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Welsh harp
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Welsh harp
Welsh harp [Welsh a.] A name specifically applied to the triple-strung harp; also called Welsh triple harp.a 1637 B. Jonson Masque, For Honour of Wales Wks. (1641) 33 Yow s'all heare the true Pritan straines now, the ancient Welse Harpe. a 1700 Evelyn Diary 13 June 1649, With him was one Carew, who ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Welsh Harp
Welsh Harp may refer to:
Welsh triple harp or triple harp, a traditional musical instrument
Welsh Harp (ward), an electoral ward of the Brent London Borough Council
Welsh Harp railway station, London 1870–1903
Brent Reservoir or Welsh Harp, London
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Welsh Harp (ward)
Welsh Harp ward is a political division of the London Borough of Brent that returns three representative Councillors and at the 2006 election was held References
Welsh Harp ward profile
Wards of the London Borough of Brent
2002 establishments in England
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Welsh Harp railway station
Welsh Harp railway station was built by the Midland Railway in 1870 on its extension to St. Pancras station. The Old Welsh Harp inn was demolished c. 1971.
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borough of delyn
"Y Delyn" is also Welsh for "The Harp", a fact reflected in the borough's coat of arms.
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History of the harp in Wales
The harp is the national instrument of Wales, with an unbroken line of harpers reaching back to at least the 11th century. External links
BBC Welsh Harp History
Teifi Harps
See also
List of national instruments (music)
Welsh musical instruments
Harps
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The Harp
The Harp is a public house at 47 Chandos Place, Covent Garden, London, WC2N 4HS. It was The Welsh Harp until 1995, when it was taken over by an Irish woman Binnie Walsh, who subsequently bought the pub.
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Triple harp
One common version is the Welsh triple harp (Welsh: telyn deires), used today mainly among players of traditional Welsh folk music. It was so popular that by the beginning of the 18th century the triple harp became generally known as the "Welsh harp".
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National symbols of Wales
Flags
Welsh heraldry
British (formerly English) monarchy heraldry
Plants and animals
Welsh Language
The Welsh language is considered a symbol and The Welsh harp, also known as the triple harp is considered to be the national instrument of Wales.
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Multi-course harp
a high head and larger size as the Welsh triple harp. It established itself as part of Welsh tradition and became known as the Welsh harp (telyn deires, "three-row harp").
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West Hendon
By 1850, there was a second public house, the Upper Welsh Harp. Harp Conservation Group and Welsh Harp Sailing Association.
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John Weston Thomas
John Weston Thomas (25 January 1921 – 1992) revived the tradition of Welsh harp making.
Thomas was born in Cardiff. Welsh businesspeople
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Brent Reservoir
Welsh Harp Open Space
Welsh Harp Open Space is a park and nature reserve of on the north-west shore. Harp Conservation Group
Barnet Council's page on Welsh Harp, checked March 2007
Brent Council's page on Welsh Harp Reservoir
Phoenix Canoe Club
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Arthur Markham (cyclist)
It was in a meadow at Brent Reservoir, known locally as the Welsh Harp, in north-west London on Whitsun Monday, 1 June 1868. Markham received a silver cup from the licensee of the Old Welsh Harp Hotel, William Perkins Warner, who had sponsored the race.
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Nansi Richards
Nansi Richards Jones (14 May 1888 – 21 December 1979) was a Welsh harpist, sometimes known as the "Queen of the Harp" or by her bardic name "Telynores Harp (Sain SCD2382, 2003)
References
External links
Welsh folk harpists
1888 births
1979 deaths
People from Montgomeryshire
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en.wikipedia.org