the 15th century St. Mary's Church, and the National Trust's Tudor Merchant's House. The town is served by Tenby train station. Watercrafts sail from Tenby's harbour to the offshore monastic Caldey Island. St Catherine's Island is tidal as well as has a 19th century Palmerston Fort. With its calculated position on the far west coastline of Britain, as well as a natural protected harbour from both the Atlantic Sea as well as the Irish Sea, Tenby was a natural settlement factor, probably a hill fort with the mercantile nature of the settlement possibly developing under Hiberno-Norse impact. The earliest referral to a settlement at Tenby is in "Etmic Dinbych", a rhyme possibly from the 9th century, protected in the 14th century Book of Taliesin.