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  1. Bontnewydd ( Welsh for 'New Bridge') is a small village and community with a population of 1,162 located on the A487 road miles (2.7 km) south of Caernarfon in Gwynedd, Wales, close to the river Gwyrfai, 2 miles (3.2 km) from its outflow into Foryd Bay. [2] It is served by Bontnewydd railway station, an unstaffed halt on the Welsh Highland Railway.

  2. Bontnewydd es una localidad situada en el condado de Gwynedd, en Gales (Reino Unido), con una población estimada a mediados de 2016 de 940 habitantes. [1] Se encuentra ubicada al noroeste de Gales, junto a la península de Lleyn, el parque nacional de Snowdonia, la costa de la mar de Irlanda y frente a la isla de Anglesey. Referencias

  3. Ar un adeg yr oedd Bontnewydd yn cael ei rannu rhwng plwyfi Llanbeblig a Llanwnda, gydag Afon Gwyrfai fel ffin rhyngddynt. Y tŷ hynaf yma yw Plas Dinas, a adeiladwyd yn y 17g, sydd a gweddillion caer Dinas Dinoethwy o Oes yr Haearn o'i gwmpas. Yn y Bontnewydd y magwyd y gwleidydd adnabyddus Dafydd Wigley .

  4. Bontnewydd is a small village and community with a population of 1,162 located on the A487 road 1+2⁄3 miles south of Caernarfon in Gwynedd, Wales, close to the river Gwyrfai, 2 miles from its outflow into Foryd Bay. Map. Directions. Satellite. Photo Map. Wikipedia. Photo: Bill Payer, CC BY-SA 2.0.

  5. Bontnewydd es una localidad situada en el condado de Gwynedd, en Gales, con una población estimada a mediados de 2016 de 940 habitantes. Se encuentra ubicada al noroeste de Gales, junto a la península de Lleyn , el parque nacional de Snowdonia, la costa de la mar de Irlanda y frente a la isla de Anglesey .

  6. Archaeologists. Stephen Aldhouse Green. Neanderthal from the period. The Bontnewydd palaeolithic site ( Welsh: [bɔntˈnɛuɨ̯ð] ), also known in its unmutated form as Pontnewydd ( Welsh language: 'New bridge'), is an archaeological site near St Asaph, Denbighshire, Wales.

  7. The Sheriff changes every March. On 1 April 1974, under the provisions of the Local Government Act 1972, the counties of Caernarvonshire, Wales, together with that of Anglesey and Merionethshire were abolished along with their shrievalties, and were replaced by the new county of Gwynedd and the new office of High Sheriff of Gwynedd.