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Anglo-Welsh and figure
James Howell ( c. 1594 – 1666 ) was a 17th-century Anglo-Welsh historian and writer who is in many ways a representative figure of his age.
On the other hand, he became a major figure for the Anglo-Welsh poetry tradition, and his poems were included in major anthologies.

Anglo-Welsh and on
However, in 1908 with the Scottish and Irish unions refusing to be involved, the Anglo-Welsh side only sported red jerseys with a thick white band on their jerseys on tour to Australia and New Zealand.
The club also compete in the Anglo-Welsh Cup as well as one of the two Europe-wide club competitions — the Heineken Cup or European Challenge Cup, depending on their performance in the previous season.
The final Scarlets match played at Stradey Park was on 24 October 2008, against Bristol in the group stage of the Anglo-Welsh Cup.
His other writing includes books on David Jones, Vernon Watkins and John Cowper Powys, and Anglo-Welsh Poetry 1480-1980 with Raymond Garlick.
The Anglo-Welsh lyric poet, Edward Thomas was killed by a shell on April 9, 1917, during the first day of the Easter Offensive.
More recently Anglo-Welsh poetry has become an important aspect of Welsh literary culture, as well as being influential on English literature.
Andrew the younger was initially held captive in Chester Castle on the Anglo-Welsh border, from which he escaped during the winter of 1296-97.
Hereford College of Arts ( formerly Herefordshire College of Art and Design ) is an art school based in the English West Midlands, on the cusp of the Anglo-Welsh border.
He made his Gloucester Rugby debut on 27 October 2007 in the Anglo-Welsh EDF Energy Cup against Newcastle Falcons.
He scored his first try for the club in the Anglo-Welsh Cup game against Worcester Warriors on 29 January 2012.
) Australasia's team, the Wallabies, was already on tour in Britain, while the best Anglo-Welsh players were on tour in New Zealand at the time.

Anglo-Welsh and where
Cup action in the form of the final round of EDF Energy Cup pool stage games, where Saracens failed once again to win away in Wales, but taking a losing bonus point and a try bonus too was enough to see them qualify for the semi-final stage for the first time in their Anglo-Welsh cup history, ahead of their opponents Llanelli Scarlets.

Anglo-Welsh and they
While some see them as clearly belonging to the English tradition, Belinda Humphrey believes that both Vaughan and Dyer are Anglo-Welsh poets because, unlike Herbert, they are " rooted creatively in the Welsh countryside of their birth ".
Although the Ospreys play their home matches at the Liberty Stadium in Swansea, they have since 2010 played their home Anglo-Welsh Cup home games at the Brewery Field, which is normally two games a season.
Leicester Tigers were the favourites, as they had already won the Anglo-Welsh cup and the Guinness Premiership, the latter just the week before.
Since 2006 they have also competed in the Anglo-Welsh Cup against clubs from the English English Premiership.

Anglo-Welsh and are
Anglo-Welsh literature and Welsh writing in English are terms used to describe works written in the English language by Welsh writers.
The beginnings of an Anglo-Welsh tradition are found by some in the novels of Allen Raine ( Anne Adalisa ( Evans ) Puddicombe ) ( 1836 – 1908 ), from Newcastle Emlyn, Carmarthenshire, whose work, Stephen Thomas Knight proposes, " realised a real, if partial, separate identity and value for a Welsh social culture ".
Thus in the Anglo-Welsh Basin, there are frequent references to the Downtonian, Dittonian, Breconian and Farlovian stages in the literature.
Anglo-Welsh poets are poets of Welsh origin or residence, writing in the English language.

Anglo-Welsh and men
Glyn Jones, in The Dragon Has Two Tongues, defines Anglo-Welsh writers as " those Welsh men and women who write in English about Wales " ( p. 37 ).
Glyn Jones in The Dragon Has Two Tongues defines the Anglo-Welsh as " those Welsh men and women who write in English about Wales " ( p. 37 ).
While Raymond Garlick discovered sixty-nine Welsh men and women who wrote in English prior to the twentieth century, Dafydd Johnston thinks it " debatable whether such writers belong to a recognisable Anglo-Welsh literature, as opposed to English literature in general ".

Anglo-Welsh and .
The Anglo-Welsh side ( Irish and Scottish unions did not participate ) performed well in all the non-test matches, but drew a test against New Zealand and lost the other two.
Griffith was born in Crestwood, Kentucky to Mary Perkins and Jacob " Roaring Jake " Griffith, who were of Anglo-Welsh ancestry.
* 1930 – Peter Warlock, Anglo-Welsh composer ( b. 1894 )
Glyndŵr was born circa 1354 ( possibly 1359 ) to a prosperous landed family, part of the Anglo-Welsh gentry of the Welsh Marches ( the border between England and Wales ) in northeast Wales.
Sir William Jones ( 28 September 1746 – 27 April 1794 ) was an Anglo-Welsh philologist and scholar of ancient India, particularly known for his proposition of the existence of a relationship among Indo-European languages.
* December 17 – Peter Warlock, Anglo-Welsh composer ( b. 1894 )
* January 1 – Katherine Philips, Anglo-Welsh poet ( d. 1664 )
* June 22 – Katherine Philips, Anglo-Welsh poet ( b. 1631 )
* Tess of the d ' Urbervilles is referenced to in the poem " Man and Dog " by Anglo-Welsh poet Edward Thomas.
Anglo-Welsh poetry includes poetry written by Welsh people in the English language, as well as poetry by those born outside Wales, but of Welsh descent, whose work is influenced by their Welsh roots.
* Raymond Garlick, An Introduction to Anglo-Welsh Literature.
* Roland Mathias, Anglo-Welsh Literature: An Ilustrated History.
There is no final, clear definition of what constitutes a Welsh writer in English, or Anglo-Welsh author.
His short-story collections My People ( 1915 ) and Capel Sion ( 1916 ) were highly controversial, and Roland Mathias bitterly comments that " No other Anglo-Welsh prose writer.
This loss of language was an important factor in the development of Anglo-Welsh writing in South Wales, especially in the mining valleys.
An early work of the first wave of Anglo-Welsh writers was The Withered Root ( 1927 ) by Rhys Davies ( 1901 – 78 ) from the Rhondda Valley.
Another Anglo-Welsh novelist ( and playwright ) was Jack Jones ( 1884 – 1970 ), a miner's son from Merthyr Tydfil who was himself a miner from the age of 12.
The Anglo-Welsh writers of the 1930s had to look to London for publication and the possibility of literary success ; though gradually, beginning in 1937, Welsh writing in English received encouragement from Welsh-based literary and critical journals, initially Wales, published by Keidrych Rhys in three intermittent series between 1937 and 1960.
The expansion in the publication of Anglo-Welsh writers in Wales in journal and book form was important for the further development of Welsh writing in English.
This included The Welsh Review ( 1939 – 1948 ), which later became Dock Leaves and then The Anglo-Welsh Review ( 1949 – 1987 ) and continues ( from 1988 ) as the New Welsh Review.

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