Meirionnydd
Meirionnydd is a coastal and mountainous region of Wales. It has been a kingdom, a cantref, a district and, as Merionethshire, a county. It is currently a committee area within the county Gwynedd.
Kingdom
Meirionnydd was a sub-kingdom of Gwynedd, founded according to legend by Meirion, a grandson of Cunedda, a warrior-prince who brought his family to Wales from the Hen Ogledd, probably in the early 5th century. His dynasty seems to have ruled there for the next four hundred years. The kingdom lay between the River Mawddach and the River Dovey, spreading in a north-easterly direction.Cantref
The ancient name of the cantref was Cantref Orddwy. The familiar name coming from Meirion's kingdom.The cantref of Meirionnydd held the presumed boundaries of the previous kingdom but now as a fief of the Kingdom of Gwynedd where it continued to enjoy long spells of relative independence. It was divided into the commotes of Ynysymaengwyn and Talybont, Barmouth. The cantref was effectively abolished in 1284 following the Statute of Rhuddlan with the area being reorganised with the addition of some neighbouring cantrefi to form the county of Merionethshire.
County
The area of Meirionnydd was enlarged under the Statute of Rhuddlan to become a county, gaining the old cantrefi of Penllyn and Ardudwy. The name for the county was anglicised to the English phonetic equivalent of Merioneth, sometimes appearing with the suffix -shire as Merionethshire.Merioneth became an administrative county with an elected county council in 1889 under the Local Government Act 1888. In 1974 the administrative county was abolished with most of the area merging with Caernarfonshire and Anglesey to create a new county of Gwynedd.
District
The 1974 reforms established a two-tier system, with upper-tier county councils and lower-tier district councils. The county of Gwynedd was divided into five districts, one of which was called Meirionnydd, reverting to the Welsh spelling of the name Merioneth. The district of Meirionnydd covered almost the same area as the pre-1974 county of Merioneth, excluding only the Edeirnion Rural District, which went to the Glyndŵr district of Clwyd. The Meirionnydd district replaced eight former districts:- Bala Urban District
- Barmouth Urban District
- Deudraeth Rural District
- Dolgellau Rural District
- Dolgellau Urban District
- Ffestiniog Urban District
- Penllyn Rural District
- Tywyn Urban District
Since 1996, Gwynedd Council has used the former Meirionnydd district as a committee area for discussing local matters.