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Penmaen, Caerphilly : ウィキペディア英語版
Penmaen, Caerphilly

:''This article refers to the hamlet in Caerphilly county borough For the village in Gower Peninsula see Penmaen, Swansea''
Penmain or Penmaen is a hamlet in Caerphilly county borough, south Wales, within the historic boundaries of Monmouthshire. It is situated in the Sirhowy valley, East of Blackwood. It is contiguous with, if not completely encompassed by, the larger village of Oakdale.
Penmain is an anglicisation of the Welsh language name ''Penmaen'', meaning quite simply "headland" or "outcrop" (a common element in Welsh placenames: literally, ''rock/stone hill''). Both spellings are found locally, with the English spelling predominant throughout the majority of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries,〔( Dissenters (1839) )〕〔Ordnance Survey map (1901)〕〔Ralph Thomas, Oakdale, The Model Village (2004) ISBN 0-9547320-0-6〕〔() | Kelly's Directory (1901)〕 but the Welsh spelling is the one now more generally used.
==History==
In 1845, the district of Penmain became an ecclesiastical parish, formed out of the parish of Mynyddislwyn, and in 1855 the Church of St. David was built, having seating for 300 worshippers. Its registers started from 1866. A National School was built there in 1845 for 250 pupils.
In 1870 Penmain was described as:〔() A Vision of Britain〕
The chapel he describes is the Congregational chapel. It was started by Henry Walter, who had been curate of Mynyddislwyn and, later, vicar of St. Woolos Newport. In 1618, King James issued the "Book of Sports", which relaxed the previous attitudes to Sunday amusements, and set out which times were to be allowed on the Sabbath. There was much opposition to this by the clergy, and it continued up to the Civil War. Afterwards, in 1660, when Charles II came to the throne, he re-introduced it. Many clergymen refused to obey, including Henry Walter, who was dismissed from his position in the Church. He then set up the Independent Chapel at Penmain, although the Nonconformist chapel building was not completed until 1691. Services were held in Welsh. It was rebuilt in 1828, renovated in 1888, and is the second oldest existing Independent Chapel in Wales.
No longer used for worship, the building is now the 'home' of the Mynyddislwyn Male Choir.

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