Editorial Board
Two parts per annum (June and December).
ISSN 0043-2431
‘The Welsh History Review is the standard-bearer of the historical profession in Wales. It offers an indispensable guide to the perspectives of leading scholars on the past.’
Professor Geraint H. Jenkins, Chairman of the University of Wales Board of Celtic Studies.
Notes for contributors of articles and reviews
Since its inception in 1960 as one of the journals of the University of Wales Board of Celtic Studies, the Welsh History Review has become firmly established as the most authoritative journal in its field. It is an invaluable medium for publishing the fruits of the steady upsurge of interest in the history of Wales in schools, colleges, universities and the media over the past thirty years. Both its readership and its contributors are truly international, including geographers, economists, philologists, sociologists, archaeologists and demographers as well as historians. Every issue includes articles on varying aspects of Welsh history, a large array of book reviews, obituaries and other special features where relevant. Each year a full checklist of publications relating to the history of Wales is given.
Contents Volume 25 Part 1 July 2010
EDWARD LHUYD: FROM FORMED STONES TO STANDING STONES By Graham Parry
EDWARD LHUYD: AN ARCHAEOLOGIST’S VIEW. By Nancy Edwards
EDWARD LHUYD, MUSEUM KEEPER. By Arthur MacGregor
EDWARD LHUYD’S ARCHÆOLOGIA BRITANNICA: METHOD AND
MADNESS IN EARLY MODERN COMPARATIVE PHILOLOGY. By David Cram
ETIFEDDION EDWARD LHUYD [THE LEGACY OF EDWARD LHUYD]. Gan Brynley F. Roberts
Contents Volume 24 Part 4 December 2009
Contents Volume 24 Part 3 June 2009
Contents Volume 24 Part 2 December 2008
Contents Volume 24 Part 1 June 2008
Contents Volume 23 Part 4 December 2007
DAFYDD AP LLYWELYN’S SUBMISSION TO KING HENRY III IN OCTOBER 1241: A NEW PERSPECTIVE. By D. A. Carpenter THE WELSH CONTRIBUTION TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF PRE-CLASSICAL POLITICAL ECONOMY. By M. D. Matthews
UNITARIANS, FREEMASONS, CHARTISTS: THE MIDDLE CLASS IN VICTORIAN MERTHYR. By Joe England
THE CO-OPERATIVE MOVEMENT IN SOUTH WALES AND ITS HISTORY:
‘A TASK WORTHY OF THE MOST SINCERE DEVOTION AND APPLICATION’. By Alun Burge
LIGHTING THE LANDSCAPE: RURAL ELECTRIFICATION IN WALES By R J. Moore-Colyer
THESES ON WELSH HISTORY IX. By David Lewis Jones
Contents Volume 23 Part 2 December 2006
ENGLISH COLONIAL ETHNIC DISCRIMINATION IN THE LORDSHIP OF DYFFRYN CLWYD: SEGREGATION AND INTEGRATION, 1282–c. 1340. By Diane M. Korngiebel
PATRONAGE, OFFICE AND FAMILY IN EARLY MODERN WALES: THE CARNES OF NASH MANOR AND EWENNI IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. By Stephen K. Roberts
REPRESENTATIONS OF AUSTRALIA IN MID-NINETEENTH-CENTURY
WELSH EMIGRANT LITERATURE: GWLAD YR AUR AND AWSTRALIA A’R CLODDFEYDD AUR. By Bill Jones
REVIVAL, REVISIONS, VISIONS AND VISITATIONS: THE RESURGENCE AND IMAGING OF SUPERNATURAL RELIGION, 1850–1940. By John Harvey
REGION OR NATIONAL TERRITORY? REGIONALISM AND THE IDEA OF THE COUNTRY OF WALES, c.1927–1998. By W. T. R. Pryce
INVENTING A COUNTY: CARDIFF, SOUTH GLAMORGAN AND THE 1974 REORGANIZATION OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT. By Martin Johnes
Contents Volume 23 Part 1 June 2006
Llyfr Cynog of Cyfraith Hywel and St Cynog of Cyfraith Hywel and St. Cynog of Brycheiniog. By Gwenno Angharad Elias
Medicine and Mortality in Early Modern Monmouthshire: The Commonplace Book of John Gwin. By Alun R. J. Withey
‘FOUNDATIONS OF A NATION’: THE WELSH LEAGUE OF YOUTH AND WALES BEFORE THE SECOND WORLD WAR. By MarionLöffler
LIBERALISM IN CRISIS: LIBERALS, LIBERAL NATIONALS AND THE POLITICS OF NORTH-EAST WALES, 1931–5. By David Dutton
FEDERALISM AND UNIVERSITY GOVERNANCE: WELSH EXPERIENCES IN NEW ZEALAND. By R. Gwynedd Parry
OBITUARY: SIR REES DAVIES (1938–2005). By Ralph A. Griffiths
MAJOR ACCESSIONS TO REPOSITORIES IN 2004 RELATING TO WELSH HISTORY. By James Travers
CONTENTS Volume 22 Part 2 December 2004
CONTENTS Volume 22 Part 1 June 2004
CONTENTS Volume 21 Part 4 December 2003
CONTENTS Volume 21 Part 3 June 2003
CONTENTS Volume 21 Part 2 December 2002
CONTENTS Volume 21 Part 1 June 2002
Contents – Vol. 20 Part 4 (December 2001)
Contents – Vol. 20 Part 3 (June 2001)
Contents – Vol. 20 Part 2 (December 2000)
Contents – Vol. 20 Part 1 (June 2000)
Contents – Vol. 19 Part 4 (December 1999)
Contents – Vol. 19 Part 3 (June 1999)
Contents – Vol. 19 Part 2 (December 1998)
Contents – Vol. 19 Part 1 (June 1998)
Contents – Vol. 18 Part 4 (December 1997)
Contents – Vol. 18 Part 2 (December 1996)
Contents – Vol. 18 Part 1 (June 1996)
Notes for contributors of articles and reviews
Preparation of typescripts
Articles submitted should be typed using double spacing on one side of A4 paper with wide margins, unjustified on the right. Pages should be numbered throughout consecutively.
Preparation of typescripts on disk
Once a paper has been accepted for publication it may be sent to the relevant editor in disk form, provided that a hard copy/printout of the full up-to-date text has also been submitted. Authors should retain a backup copy of both disk and printout of their papers. Please consult UWP about preparation of disks.
Footnotes
These should not exceed an average maximum of 25 per cent of the printed page. They too should be supplied in double-spacing and separately from the text, at the end of the article, and they should be numbered consecutively.
Tables, maps and diagrams
These will appear within the printed page but should be provided on a separate page in the typescript and their position indicated by a marginal note in the text. Complicated diagrams should as far as possible be submitted in camera-ready form, but the editors should be consulted in case of difficulty. References in the text to illustrative material should take the form ‘Table 1’ etc. for tables and ‘Figure 1’ etc. for other forms of illustration, not ‘in the following diagram’ since there is no guarantee that pagination will allow this precise positioning.
Style of text
(See also UWP: ‘Guidelines for presentation of texts for publication’.)
Quotations within running text should be in single quote marks (double for quotes within quotes). Quotations of more than fifty words should be indented without quotation marks and with a line space before and after.
Underline words which are to appear in italic. Single words or short phrases in languages other than English should be in italic, but quotations in another language should not.
Dates should be expressed as 1 January 1996; the 1990s; the fourteenth century (but ‘a fourteenth-century manuscript’); 1888–9; 1914–18 (not 1914–8). Numbers up to ninety-nine should be spelt out in full except in a list of statistics or in percentages (e.g. 25 per cent).
Use-ize endings when given as an alternative to -ise.
Capitalization should be kept to a minimum in the text; for titles, initial capitals should only be used when attached to a personal name (thus King Henry V, Bishop William Morgan, but ‘the king of England’, ‘the bishop of St Asaph’ etc.).
References
References in the footnotes should he given in the following format (not in the Harvard system):
Books: D. W. Howell, Patriarchs and Parasites: The Gentry of South-West Wales in the Eighteenth Century (Cardiff, 1986), p. 320.
Articles in an edited volume: G. Williams, ‘Local and national history in Wales’, in D. H. Owen (ed.), Settlement and Society in Wales (Cardiff, 1989), pp 7–26. (Note the use of lower case for all initial letters except the first in the article title.)
Articles in a journal: F. O’Gorman, ‘The politics of deference’, Journal of Modern History, VI (1984), 407; U. Henriques, ‘The Jewish community of Cardiff, 1813–1914’, ante, 14 (2) (1988), 269–300 (for references to previous issues of Welsh History Review).
Unpublished theses: G. A. Plume, ‘The enclosure movement in Caernarvonshire with special reference to the Porth yr Aur papers’ (unpublished MA thesis, University of Wales, 1935), 63.
Manuscripts: National Library of Wales, Ellis papers, 1698, 1699 University College of North Wales, Lloyd Papers, MS 314, no. 592.
For authorities and locations to which continual reference is made, an abbreviated form can be established on the first occurrence by the use of square brackets, e.g. L[etters] and P[apers of Henry VIII].
On the second or subsequent occurrences of a reference, a short form of the title may be used e.g. Howell, Patriarchs and Parasites; Henriques, ‘The Jewish community’.
Copyright
Contributors submitting manuscripts do so on the understanding that the work has not been published previously and, should the editor accept it for publication, that (a) the authors obtain the necessary permission to use material already protected by copyright; and (b) copyright in articles published in WHR will be retained by the University of Wales.
Proofs and offprints
Contributors will be expected to check and return the page-proofs of their articles within two weeks of receipt. They will receive 15 free offprints of the article upon publication.