1982 in Wales
This article is about the particular significance of the year 1982 to Wales and its people.
Incumbents
- Secretary of State for Wales – Nicholas Edwards
- Archbishop of Wales – Gwilym Williams, Bishop of Bangor
- Archdruid of the National Eisteddfod of Wales – Jâms Nicholas
Events
- 2 January – The Free [Wales Army|Welsh Army of Workers] claims responsibility for a bomb explosion at the Birmingham headquarters of Severn Trent Water.
- 23 February – Wales was declared a Nuclear Free Zone as Clwyd County Council became the last of eight Welsh local authorities to pass a resolution to that effect.
- May – Swansea City complete their first season in the English Football League First Division with a sixth-place finish.
- 2 June – 100,000 people gather in Pontcanna Fields, Cardiff, to welcome Pope John Paul II on the first-ever papal visit to Wales.
- 8 June – 32 men from the Welsh Guards are killed when the Sir Galahad burns during the Falklands War. The most famous of the survivors is Simon Weston, who is severely burned.
- 16 June – Welsh miners go on strike to support health workers demanding a 12% pay rise.
- 30 August – St David's Hall opens in Cardiff.
- 11 September – 14 skydivers from Wales die when a Chinook helicopter crashes at an airshow in Mannheim in Germany.
- 16 September – At the Gower by-election brought about by the death of Ifor Davies, Gareth Wardell holds the seat for Labour.
- 17 October – First issue of Sulyn, the first Sunday newspaper in the Welsh language.
- 26 November – A plaque is unveiled by the Prince of Wales at the monument erected in memory of those who died in the Gresford Disaster of 1934.
- date unknown
- *The Inmos microprocessor factory in Newport, Wales, designed by the Richard Rogers Partnership, is completed.
- *Swansea is given the right to have a Lord Mayor. Councillor Paul Valerio becomes the first incumbent.
- *First students begin courses at the Welsh language study centre at Nant Gwrtheyrn.
Arts and literature
- Roger Rees wins a Tony Award for Best Actor in a Play for his performance in The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby.
- Alice Thomas Ellis is shortlisted for the Booker Prize for The 27th Kingdom.
Awards
- National Eisteddfod of Wales
- National Eisteddfod of Wales: Chair - Gerallt Lloyd Owen
- National Eisteddfod of Wales: Crown - Eirwyn George
- National Eisteddfod of Wales: Prose Medal - Gwilym M. Jones
New books
- Gwynfor Evans - Bywyd Cymro
- Alun Jones - Pan Ddaw'r Machlud
- R. Merfyn Jones - The North Wales Quarrymen 1874-1922
- Rhiannon Davies Jones - Eryr Pengwern
- Kenneth O. Morgan - Rebirth of a Nation: Wales 1880-1980
- Wynford Vaughan-Thomas - ''Princes of Wales''
Music
- John Cale - Music For A New Society
- Dafydd Iwan with Ar Log - ''Rhwng Hwyl a Thaith''
Film
- Political Annie’s Off Again, film of a local industrial dispute made by Chapter Video Workshop.
Broadcasting
Welsh-language television
- Cefn Gwlad
- Joni Jones
- Noson Lawen appears for the first time.
- S4C starts broadcasting on 1 November
English-language television
- The Citadel, filmed in Tredegar.
Sport
- BBC Wales Sports Personality of the Year – Steve Barry
- Boxing
- * 14 September – Kelvin Smart becomes British flyweight champion after beating fellow Welsh fighter Dave George.
- Darts – Ann-Marie Davies wins the Women's World Masters Championship.
- Snooker
- * 13 January – Terry Griffiths wins the Lada Classic.
- * 4 December – Terry Griffiths wins the UK Snooker Championship, to complete his career Triple Crown (snooker).
- * Terry Parsons wins the World Amateur Championship.
Births
- 9 January – Catherine Middleton, future Princess of Wales
- 14 January – Joe Dunthorne, novelist and poet
- 1 February – Gavin Henson, rugby player
- 4 February – Kevin Gall, footballer
- 2 May – Timothy Benjamin, athlete
- 12 May – David Thaxton, actor and singer
- 21 June – Prince William, first child of the Prince and Princess of Wales
- 29 August – Mike Phillips, rugby player
- 2 September – Matthew Rees, footballer
- 29 November – Imogen Thomas, model
- 25 December – Rob Edwards, footballer
Deaths
- 5 January – Jeanetta Thomas, UK's oldest person and oldest Welsh-born woman of all time, 112
- 11 January – Ronald Lewis, actor, 53
- 5 February – Ronald Welch, historical novelist, 72
- 8 February – Cedric Morris, artist, 92
- 6 May – Jennie Eirian Davies, politician and magazine editor
- 19 May – Elwyn Jones, television writer, 58
- 31 May – Eryl Davies, educationist, 59
- 6 June – Ifor Davies, politician, 71
- 10 July
- *Gwilym Jenkins, statistician and systems engineer, 49
- *Gwilym Ellis Lane Owen, philosopher, 60
- 17 July – Bob John, footballer, 83
- 16 August – Sydney Hinam, Wales international rugby player, 83
- 18 October – Idwal Jones, politician, 82
- 19 October – Iorwerth Peate, social anthropologist and poet, founder of St Fagans National Museum of History, 81
- 4 November – Talfryn Thomas, character actor, 60
- 16 November – Ivor Jones, rugby union international, 80
- 19 November – Herbie Evans, footballer, 88
- 4 December – Ivor Williams, portrait painter, 74