Brecon
| |
|---|---|
Location withinPowys | |
| Population | 8,250 (2011)[1] |
| OS grid reference | SO045285 |
| Community |
|
| Principal area | |
| Preserved county | |
| Country | Wales |
| Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
| Post town | BRECON |
| Postcode district | LD3 |
| Dialling code | 01874 |
| Police | Dyfed-Powys |
| Fire | Mid and West Wales |
| Ambulance | Welsh |
| UK Parliament | |
| Senedd Cymru – Welsh Parliament | |

Brecon (/ˈbrɛkən/;[3]Welsh:Aberhonddu;pronounced[ˌabɛrˈhɔnði]), archaically known asBrecknock, is amarket town inPowys, midWales. In 1841, it had a population of 5,701.[4] The population in 2001 was 7,901,[5] increasing to 8,250 at the 2011 census. Historically it was thecounty town ofBrecknockshire (Breconshire); although its role as such was eclipsed with the formation of the County of Powys, it remains an important local centre. Brecon is the third-largest town in Powys, afterNewtown andYstradgynlais. It lies north of theBrecon Beacons mountain range, but is just within theBrecon Beacons National Park.
TheWelsh name, Aberhonddu, means "mouth of the Honddu". It is derived from theRiver Honddu, which meets theRiver Usk near thetown centre, a short distance away from the River Tarell which enters the Usk a few hundred metres upstream. After theDark Ages the original Welsh name of the kingdom in whose territory Brecon stands was (in modern orthography) "Brycheiniog", which was lateranglicised to Brecknock or Brecon, and probably derives fromBrychan, the eponymous founder of the kingdom.[6]
Before the building of the bridge over the Usk, Brecon was one of the few places where the river could beforded. InRoman BritainY Gaer (Cicucium) was established as a Roman cavalry base for the conquest ofRoman Wales and Brecon was first established as a military base.[7]
Theconfluence of theRiver Honddu and theRiver Usk made for a valuable defensive position for theNormancastle which overlooks the town, built byBernard de Neufmarche in the late 11th century.[8]: 80 Gerald of Wales came and made some speeches in 1188 to recruit men to go to theCrusades.[9]
Brecon's town walls were constructed byHumphrey de Bohun after 1240.[10]: 8 The walls were built of cobble, with fourgatehouses and was protected by ten semi-circularbastions.[10]: 9 In 1400 the Welsh princeOwain Glyndŵr rose in rebellion against English rule, and in response in 1404, 100marks was spent by the royal government improving the fortifications to protect Brecon in the event of a Welsh attack. Brecon's walls were largely destroyed during theEnglish Civil War. Today only fragments survive, including some earthworks and parts of one of the gatehouses; these are protected asscheduled monuments.[11]
In Shakespeare's playKing Richard III, the Duke of Buckingham is suspected of supporting the Welsh pretender Richmond (the future Henry VII), and declares:
O, let me think on Hastings and be gone
To Brecknock, while my fearful head is on![12]

A priory was dissolved in 1538, and Brecon's Dominican Friary of St Nicholas was suppressed in August of the same year.[13] About 250 m (270 yd) north of the castle standsBrecon Cathedral, a fairly modest building compared to many cathedrals. The role of cathedral is a fairly recent one, and was bestowed upon the church in 1923 with the formation of theDiocese of Swansea and Brecon from what was previously thearchdeaconry of Brecon — a part of theDiocese of St Davids.[14]
Saint Mary's Church began as achapel of ease to the priory but most of the building is dated to later medieval times. The West Tower, some 27 m (90 ft) high, was built in 1510 byEdward, Duke of Buckingham at a cost of £2,000. The tower has eight bells which have been rung since 1750, the heaviest of which weighs 810 kg (16 long hundredweight). They were cast byRudhall of Gloucester. In March 2007 the bells were removed from the church tower for refurbishment. When the priory was elevated to the status of a cathedral, St Mary's became the parish church.[15][16] It is a Grade II*listed building.[17]

TheChurch of St David, referred to locally as Llanfaes Church, was probably founded in the early sixteenth century. The first parish priest, Maurice Thomas, was installed there by John Blaxton, Archdeacon of Brecon in 1555. The name is derived from the Welsh – Llandewi yn y Maes – which translates as 'St David's in the field'.[18]
Plough Lane Chapel, also known as Plough United Reformed Church, is aGrade II* listed building. The present building dates back to 1841 and was re-modelled by Owen Morris Roberts.[19]
After the Reformation, some Breconshire families such as the Havards, the Gunters and the Powells persisted with Catholicism despite its suppression. In the 18th Century a Catholic Mass house in Watergate was active, and Rev John Williams was the local Catholic priest from 1788 to 1815. The present parish priest is Rev Father Jimmy Sebastian Pulickakunnel MCBS since 2012. The Watergate house was sold in 1805, becoming the current Watergate Baptist Chapel, and property purchased as the priest's residence and a chapel between Wheat Street and the current St Michael Street, including the "Three Cocks Inn"; about this time Catholic parish records began again. The normal round of bishop's visitations and confirmations resumed in the 1830s. In 1832 most civil liberties were restored to Catholics and they became able to practise their faith more openly. A simple Gothic church, dedicated to St Michael and designed byCharles Hansom, was built in 1851 at a cost of £1,000.[13]
The east end of town has two military establishments:
Approximately 9 miles (14 km) to the west of Brecon isSennybridge Training Area, an important training facility for theBritish Army.[22]
The town sits within the Usk valley at the point where the Honddu and Tarell rivers join it from north and south respectively. Two low hills overlook the town, the 331m highPen-y-crug to its northwest and 231m highSlwch Tump to the east. Both are crowned by Iron Age hillforts. The modern administrative community includes the town of Brecon on the north bank of the Usk together with the smaller settlement of Llanfaes on its southern bank. Llanfaes is built largely on the floodplain of the Usk and the Tarell; embankments and walls protect parts of both Brecon and Llanfaes from this risk.[23]

There are two tiers of local government covering Brecon, atcommunity (town) andcounty level: Brecon Town Council andPowys County Council. The town council is based atBrecon Guildhall on the High Street.[24]
The town council elects a mayor annually. In May 2018 it elected its first mixed race mayor, local hotelier Emmanuel (Manny) Trailor.[25]
In 2010 the Town Council installed a plaque to the slave-trader Captain Thomas Phillips captain of theHannibal slave ship.[26] During the worldwideBlack Lives Matter protests the plaque was removed and thrown into the River Usk.[citation needed][27] Following the protests the Council passed two resolutions on 20 September 2020 to display the plaque in the local museum, Y Gaer, and to request that it is displayed as part of a suitable exhibit detailing the wider context, without being restored. It was also resolved unanimously that a working group is established to consider whether a new plaque, new work of art, or loaned artwork should be commissioned, and where any new piece should be located.[28]
Brecon was anancient borough. Its date of becoming a borough is unknown, but it was described as havingburgesses in 1100 and its first knowncharter was issued in 1276.[29] Until 1536, the town formed part of the widerLordship of Brecknock, amarcher lordship. In 1536 the new county of Brecknockshire was created, with Brecon as its county town.[30]
The borough of Brecon's responsibilities were originally primarily judicial, holding various courts. The borough council also owned themanorial rights to the borough, oversaw the town's market and fairs, and ran elections for theborough's member of parliament. In 1776 a separate body ofimprovement commissioners was established to supply the town with water and pave and light the streets.[31]
The borough was reformed to become amunicipal borough in 1836 under theMunicipal Corporations Act 1835, which standarised how most boroughs operated across the country.[32] The improvement commissioners were abolished in 1850 when their functions were taken over by the borough council.[33][34]
The borough was abolished in 1974, with its area instead becoming a community called Brecon within the largerBorough of Brecknock in the new county ofPowys. The former borough council's functions therefore passed to Brecknock Borough Council, which was in turn abolished in 1996 and its functions passed to Powys County Council.[35][36]

Brecon hasprimary schools, with asecondary school andfurther education college (Brecon Beacons College) on the northern edge of the town. The secondary school, known as Brecon High School, was formed from separate boys' and girls' grammar schools ('county schools') and Brecon Secondary Modern School, after comprehensive education was introduced into Breconshire in the early 1970s. The town is home to an independent school,Christ College, which was founded in 1541.[37]
The junction of the east–westA40 (London-Monmouth-Carmarthen-Fishguard) and the north–southA470 (Cardiff-Merthyr Tydfil-Llandudno) is on the east side of Brecon town centre. The nearest airport isCardiff Airport.[38]
The town's primary public transport hub is the Brecon Interchange at the B4601 Heol Gouesnou, served mainly by the long-distance T4, T6 and T14 routes operated byTrawsCymru. Local services 40A and 40B, operated byStagecoach South Wales, connect the town centre with the suburbs, operating at a roughly-hourly frequency.[39]
TheMonmouthshire and Brecon Canal runs for 35 miles (56 km) between Brecon andPontnewydd,Cwmbran. It then continues toNewport, the towpath being the line of communication and the canal being disjointed by obstructions and road crossings. The canal was built between 1797 and 1812 to link Brecon with Newport and theSevern Estuary. The canalside in Brecon was redeveloped in the 1990s and is now the site of two mooring basins andTheatr Brycheiniog.[40]

The bridge carries the B4601 across the River Usk. A plaque on a house wall adjacent to the eastern end of the bridge records that the present bridge was built in 1563 to replace a medieval bridge destroyed by floods in 1535. It was repaired in 1772 and widened in 1794 by Thomas Edwards, the son ofWilliam Edwards ofEglwysilan. It had stone parapets until the 1970s when the present deck was superimposed on the old structure. The bridge was painted byJ. M. W. Turner c.1769.[41]
TheNeath and Brecon Railway reached Brecon in 1867, terminating atFree Street. By this point, Brecon already had two other railway stations:

TheHereford, Hay and Brecon Railway was opened gradually from Hereford towards Brecon. The first section opened in 1862, with passenger services on the complete line starting on 21 September 1864.[45]TheMidland Railway Company (MR) took over the HH&BR from 1 October 1869, leasing the line by an Act of 30 July 1874 and absorbing the HH&BR in 1876.[46] The MR was absorbed into theLondon, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) on 1 January 1923.[47]
Passenger services toMerthyr ended in 1958,Neath in October 1962 andNewport in December 1962. In 1962 the important line toHereford closed. Therefore, Brecon lost all its train services before the 1963Reshaping of British Railways report (often referred to as theBeeching Axe) was implemented.[48]
Brecon hosted theNational Eisteddfod in 1889.[49]
August sees the annualBrecon Jazz Festival. Concerts are held in both open air and indoor venues, including the town's market hall and the 400-seatTheatr Brycheiniog, which opened in 1997.[40]
October sees the annual 4-day weekend Brecon Baroque Music Festival, organised by leading violinistRachel Podger.[50]
Idris Davies put "the pink bells of Brecon" in his poem published as XV inGwalia Deserta (byT. S. Eliot). This was copied in "Quite Early One Morning" byDylan Thomas, put to music byPete Seeger as the song "The Bells of Rhymney", then recorded bythe Byrds where it became known to millions although by then the Brecon line had gone missing.[51]




Brecon istwinned with:
Charles Kemble (1775–1854), a younger brother of....