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Cardiff
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Cardiff (/ˈkɑːrdɪf/ ⓘ; Welsh: Caerdydd [kairˈdiːð, kaːɨrˈdɨːð] ⓘ) is the capital and largest city of Wales. Cardiff had a population of 383,919 in 2024[2] and forms a principal area officially known as the City and County of Cardiff (Welsh: Dinas a Sir Caerdydd). The city is the eleventh largest in the United Kingdom. Located in the southeast of Wales and in the Cardiff Capital Region, Cardiff is the county town of the historic county of Glamorgan and in 1974–1996 of South Glamorgan. It belongs to the Eurocities network of the largest European cities.[4] A small town until the early 19th century, its prominence as a port for coal when mining began in the region helped its expansion. In 1905, it was ranked as a city and in 1955 proclaimed capital of Wales. The Cardiff urban area covers a larger area outside the county boundary, including the towns of Dinas Powys and Penarth.
Key Information
Cardiff is the main commercial centre of Wales as well as the base for the Senedd, the Welsh Parliament. At the 2021 census, the unitary authority area population was put at 362,400.[5] The population of the wider urban area in 2011 was 479,000.[6] In 2011, it ranked sixth in the world in a National Geographic magazine list of alternative tourist destinations.[7] It is the most popular destination in Wales with 21.3 million visitors in 2017.[8] It was voted as the best city in the UK at the 2023 Readers' Choice Awards.[9]
Cardiff is a major centre for television and film production (such as the 2005 revival of Doctor Who,[10] Torchwood and Sherlock) and is the Welsh base for the main national broadcasters.
Cardiff Bay contains the Senedd building and the Wales Millennium Centre arts complex. Work continues at Cardiff Bay and in the centre on projects such as Cardiff International Sports Village, BBC drama village,[11] and a new business district.[12]
History
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Caerdydd (the Welsh name of the city) derives from the Middle Welsh Caerdyf. The change from -dyf to -dydd shows the colloquial alteration of Welsh f [v] and dd [ð] and was perhaps also driven by folk etymology. This sound change probably first occurred in the Middle Ages; both forms were current in the Tudor period. Caerdyf has its origins in post-Roman Brythonic words meaning "the fort of the Taff". The fort probably refers to that established by the Romans. Caer is Welsh for fort and -dyf is a form of Taf (Taff), the river which flows by Cardiff Castle, with the ⟨t⟩ showing consonant mutation to ⟨d⟩, as is normal in compound words, and the vowel showing affection as a result of a (lost) genitive case ending.[13]
The anglicised Cardiff is derived from Caerdyf, with the Welsh f [v] borrowed as ff /f/, as also happens in Taff (from Welsh Taf) and Llandaff (from Welsh Llandaf).
The antiquarian William Camden (1551–1623) suggested that the name Cardiff may derive from *Caer-Didi ("the Fort of Didius"), a name supposedly given in honour of Aulus Didius Gallus, governor of a nearby province at the time when the Roman fort was established. Although some sources repeat this theory, it has been rejected on linguistic grounds by modern scholars such as Professor Gwynedd Pierce.[14]
Origins
[edit]Archaeological evidence from sites in and around Cardiff show that people had settled in the area by at least around 6000 BC, during the early Neolithic: about 1,500 years before either Stonehenge or the Great Pyramid of Giza was completed.[15][16][17][18][19] These include the St Lythans burial chamber near Wenvoe, (approximately four miles or six km west of Cardiff city centre); the Tinkinswood burial chamber, near St. Nicholas (about six miles or ten km west of Cardiff city centre), the Cae'rarfau Chambered Tomb, Creigiau (about six miles or ten km northwest of Cardiff city centre) and the Gwern y Cleppa long barrow, near Coedkernew, Newport (about eight miles or thirteen km northeast of Cardiff city centre). A group of five Bronze Age tumuli is at the summit of the Garth, within the county's northern boundary.[20] Four Iron Age hill fort and enclosure sites have been identified within Cardiff's county boundaries, including Caerau Hillfort, an enclosed area of 5.1 hectares (12+1⁄2 acres).[21][22][23][24]

part of the original Roman fort beneath the red stones
Until the Roman conquest of Britain, Cardiff was part of the territory of the Silures – a Celtic British tribe that flourished in the Iron Age – whose territory included the areas that would become known as Breconshire, Monmouthshire and Glamorgan.[25] The 3.2 ha (8-acre) fort established by the Romans near the mouth of the River Taff in AD 75, in what would become the north western boundary of the centre of Cardiff, was built over an extensive settlement that had been established by the Romans in the 50s AD.[26] The fort was one of a series of military outposts associated with Isca Augusta (Caerleon) that acted as border defences. The fort may have been abandoned in the early 2nd century as the area had been subdued. However, by this time a civilian settlement, or vicus, was established. It was likely made up of traders who made a living from the fort, ex-soldiers and their families. A Roman villa has been discovered at Ely.[27] Contemporary with the Saxon Shore forts of the 3rd and 4th centuries, a stone fortress was established at Cardiff. Similar to the shore forts, the fortress was built to protect Britannia from raiders.[28] Coins from the reign of Gratian indicate that Cardiff was inhabited until at least the 4th century; the fort was abandoned towards the end of the 4th century, as the last Roman legions left the province of Britannia with Magnus Maximus.[29][30]
Little is known of the fort and civilian settlement in the period between the Roman departure from Britain and the Norman Conquest. The settlement probably shrank in size and may even have been abandoned. In the absence of Roman rule, Wales was divided into small kingdoms; early on, Meurig ap Tewdrig emerged as the local king in Glywysing (which later became Glamorgan). The area passed through his family until the advent of the Normans in the 11th century.[31]
Norman occupation and Middle Ages
[edit]
In 1081 William I, King of England visited Cardiff as part of an armed pilgrimage across South Wales and ordered work to begin on the castle keep within the walls of the old Roman fort.[32] Cardiff Castle has been at the heart of the city ever since.[33] The castle was substantially altered and extended during the Victorian period by John Crichton-Stuart, 3rd Marquess of Bute, and the architect William Burges.[34] Original Roman work can, however, still be distinguished in the wall facings.
A town grew up under the castle, consisting mainly of settlers from England.[35] Cardiff had a population of between 1,500 and 2,000 in the Middle Ages – a normal size for a Welsh town in the period.[36] It was the centre of the Norman Marcher Lordship of Glamorgan. By the end of the 13th century, Cardiff was the only town in Wales with a population exceeding 2,000, although it remained relatively small compared with notable towns in England and continued to be contained within its walls, which were begun as a wooden palisade in the early 12th century.[37] It was of sufficient size and importance to receive a series of charters, notably in 1331 from William La Zouche, Lord of Glamorgan through marriage with the de Clare family,[38] Edward III in 1359,[39] then Henry IV in 1400,[39] and later Henry VI.
In 1404, Owain Glyndŵr burned Cardiff and took possession of the Castle.[40] As many of the buildings were made of timber and tightly packed within the town walls, much of Cardiff was destroyed. The settlement was soon rebuilt on the same street plan and began to flourish again.[36] (Glyndŵr's statue was erected in Cardiff Town Hall in the early 20th century, reflecting the complex, often conflicting cultural identity of Cardiff as capital of Wales.) Besides serving an important political role in the governance of the fertile south Glamorgan coastal plain, Cardiff was a busy port in the Middle Ages and declared a staple port in 1327.
County town of Glamorganshire
[edit]

In 1536, the Laws in Wales Acts 1535–1542 led to the creation of Glamorganshire and Cardiff was made the county town, it also became part of Kibbor hundred,[41] around the same time the Herberts became the most powerful family in the area.[35] In 1538, Henry VIII closed Cardiff's Dominican and Franciscan friaries, whose remains were used as building materials.[36] A writer in this period noted: "The River Taff runs under the walls of his honours castle and from the north part of the town to the south part where there is a fair quay and a safe harbour for shipping."[36]
Cardiff became a borough in 1542[40] and further Royal Charters were granted to it by Elizabeth I in 1600[42] and James I in 1608.[43] In 1573, it was made a head port for collection of customs duties.[35] Pembrokeshire historian George Owen described Cardiff in 1602 as "the fayrest towne in Wales yett not the welthiest".[35] It gained a second Royal Charter in 1608.[44]

A disastrous flood in the Bristol Channel on 30 January 1607 (now believed to have been a tidal wave)[45] changed the course of the River Taff and ruined St Mary's Parish Church, which was replaced by a chapel of ease dedicated to St John the Baptist.[46]
During the Second English Civil War St Fagans, just to the west of the town, the Battle of St Fagans, between Royalist rebels and a New Model Army detachment, was a decisive victory for the Parliamentarians that allowed Oliver Cromwell to conquer Wales.[40] It was the last major battle in Wales, with about 200, mostly Royalist soldiers killed.[35]
Cardiff was at peace throughout the ensuing century. In 1766, John Stuart, 1st Marquess of Bute married into the Herbert family and was later created Baron Cardiff.[35] In 1778, he began renovating Cardiff Castle.[47] A racecourse, printing press, bank and coffee house opened in the 1790s and Cardiff gained a stagecoach service to London. Despite these improvements, Cardiff's position in the Welsh urban hierarchy declined over the 18th century. Iolo Morganwg called it "an obscure and inconsiderable place" and the 1801 census found a population of only 1,870, making it only the 25th largest town in Wales, well behind Merthyr and Swansea.[48]
Building the docks
[edit]In 1793, John Crichton-Stuart, 2nd Marquess of Bute was born. He spent his life building the Cardiff docks and was later hailed as "the creator of modern Cardiff".[35] A twice-weekly boat service between Cardiff and Bristol opened in 1815,[49] and in 1821, the Cardiff Gas Works was established.[49]
After the Napoleonic Wars Cardiff suffered some social and industrial unrest, starting with the trial and hanging of Dic Penderyn in 1831.[50]

The town grew rapidly from the 1830s onwards, when the Marquess of Bute built a dock, which eventually linked to the Taff Vale Railway. Cardiff became the main port for coal exports from the Cynon, Rhondda, and Rhymney valleys, and grew in population at a rate of nearly 80 per cent per decade between 1840 and 1870. Much of this was due to migration from within and outside Wales: in 1841, a quarter of Cardiff's population were English-born and more than 10 per cent born in Ireland.[51] By the 1881 census, Cardiff had overtaken Merthyr and Swansea to become the largest town in Wales.[52] Cardiff's status as the premier town in South Wales was confirmed when it was chosen as the site for the University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire in 1883.[48]
A permanent military presence was established with the completion of Maindy Barracks in 1877.[53]
Cardiff faced a challenge in the 1880s when David Davies of Llandinam and the Barry Railway Company promoted rival docks at Barry. These had the advantage of being accessible in all tides: David Davies claimed his venture would cause "grass to grow in the streets of Cardiff". From 1901 coal exports from Barry surpassed those from Cardiff, but the administration of the coal trade remained centred on Cardiff, in particular its Coal Exchange, where the price of coal on the British market was determined and the first million-pound deal was struck in 1907.[48] The city also strengthened its industrial base when the owners of the Dowlais Ironworks in Merthyr (who would later form part of Guest, Keen and Nettlefolds) built a steelworks close to the docks at East Moors, which Lord Bute opened on 4 February 1891.[54]
County Borough of Cardiff
[edit]Cardiff became a county borough on 1 April 1889 under the Local Government Act 1888. The town had grown rapidly and had a population of over 123,000. It retained its county borough status until 1974.[55][clarification needed]
City and capital city status
[edit]

King Edward VII granted Cardiff city status on 28 October 1905.[56] It acquired a Roman Catholic cathedral in 1916. Later, more national institutions came to the city, including the National Museum of Wales, the Welsh National War Memorial, and the University of Wales Registry Building, but it was denied the National Library of Wales, partly because the library's founder, Sir John Williams, considered Cardiff to have "a non-Welsh population".[48]
After a brief post-war boom, Cardiff docks entered a prolonged decline in the interwar period. By 1936, trade was at less than half its value in 1913, reflecting the slump in demand for Welsh coal.[48] Bomb damage in the Cardiff Blitz of World War II included the devastation of Llandaff Cathedral, and in the immediate postwar years, the city's link with the Bute family came to an end.
The city was recognised as the capital city of Wales on 20 December 1955, in a written reply by the Home Secretary, Gwilym Lloyd George.[57] Caernarfon had also vied for the title.[58] Welsh local authorities had been divided: only 76 out of 161 chose Cardiff in a 1924 poll organised by the South Wales Daily News.[59] The subject was not debated again until 1950, and meanwhile Cardiff took steps to promote its "Welshness". The stalemate between Cardiff and cities such as Caernarfon and Aberystwyth was not broken until Cardiganshire County Council decided to support Cardiff; and in a new local authority vote, 134 out of 161 voted for Cardiff.[59]
Cardiff therefore celebrated two important anniversaries in 2005. The Encyclopedia of Wales notes that the decision to recognise the city as the capital of Wales "had more to do with the fact that it contained marginal Conservative constituencies than any reasoned view of what functions a Welsh capital should have." Although the city hosted the Commonwealth Games in 1958, Cardiff became a centre of national administration only with the establishment of the Welsh Office in 1964, which later prompted the creation of various other public bodies such as the Arts Council of Wales and the Welsh Development Agency, most of which were based in Cardiff.

The East Moors Steelworks closed in 1978 and Cardiff lost population in the 1980s,[60] consistent with a wider pattern of counter-urbanisation in Britain. However, it recovered to become one of the few cities outside London where population grew in the 1990s.[61] During this period the Cardiff Bay Development Corporation was promoting the redevelopment of south Cardiff; an evaluation of the regeneration of Cardiff Bay published in 2004 concluded that the project had "reinforced the competitive position of Cardiff" and "contributed to a massive improvement in the quality of the built environment, although it had "failed "to attract the major inward investors originally anticipated".[62]
In the 1997 Welsh devolution referendum, Cardiff voters rejected the establishment of the National Assembly for Wales by 55.4% to 44.2% on a 47% turnout, which Denis Balsom partly ascribed to a general preference in Cardiff and some other parts of Wales for a British rather than exclusively Welsh identity.[63][64] The relative lack of local support for the Assembly and difficulties between the Welsh Office and Cardiff Council in acquiring the originally preferred venue, Cardiff City Hall, encouraged other local authorities to bid to house the Assembly.[65][66] However, the Assembly was eventually located at Tŷ Hywel in Cardiff Bay in 1999. In 2005, a new debating chamber on an adjacent site, designed by Richard Rogers, was opened.
Government
[edit]The Senedd (Welsh Parliament; Welsh: Senedd Cymru) has been based in Cardiff Bay since its formation in 1999 as the "National Assembly for Wales". The Senedd building was opened on 1 March 2006 by The Queen.[67] The Members of the Senedd (MSs), the Senedd Commission and ministerial support staff are based in Cardiff Bay.
Cardiff elects four constituency Members of the Senedd to the Senedd; the constituencies for the Senedd are the same as for the UK Parliament. All of the city's electors have an extra vote for the South Wales Central regional members; this system increases proportionality to the Senedd. The most recent Senedd general election was held on 6 May 2021.
In the Senedd, Cardiff is represented by Jenny Rathbone (Labour) in Cardiff Central, Julie Morgan (Labour) in Cardiff North, former First Minister Mark Drakeford (Labour) in Cardiff West and former First Minister Vaughan Gething (Labour) in Cardiff South and Penarth.

At Westminster, Cardiff is represented by four constituencies: Cardiff East, Cardiff North, Cardiff South and Penarth, and Cardiff West.
The Welsh Government is headquartered in Cardiff's Cathays Park, where most of its civil servants are based, with smaller numbers in other central locations: Cathays, Canton, and Cardiff Bay.[68] There are other Welsh Government offices in other parts of Wales, such as Llandudno and Aberystwyth, and there are international offices.[69]
Local government
[edit]Between 1889 and 1974 Cardiff was a county borough governed by Cardiff County Borough Council (known as Cardiff City Council after 1905). Between 1974 and 1996, Cardiff was governed by Cardiff City Council, a district council of South Glamorgan. Since local government reorganisation in 1996, Cardiff has been governed by the City and County Council of Cardiff, based at County Hall in Atlantic Wharf, Cardiff Bay. Voters elect 75 councillors every four years.
Between the 2004 and 2012 local elections, no individual political party held a majority on Cardiff County Council. The Liberal Democrats held the largest number of seats and Cllr Rodney Berman was Leader of the council.[70] The Liberal Democrats and Plaid Cymru formed a partnership administration.[71] In the 2012 elections the Labour Party achieved an outright majority, after gaining an additional 33 seats across the city.
Cardiff is divided into communities, several with their own community council and the rest governed directly by Cardiff City Council. Elections are held every five years. The last contested elections would have been held at the same time as the 2017 Cardiff Council election had there been more candidates standing than available seats. Those with community councils are:
Geography
[edit]The centre of Cardiff is relatively flat and bounded by hills to the east, north and west. Its location influenced its development as the world's largest coal port, notably its proximity and easy access to the coalfields of the South Wales Valleys. The highest point in the local authority area is Garth Hill, 307 m (1,007 ft) above sea level.
Cardiff is built on reclaimed marshland on a bed of Triassic stones. This reclaimed marshland stretches from Chepstow to the Ely Estuary,[78] which is the natural boundary of Cardiff and the Vale of Glamorgan. Triassic landscapes of this part of the world are usually shallow and low-lying, consistent with the flatness of the centre of Cardiff.[79] The classic Triassic marl, sand and conglomerate rocks are used predominantly throughout Cardiff as building materials. Many of these Triassic rocks are purplish, especially the coastal marl found near Penarth. One of the Triassic rocks used in Cardiff is "Radyr Stone", a freestone which as its name suggests is quarried in the Radyr district.[80] Cardiff has also imported some materials for buildings: Devonian sandstones (the Old Red Sandstone) from the Brecon Beacons has been used. Most famously, the buildings of Cathays Park, the civic centre in the centre of the city, are built of Portland stone from Dorset.[81] A widely used building stone in Cardiff is the yellow-grey Liassic limestone rock of the Vale of Glamorgan, including the rare "Sutton Stone", a conglomerate of lias limestone and carboniferous limestone.[82]
Cardiff is bordered to the west by the rural district of the Vale of Glamorgan, also known as the Garden of Cardiff,[83] to the east by the city of Newport; to the north by the South Wales Valleys, and to the south by the Severn Estuary and Bristol Channel. The River Taff winds through the city centre and together with the River Ely flows into the freshwater Cardiff Bay. A third river, the Rhymney, flows through the east of the city directly into the Severn Estuary.
Cardiff lies near the Glamorgan Heritage Coast, stretching westward from Penarth and Barry – commuter towns of Cardiff – with striped yellow-blue Jurassic limestone cliffs. The Glamorgan coast is the only part of the Celtic Sea with exposed Jurassic (blue lias) geology. This stretch of coast with its reefs, sandbanks and serrated cliffs was a ship graveyard; many ships sailing to Cardiff during the industrial era were wrecked on this hostile coastline during west/south-westerly gales. Smuggling, deliberate shipwrecking and attacks on ships were also common.[84]
Cityscape
[edit]


Atlantic Wharf
"Inner Cardiff" consists of the wards of Plasnewydd, Gabalfa, Roath, Cathays, Adamsdown and Splott ward on the north and east of the city centre, and Butetown, Grangetown, Riverside and Canton to the south and west.[85] The inner-city areas to the south of the A4161 road, known as the "Southern Arc", are with the exception of Cardiff Bay some of the poorest districts of Wales, with low levels of economic activity.[86] On the other hand, Gabalfa, Plasnewydd and Cathays north of the 'arc' have large student populations,[87] and Pontcanna (north of Riverside and alongside Canton) is a favourite for students and young professionals. Penylan, to the north east of Roath Park, is an affluent area popular with older parents and the retired.
To the west lie Ely and Caerau, which have some of the largest housing estates in the United Kingdom. With the exception of some outlying privately built estates at Michaelston-super-Ely, this is an economically disadvantaged area with high numbers of unemployed households. Culverhouse Cross is a more affluent western area of the city. Fairwater, Heath, Birchgrove, Gabalfa, Mynachdy, Llandaff North, Llandaff, Llanishen, Radyr, Whitchurch & Tongwynlais, Rhiwbina, Thornhill, Lisvane and Cyncoed lie in an arc from the north-west to the north-east of the centre. Lisvane, Cyncoed, Radyr and Rhiwbina contain some of the most expensive housing in Wales.
Further east lie the wards of Pontprennau and Old St Mellons, St Mellons, Rumney, Pentwyn, Llanrumney, Llanedeyrn and Trowbridge. The last four are largely public housing stock, although much new private housing is being built in Trowbridge. Pontprennau is the newest "suburb" of Cardiff, while Old St Mellons has a history going back to the 11th-century Norman Conquest.[88] The region that may be called "Rural Cardiff" contains the villages of St Fagans, Creigiau, Pentyrch, Tongwynlais and Gwaelod-y-garth.[89] In 2017, plans were approved for a new suburb of 7,000 homes between Radyr and St Fagans, known as Plasdŵr.[90] St Fagans, home to the Museum of Welsh Life, is protected from further development.[91]
Since 2000, there has been a marked change of scale and building height in Cardiff, with the development of the city centre's first purpose-built high-rise apartments.[92] Tall buildings have been built in the city centre and Cardiff Bay, and more are planned.[93]
Climate
[edit]| Cardiff | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Climate chart (explanation) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Cardiff, in the north temperate zone, has a maritime climate (Köppen: Cfb) marked by mild weather that is often cloudy, wet and windy.[94] Cardiff is one of the warmest and wettest cities in the UK, with an average annual temperature and rainfall of approximately 11°C and 1200mm respectively. Summers tend to be warm and sunny, with average maxima between 19 and 22 °C (66 and 72 °F). Winters are fairly wet, but excessive rainfall as well as frost are rare. Spring and autumn feel similar, with mild temperatures averaging around 15°C as daytime maxima. Rain is unpredictable at any time of year, although showers tend to be shorter in summer.[95]
The northern part of the county, being higher and inland, tends to be cooler and wetter than the city centre.[96]
Cardiff's maximum and minimum monthly temperatures average 21.8 °C (71.2 °F) (July) and 2.5 °C (36.5 °F) (January and February).
For Wales, the temperatures average 19.3 °C (66.7 °F) (July) and 1.6 °C (34.9 °F) (February).[97][98]
Cardiff has 1,573 hours of sunshine in an average year (Wales 1,407.5 hours). Cardiff is sunniest in July, with an average 199.6 hours during the month (Wales 177 hours), and least sunny in December with 50.4 hours (Wales 41.4 hours).[97][98]
Cardiff experiences less rainfall than average for Wales. It falls on 153 days in an average year, with total annual rainfall of 1,203.3 mm (47.37 in). Monthly rainfall patterns show that from October to January, average monthly rainfall in Cardiff exceeds 100 mm (3.9 in) each month, the wettest month being December with 139.6 mm (5.50 in) and the driest from April to June, with average monthly rainfall fairly consistent between 70 and 80 mm (2.8 and 3.1 in).[97][98]
| Climate data for Cardiff (Bute Park) WMO ID: 99610; coordinates 51°29′17″N 3°11′19″W / 51.48818°N 3.18859°W; elevation: 9 m (30 ft); 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1913–present[a] | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
| Record high °C (°F) | 15.0 (59.0) |
18.3 (64.9) |
21.6 (70.9) |
26.9 (80.4) |
28.9 (84.0) |
32.1 (89.8) |
33.6 (92.5) |
34.5 (94.1) |
29.7 (85.5) |
27.1 (80.8) |
18.7 (65.7) |
16.7 (62.1) |
34.5 (94.1) |
| Mean daily maximum °C (°F) | 8.6 (47.5) |
9.2 (48.6) |
11.3 (52.3) |
14.4 (57.9) |
17.4 (63.3) |
20.1 (68.2) |
21.8 (71.2) |
21.4 (70.5) |
19.1 (66.4) |
15.3 (59.5) |
11.6 (52.9) |
9.1 (48.4) |
15.0 (59.0) |
| Daily mean °C (°F) | 5.6 (42.1) |
5.9 (42.6) |
7.6 (45.7) |
10.1 (50.2) |
13.0 (55.4) |
15.7 (60.3) |
17.5 (63.5) |
17.2 (63.0) |
14.9 (58.8) |
11.7 (53.1) |
8.3 (46.9) |
6.0 (42.8) |
11.1 (52.0) |
| Mean daily minimum °C (°F) | 2.5 (36.5) |
2.5 (36.5) |
3.9 (39.0) |
5.7 (42.3) |
8.5 (47.3) |
11.1 (52.0) |
13.1 (55.6) |
12.9 (55.2) |
10.7 (51.3) |
8.0 (46.4) |
4.9 (40.8) |
2.8 (37.0) |
7.3 (45.1) |
| Record low °C (°F) | −16.7 (1.9) |
−11.1 (12.0) |
−8.9 (16.0) |
−4.8 (23.4) |
−2.0 (28.4) |
1.0 (33.8) |
4.5 (40.1) |
3.6 (38.5) |
0.5 (32.9) |
−3.4 (25.9) |
−8.7 (16.3) |
−10.1 (13.8) |
−16.7 (1.9) |
| Average precipitation mm (inches) | 127.0 (5.00) |
93.0 (3.66) |
85.3 (3.36) |
72.1 (2.84) |
78.5 (3.09) |
73.5 (2.89) |
83.6 (3.29) |
104.8 (4.13) |
86.3 (3.40) |
129.1 (5.08) |
130.7 (5.15) |
139.6 (5.50) |
1,203.5 (47.39) |
| Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) | 15.6 | 12.0 | 12.3 | 10.7 | 11.2 | 10.4 | 11.2 | 12.4 | 11.8 | 15.0 | 15.6 | 15.2 | 153.4 |
| Mean monthly sunshine hours | 53.5 | 76.2 | 116.6 | 177.0 | 198.4 | 195.2 | 199.6 | 185.3 | 151.9 | 103.9 | 65.0 | 50.4 | 1,572.9 |
| Source 1: Met Office[99][100][101] Ordnance Survey[102] | |||||||||||||
| Source 2: KNMI[103] Starlings Roost Weather[104][105] | |||||||||||||
- ^ Extreme temperature records were measured at Cardiff (1913–1976), Cardiff Weather Centre (1982–2006) and Bute Park (1977–present).
Demography
[edit]| Year | Pop. | ±% |
|---|---|---|
| 1801 | 6,342 | — |
| 1851 | 26,630 | +319.9% |
| 1861 | 48,965 | +83.9% |
| 1871 | 71,301 | +45.6% |
| 1881 | 93,637 | +31.3% |
| 1891 | 142,114 | +51.8% |
| 1901 | 172,629 | +21.5% |
| 1911 | 209,804 | +21.5% |
| 1921 | 227,753 | +8.6% |
| 1931 | 247,270 | +8.6% |
| 1941 | 257,112 | +4.0% |
| 1951 | 267,356 | +4.0% |
| 1961 | 278,552 | +4.2% |
| 1971 | 290,227 | +4.2% |
| 1981 | 274,500 | −5.4% |
| 1991 | 272,557 | −0.7% |
| 2001 | 292,150 | +7.2% |
| 2011 | 346,100 | +18.5% |
| 2021 | 362,400 | +4.7% |
| Source: Vision of Britain except 2011, which is the 2011 census data from the Office for National Statistics. Historical populations are calculated with the modern boundaries | ||
After a period of decline in the 1970s and 1980s, Cardiff's population is growing again. It reached 362,400 in the 2021 census,[106] compared to a 2011 census figure of 346,100.[107] Between mid-2007 and mid-2008, Cardiff was the fastest-growing local authority in Wales, with growth of 1.2%.[108] According to 2001 census data, Cardiff was the 21st largest urban area in the United Kingdom.[109] The Cardiff Larger Urban Zone (a Eurostat definition including the Vale of Glamorgan and a number of local authorities in the Valleys) has 841,600 people, the 10th largest LUZ in the UK.[110] The Cardiff and South Wales Valleys metropolitan area has a population of nearly 1.1 million.[111]

Official census estimates of the city's total population have been disputed. The city council published two articles arguing that the 2001 census seriously under-reported the population of Cardiff, and in particular the ethnic minority population of some inner city areas.[112][113]
The Welsh Government's official mid-year estimate of the population of the Cardiff local authority area in 2019 was 366,903.[114] At the 2011, census the official population of the Cardiff Built Up Area (BUA) was put at 447,287.[115][116] The BUA is not contiguous with the local authority boundary and aggregates data at a lower level; for Cardiff this includes the urban part of Cardiff, Penarth/Dinas Powys, Caerphilly and Pontypridd.
Cardiff has an ethnically diverse population due to past trading connections, post-war immigration and large numbers of foreign students who attend university in the city. The ethnic make-up of Cardiff's population at the 2011 census was: 84.7% White, 1.6% mixed White and Black African/Caribbean, 0.7% mixed White and Asian, 0.6% mixed other, 8.1% Asian, 2.4% Black, 1.4% Arab and 0.6% other ethnic groups.[117] This means almost 53,000 people from a non-white ethnic group reside in the city. This diversity, especially that of the city's long-established African[118] and Arab[119] communities, has been recorded in cultural exhibitions and events, along with books published on this subject.[120][121]
Health
[edit]
There are seven NHS hospitals in the city, the largest being the University Hospital of Wales, which is the third largest hospital in the UK and deals with most accidents and emergencies.[122] The University Dental Hospital, which provides emergency treatment, is also located on this site. Llandough Hospital is located in the south of the city.
St. David's Hospital, the city's newest hospital, built behind the former building, is located in Canton and provides services for the elderly and children. Cardiff Royal Infirmary is on Newport Road, near the city centre. The majority of this hospital was closed in 1999, but the west wing remained open for clinic services, genitourinary medicine and rehabilitation treatment. Rookwood Hospital and the Velindre Cancer Centre are also located within Cardiff. They are administered by the Cardiff and Vale University Health Board, with the exception of Velindre, which is run by a separate trust.[123][124] Spire Healthcare, a private hospital, is in Pontprennau.[125]
Language
[edit]
Cardiff has a chequered linguistic history with Welsh, English, Latin, Norse and Norman French preponderant at different times. Welsh was the majority language in Cardiff from the 13th century until the city's explosive growth in the Victorian era.[126] As late as 1850, five of the 12 Anglican churches within the current city boundaries conducted their services exclusively in Welsh, while only two worshipped exclusively in English.[126] By 1891, the percentage of Welsh speakers had fallen to 27.9% and only Lisvane, Llanedeyrn and Creigiau remained as majority Welsh-speaking communities.[127] The Welsh language became grouped around a small cluster of chapels and churches, the most notable of which is Tabernacl in the city centre, one of four UK churches chosen to hold official services to commemorate the new millennium.
The city's first Welsh-language school (Ysgol Gymraeg Bryntaf) was established in the 1950s. Welsh has since regained ground.[128] Aided by Welsh-medium education and migration from other parts of Wales, there are now many more Welsh speakers: their numbers doubled between the 1991 and 2011 censuses, from 18,071 (6.6%) to 36,735 (11.1%) residents aged three years and above.[129] The LSOA (Lower Layer Super Output Area) with the highest percentage of Welsh speakers in the city centre is found in Canton, at 25.5%.[130] The LSOA with the highest percentage of Welsh speakers in the whole of Cardiff is Whitchurch, at 26%.[130]
Cardiff City Council adopted a five-year Welsh-language strategy in 2017, aimed at increasing the number of Welsh speakers (aged 3+) in Cardiff by 15.9%, from 36,735 in 2011 to 42,584 residents by the 2021 Census.[131] The ONS estimated that in December 2020, 89,900 (24.8%) of Cardiff's population could speak Welsh.[132]
In addition to English and Welsh, the diversity of Cardiff's population (including foreign students) means that many other languages are spoken. One study has found that Cardiff has speakers of at least 94 languages, with Somali, Urdu, Bengali and Arabic being the most commonly spoken foreign ones.[133]
The modern Cardiff accent is distinct from that of nearby South Wales Valleys. It is marked primarily by:
- Substitution of ⟨iə⟩ by ⟨jøː⟩[134][135]
- here [hiːə] pronounced as [(h)jøː] in the broader form[clarification needed]
- The vowel of start may be realised as [æː] or even [ɛː], so that Cardiff is pronounced [ˈkæːdɪf].
Language schools
[edit]Due to its diversity and large student population, more people now come to the city to learn English. Foreign students from Arab states and other European countries are a common sight on the streets of Cardiff.[108] The British Council has an office in the city centre and there are six accredited schools in the area.[136]
Religion
[edit]- No religion (42.9%)
- Christianity (38.3%)
- Islam (9.30%)
- Hinduism (1.50%)
- Buddhism (0.40%)
- Sikhism (0.40%)
- Judaism (0.20%)
- Other religion (0.60%)
- Not stated (6.30%)
Since 1922, Cardiff has included Llandaff within its boundary, along with the Anglican Llandaff Cathedral, the parish church of Llandaff and the seat of the Bishop of Llandaff, head of the Church in Wales and the Diocese of Llandaff.
There is a Roman Catholic cathedral in the city. Since 1916, Cardiff has been the seat of a Catholic archbishop, but there appears to have been a fall in the estimated Catholic population, with numbers in 2006 around 25,000 fewer than in 1980.[138] Likewise, the Jewish population appears to have fallen – there are two synagogues in Cardiff, one in Cyncoed and one in Moira Terrace, as opposed to seven at the turn of the 20th century.[139] There are several nonconformist chapels, an early 20th century Greek Orthodox church and 11 mosques.[140][141][142] In the 2001 census, 66.9% of Cardiff's population described itself as Christian, a percentage point below the Welsh and UK averages.
The oldest of the non-Christian communities in Wales is Judaism. Jews were not permitted to live in England and Wales between the 1290 Edict of Expulsion and the 17th century. A Welsh Jewish community was re-established in the 18th century.[143] There was once a fairly substantial Jewish population in South Wales, most of which has disappeared. The Orthodox Jewish community congregations are consolidated in the Cardiff United Synagogue in Cyncoed, which was dedicated by Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks in 2003.[144][145] The Cardiff Reform Synagogue is in Adamsdown.
Cardiff's Muslim population is much above the Welsh average and the longest established in the UK, being started by Yemeni and Somali sailors settling in the 19th century.[146] Cardiff now has over 11,000 Muslims with various national affiliations[147] – nearly 52 per cent of the Muslim population in Wales.[148]
The proportion of Cardiff residents declaring themselves Hindu, Sikh and Jewish were all considerably higher than the Welsh averages, but lower than the UK figures. The city has had a Hindu community since Indian immigrants settled in the 1950s and 1960s. The first Hindu temple in the city was opened in Grangetown on 6 April 1979 on the site of an abandoned synagogue.[149] The 25th anniversary of the founding was celebrated in September 2007 with a parade of over 3,000 people through the city centre, including Hindus from across the United Kingdom and members of Cardiff's other religious communities.[150] There are over 2,000 Hindus in Cardiff, worshipping at three temples.[147]
In the 2001 census 18.8% of the city's population stated they had no religion, while 8.6% did not state a religion.[151]
Economy
[edit]
As the capital city of Wales, Cardiff is the main engine of growth in the Welsh economy. Though the population of Cardiff is about 10% of the Welsh population, the economy of Cardiff makes up nearly 20% of Welsh GDP and 40% of the city's workforce are daily in-commuters from the surrounding South Wales area.[152][153]
Industry has played a major part in Cardiff's development for many centuries. The main catalyst for its transformation from a small town into a big city was the demand for coal required in making iron and later steel, brought to sea by packhorse from Merthyr Tydfil. This was first achieved by building a 25-mile (40 km) canal from Merthyr (510 ft or 160 m above sea level) to the Taff Estuary at Cardiff.[154] Eventually the Taff Vale Railway replaced the canal barges and massive marshalling yards sprang up as new docks were developed in Cardiff – all prompted by the soaring worldwide demand for coal from the South Wales valleys.
At its peak, Cardiff's port area, known as Tiger Bay, became the busiest port in the world and – for some time – the world's most important coal port.[155][156] In the years leading up to the First World War, more than 10 million tonnes of coal was exported annually from Cardiff Docks.[157] In 1907, Cardiff's Coal Exchange was the first host to a business deal for a million pounds Sterling.[158] The high demand for Welsh coal and specifically Welsh artificial fuel, named Patent Fuel, is shown by the numerous factories producing this fuel, with the same recipe, in the region of Cardiff. Most well known factories were the Star Patent fuel Co., the Crown Patent fuel, the Cardiff Patent fuel etc.[159] After a period of decline, due to low demand on coal, Cardiff's port has started to grow again – over 3 million tonnes of cargo passed through the docks in 2007.[160]

Cardiff today is the main finance and business services centre in Wales, with strong representation of finance and business services in the local economy. This sector, combined with the public administration, education and health sectors, have accounted for about 75% of Cardiff's economic growth since 1991.[162] The city was recently placed seventh overall in the top 50 European cities in the fDI 2008 Cities of the Future list published by the fDi magazine, and ranked seventh in terms of attracting foreign investment.[163] Notable companies such as Legal & General, Admiral Insurance, HBOS, Zurich, ING Direct, The AA, Principality Building Society, 118118, British Gas, Brains, SWALEC Energy and BT, all operate large national or regional headquarters and contact centres in the city, some of them based in Cardiff's office towers such as Capital Tower and Brunel House. Other major employers include NHS Wales and the Senedd. On 1 March 2004, Cardiff was granted Fairtrade City status.
Cardiff is one of the most popular tourist destinations in the United Kingdom, receiving 18.3 million visitors in 2010 and generating £852 million for the city's economy.[164] One result is that one in five employees in Cardiff is based in the distribution, hotels and restaurants sector, highlighting the growing retail and tourism industries in the city.[162] The city has many hotels of varying sizes and standards, providing almost 9,000 available beds.[165]
Cardiff is home to the Welsh media and a large media sector with BBC Cymru Wales, S4C and ITV Wales all having studios in the city.[166] There is a large independent TV production industry sector of over 600 companies, employing around 6,000, with a turnover estimated at £350 million.[166] Just to the north-west of the city, in Rhondda Cynon Taff, the first completely new film studios in the UK for 30 years are being built, to be named Valleywood. The studios are set to be the biggest in the UK. In 2011 the BBC completed the Roath Lock studios in Cardiff Bay to film dramas such as Casualty, Doctor Who, and Pobol y Cwm.[167]
Cardiff has several regeneration projects, such as St David's 2 Centre and surrounding areas of the city centre, and the £1.4 billion International Sports Village in Cardiff Bay, which played a part in the London 2012 Olympics. It features the only Olympic-standard swimming pool in Wales, the Cardiff International Pool, which opened on 12 January 2008.
According to the Welsh Rugby Union, the Principality Stadium contributed £1 billion to the Welsh economy in the ten years after it opened in 1999, with around 85% of that staying in the Cardiff area.[168]
Shopping
[edit]
Most of Cardiff's shopping portfolio is in the city centre around Queen Street, St Mary Street and High Street, with large suburban retail parks in Cardiff Bay, Culverhouse Cross, Leckwith, Newport Road and Pontprennau, together with markets in the city centre and Splott. A £675 million regeneration programme for Cardiff's St. David's Centre was completed in 2009, providing a total of 1,400,000 sq ft (130,000 m2) of shopping space, making it one of the largest shopping centres in the United Kingdom.[169] The centre was named the international shopping centre of the year in 2010 by Retail Leisure International (RLI).[170]

The Castle Quarter is a commercial area in the north of the city centre, which includes some of Cardiff's Victorian and Edwardian arcades: Castle Arcade, Morgan Arcade and Royal Arcade, and principal shopping streets: St Mary Street, High Street, The Hayes, and Queen Street. Morgan Arcade is home to Spillers Records, the world's oldest record shop.[171][172] Cardiff has a number of markets, including the vast Victorian indoor Cardiff Central Market and the newly established Riverside Community Market, which specialises in locally produced organic produce.[citation needed]
Transport
[edit]Rail
[edit]Cardiff Central railway station is the largest railway station in Wales, with eight platforms coping with over 12.5 million passengers a year.[173][174] It provides direct services to Bridgend and Newport, long-distance, cross-Wales services to Wrexham and Holyhead, and services to Bristol, Birmingham, Manchester and London. Cardiff Central Station is situated within the southern border of what was known Temperance Town, a former residential area within central Cardiff.
Cardiff Queen Street railway station is the second busiest in Wales and the hub for the Valley Lines services that connect the South Wales Valleys and the Cardiff suburbs with the city centre. It is located at the eastern end of the city centre and provides services to Cardiff Bay. Cardiff has a suburban rail system known as the Valleys & Cardiff Local Routes, operated by Transport for Wales. There are eight lines that serve 20 stations in the city, 26 in the wider urban area (including Taffs Well, Penarth and Dinas Powys) and more than 60 in the South Wales valleys and the Vale of Glamorgan.[175]
Metro
[edit]The South Wales Metro is an integrated public transport system under development in south-east Wales, centered on Cardiff. The project is to include the electrification of some of the existing railway lines and the creation of multiple light rail and light rapid transit lines. Four lines are under construction with a further three planned. The first lines will link Penarth and Cardiff Bay to Radyr, Treherbert, Aberdare and Merthyr Tydfil, with plans to also serve Pontyclun, St Mellons and Porth Teigr. Alongside this, current commuter services will be improved with a near-tripling in capacity on some routes to Bridgend and Rhymney.
Air
[edit]Domestic and international air links to Cardiff and South & West Wales are provided from Cardiff Airport (CWL), the only international airport in Wales. The airport lies in the village of Rhoose, 10 miles (16 km) west of the city. There are regular bus services linking the airport with Cardiff city centre, and a train service from Rhoose Cardiff International Airport railway station to Cardiff Central.
Road and bus
[edit]The M4 motorway connects Cardiff with Swansea to the west and Newport and London to the east, with four junctions on the M4, including one with the A48(M). The A470 provides an important link from the city to the Heads of the Valleys road. When completed, the A4232 – also known as the Peripheral Distributor Road – will form part of the Cardiff ring-road system, along with the M4 motorway between junctions 30 and 33.[176]
Cardiff has a comprehensive bus network, whose providers include the municipal bus company Cardiff Bus (routes within the city and to Newport, Barry and Penarth), Adventure Travel (cross-city and to Cardiff Airport), Stagecoach South Wales (to the South Wales Valleys) and First Cymru (to Cowbridge and Bridgend). National Express and Megabus provides direct services to major cities such as Bristol, London, Newcastle upon Tyne and Manchester. Most bus services in the city use Cardiff Bus Interchange located next to Central Station, which opened in 2024 replacing an older structure on the same site, whilst intercity and coach services use the coach terminal located near Sophia Gardens in the north of the city centre.
Cycle
[edit]The Taff Trail is a walking and cycle path running for 55 miles (90 km) between Cardiff Bay and Brecon in the Brecon Beacons National Park. It runs through Bute Park, Sophia Gardens and many other green areas within Cardiff. It is possible to cycle the entire distance of the Trail almost completely off-road, as it largely follows the River Taff and many of the disused railways of the Glamorganshire valleys.
Nextbike previously operated a public bike-hire scheme in the city between March 2018 and January 2024,[177] with the scheme allegedly being scrapped due to theft. Cardiff Council are seeking a replacement operator.
Water
[edit]The Aquabus water taxi runs every hour between the city centre (Taff Mead Embankment) and Cardiff Bay (Mermaid Quay), and between Cardiff Bay and Penarth Cardiff Bay Barrage. Throughout the year, Cardiff Waterbus[178] sail between the Pierhead on The Waterfront and the Penarth end of the Cardiff Bay Barrage with short sightseeing cruises.
Between March and October boats depart from Cardiff Bay for Flat Holm Island. The PS Waverley and MV Balmoral sail from Britannia Quay (in Roath Basin) to various destinations in the Bristol Channel.
-
Cardiff Bus is the main bus operator in the Cardiff area
-
Typical cycle lane in Cardiff
-
Aquabus
Telecommunications
[edit]029 is the current telephone dialling code for Cardiff,[179] as well as for the neighbouring towns of Penarth, Dinas Powys and Caerphilly. The dialling code is optional when dialling within the area: one can dial between any two phones within the 029 code using only the eight-digit local number.
Prior to the Big Number Change on 22 April 2000 the area had shorter, six-digit local numbers with an area code of 01222.[179] This was 0222 before May 1995, derived from 0 (indicating it was a trunk call), 22 (CA on a telephone pad, for CArdiff) and 2 (as 220 was used for CAmbridge and 221 for BAth). Before the introduction of automated trunk call dialling, non-local numbers were accessed through a system of manual telephone exchanges, in common with rest if the United Kingdom.
There remains a common misconception that local numbers are still six digits long and that the code is 02920, even though there are newer Cardiff numbers in the ranges (029) 21xx xxxx and (029) 22xx xxxx.[179]
Education
[edit]Cardiff is home to four major institutions of higher education: Cardiff University, Cardiff Metropolitan University, University of South Wales and the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama.
Cardiff University was founded by a royal charter in 1883 as the University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire,[180] is a member of the Russell Group of leading research led universities, having most of its campus in Cathays and the city centre. Cardiff Metropolitan University (formerly UWIC) has campuses in the Llandaff, Cyncoed and city centre areas, and is part of the confederal University of Wales. The Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama is a conservatoire established in 1949 and is based in the grounds of Cardiff Castle. The University of South Wales's Cardiff campus, Atrium, is home to the Cardiff School of Creative & Cultural Industries and is located in the city centre.
The total number of higher education students in the city is around 43,900.[181][182] The city also has two further education colleges: Cardiff and Vale College and St David's College. The former is the result of a merger, completed in August 2011, between Coleg Glan Hafren and Barry College. Further education is also offered at most high schools in the city.
Cardiff has three state nursery schools (one bilingual), 98 state primary schools (two bilingual, fifteen Welsh medium), and 19 state secondary schools (three Welsh medium).[183] There are also several independent schools in the city, including St John's College, Llandaff Cathedral School, Cardiff Sixth Form College, Kings Monkton School and Howell's School, a single-sex girls' school (until sixth form). In 2013 Cardiff Sixth Form College came top of the independent senior schools in the UK, which were based on the percentage of A* and A at Advanced Level. Also in the top 100 were St John's College and Howell's School.[184]
Notable schools include Whitchurch High School (the largest secondary school in Wales),[185] Fitzalan High School (one of the most multi-cultural state schools in the UK),[186] and Ysgol Gyfun Gymraeg Glantaf (the largest Welsh medium secondary school in Wales).
As well as academic institutions, Cardiff is also home to other educational and learning organisations such as Techniquest, a hands-on science discovery centre that now has franchises throughout Wales, and is part of the Wales Gene Park in collaboration with Cardiff University, NHS Wales and the Welsh Development Agency (WDA).[187] Cardiff is also home to a regional office of the International Baccalaureate Organisation (IBO).[188]
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Landmarks and attractions
[edit]Cardiff has many landmark buildings such as the Principality Stadium, Pierhead Building, the Welsh National Museum and the Senedd building, the home of the Welsh Parliament. Cardiff is also known for Cardiff Castle, St David's Hall, St John the Baptist Church, Llandaff Cathedral and the Wales Millennium Centre.
Cardiff Castle is a major tourist attraction in the city and is situated in the heart of the city centre. The National History Museum at St Fagans in Cardiff is a large open-air museum housing dozens of buildings from throughout Welsh history that have been moved to the site in Cardiff. The Civic Centre in Cathays Park comprises a collection of Edwardian buildings such as the City Hall, National Museum and Gallery of Wales, Cardiff Crown Court, and buildings forming part of Cardiff University, together with more modern civic buildings. These buildings are laid out around the Queen Alexandra Gardens, a formal park which contains the Welsh National War Memorial and a number of other, smaller memorials.
In addition to Cardiff Castle, Castell Coch is a castle in Tongwynlais, in the north of the city. The current castle is an elaborately decorated Victorian folly designed by William Burges for the Marquess and built in the 1870s, as an occasional retreat. However, the Victorian castle stands on the footings of a much older medieval castle possibly built by Ifor Bach, a regional baron with links to Cardiff Castle also. The exterior has become a popular location for film and television productions. It rarely fulfilled its intended role as a retreat for the Butes, who seldom stayed there. For the Marquess, the pleasure had been in its creation, a pleasure lost following Burges's death in 1881.
Cardiff claims the largest concentration of castles of any city in the world.[189] As well as Cardiff Castle and Castell Coch, there are the remains of two motte-and-bailey castles in Morganstown and Rhiwbina, known as Morganstown Castle Mound and Twmpath Castle or Twmpath Motte (also known as Caer Cynwrig) respectively.[190][191] Twmpath being a Welsh word for a small mound),[192] which along with a castle at Whitchurch (known as Treoda and destroyed by housing in the 1960s) formed an arc of fortifications which divided the Norman lordship from the Welsh lordship of Senghenydd.[193] Further up the Cefn Cibwr ridge on the boundary with Caerphilly there is also another ruined castle, known as Morgraig Castle (Welsh: Castell Morgraig). Archaeological evidence suggests this castle was never finished, and it is debated whether the fortification was of Norman or Welsh origin. The concentration of castles indicates the moveable nature of the border between the Norman lordship of Glamorgan, centred at Cardiff, and its Welsh neighbours to the north.
There is also the ruined Llandaff Bishop's Palace, also known as Llandaff Castle,[194] which was the home of the medieval bishops, which was destroyed about 1403–1404 by the Welsh leader Owain Glyndŵr. Now only the ruined gatehouse remains.[194] Not strictly a castle in the historical sense, Saint Fagans Castle is a preserved 17th-century manor house, once the seat of the Earls of Plymouth.
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Other major tourist attractions are the Cardiff Bay regeneration sites, which include the recently opened Wales Millennium Centre and the Senedd building, and many other cultural and sites of interest, including the Cardiff Bay Barrage and the famous Coal Exchange. The New Theatre was founded in 1906 and refurbished in the 1980s. Until the opening of the Wales Millennium Centre in 2004, it was the premier venue in Wales for touring theatre and dance companies. Other venues popular for concerts and sporting events include Cardiff International Arena, St David's Hall and the Principality Stadium. Cardiff Story, a museum documenting the city's history, has been open to the public since the spring of 2011.
Cardiff has over 1,000 listed buildings, ranging from the more prominent buildings such as the castles, to smaller buildings, houses and structures.[195] Cathedral Road was developed by the 3rd Marquis of Bute and is lined by fine villas, some backing on to Sophia Gardens.
Cardiff has walks of special interest for tourists and ramblers alike, such as the Centenary Walk, which runs for 2+1⁄4 miles (3.5 km) within Cardiff city centre. This route passes through many of Cardiff's landmarks and historic buildings. The Animal Wall, designed by William Burges in 1866, marks the south edge of Bute Park on Castle Street. It bears 15 carved animal statues.
Culture and recreation
[edit]
Cardiff has many cultural sites varying from the historical Cardiff Castle and out of town Castell Coch to the more modern Wales Millennium Centre and Cardiff Bay. Cardiff was a finalist in the European Capital of Culture 2008.[196] In recent years Cardiff has grown in stature as a tourist destination, with recent accolades including Cardiff being voted the eighth favourite UK city by readers of the Guardian.[197]
The city was also listed as one of the top 10 destinations in the UK on the official British tourist boards website Visit Britain,[198] and US travel guide Frommers have listed Cardiff as one of 13 top destinations worldwide for 2008.[199] Annual events in Cardiff that have become regular appearances in Cardiff's calendar include Sparks in the Park, The Great British Cheese Festival, Pride Cymru (formerly Cardiff Mardi Gras), Cardiff Winter Wonderland, Cardiff Festival and Made in Roath.
Music and performing arts
[edit]
A large number of concerts are held in the city, the larger ones at St David's Hall, Cardiff International Arena and occasionally the Principality Stadium. A number of festivals are also held in Cardiff, the largest being the Cardiff Big Weekend Festival, held annually in the city centre in the summer and playing host to free musical performances (from artists such as Ash, Jimmy Cliff, Cerys Matthews, the Fun Loving Criminals, Soul II Soul and the Magic Numbers), fairground rides and cultural events such as a Children's Festival that takes place in the grounds of Cardiff Castle. The annual festival claims to be the UK's largest free outdoor festival, attracting over 250,000 visitors in 2007.[200]
Cardiff hosted the National Eisteddfod in 1883, 1899, 1938, 1960, 1978, 2008 and 2018. Cardiff is unique in Wales in having two permanent stone circles used by the Gorsedd of Bards during Eisteddfodau. The original circle stands in Gorsedd Gardens in front of the National Museum while its 1978 replacement is situated in Bute Park. Since 1983, Cardiff has hosted the BBC Cardiff Singer of the World competition, a world-renowned event on the opera calendar which is held every two years. The city also hosts smaller events.
The Wales Millennium Centre hosts performances of opera, ballet, dance, comedy, musicals and is home to the BBC National Orchestra of Wales. St David's Hall (which hosts the Singer of the World competition) has regular performances of classical music and ballet as well as music of other genres. The largest of Cardiff's theatres is the New Theatre, situated in the city centre just off Queen Street. Other such venues include the Sherman Theatre, Chapter Arts Centre and the Gate Arts Centre.
The Cardiff music scene is established and wide-ranging: home to the BBC National Orchestra of Wales and the Welsh National Opera; has produced several leading acts; has acted as a springboard for Welsh bands to become famous. Acts hailing from Cardiff include Charlotte Church, Shirley Bassey, Iwan Rheon, the Oppressed, Kids In Glass Houses, Los Campesinos, the Hot Puppies, the School, We're No Heroes, Budgie and Shakin' Stevens. Also, artists such as Stereophonics, the Automatic,[201] Manic Street Preachers,[202] Lostprophets,[203] Underworld, Super Furry Animals, Catatonia and Bullet for My Valentine have links with the city and are associated with the Cardiff music scene.[204] In 2010, Cardiff was named the UK's second "most musical" city by PRS for Music.[205]
Visual arts
[edit]Cardiff has held a photomarathon in the city each year since 2004, in which photographers compete to take the best 12 pictures of 12 previously unknown topics in 12 hours. An exhibition of winners and other entries is held in June/July each year.[206]
Sporting venues
[edit]Cardiff's former municipal baths opened in 1862, as Turkish Baths, and were taken over by the City Council in 1873, before closing over a century later.[207]
Sporting venues include the Principality Stadium – the national stadium and home of the Wales national rugby union team – Sophia Gardens for Glamorgan County Cricket Club, Cardiff City Stadium for Cardiff City F.C. and the Wales football team, Cardiff International Sports Stadium, home of Cardiff Amateur Athletic Club, Cardiff Arms Park for Cardiff Blues and Cardiff RFC rugby union teams, and Ice Arena Wales for Cardiff Devils ice hockey team. It hosted the 1958 British Empire and Commonwealth Games and was dubbed European City of Sport for its role in international sporting events in 2009 and again in 2014.[208] The Principality Stadium hosted 11 football matches during the 2012 Summer Olympics, including the opening event and the men's bronze medal match.[209]
Recreation
[edit]
Cardiff has strong nightlife. Most clubs and bars are situated in the city centre, especially St Mary Street. More recently Cardiff Bay has built up a strong night scene, with many modern bars and restaurants. The Brewery Quarter on St Mary Street is a recently developed venue for bars and restaurant with a central courtyard. Charles Street is also a popular part of the city.

Cardiff is known for its extensive parks and other green spaces covering around 10% of the city's total area.[210] Cardiff's main park, Bute Park (which was formerly the castle grounds) extends northwards from the top of one of Cardiff's main shopping street (Queen Street); when combined with the adjacent Llandaff Fields and Pontcanna Fields to the north-west it produces a massive open space skirting the River Taff. Other popular parks include Roath Park in the north, donated to the city by the 3rd Marquess of Bute in 1887, which includes a popular boating lake; Victoria Park, Cardiff's first official park; and Thompson's Park, formerly home to an aviary removed in the 1970s. Wild open spaces include Howardian Local Nature Reserve, 32 acres (13 ha) of the lower Rhymney valley in Penylan noted for its orchids,[211] and Forest Farm Country Park, over 150 acres (61 ha) along the River Taff in Whitchurch.
Media
[edit]
Cardiff is the Welsh base for the main national broadcasters (BBC Cymru Wales, ITV Wales and S4C). A locally based television station, Made in Cardiff, is also based in the city centre. Major filming studios in Cardiff include the BBC's Roath Lock Studios and Pinewood Studios Wales.
Several contemporary television programmes and films are filmed in and/or set in Cardiff such as Casualty, Doctor Who, The Sarah Jane Adventures, Torchwood, Merlin, Class, The Valleys, Upstairs Downstairs, A Discovery of Witches, His Dark Materials, Being Human, The Story of Tracy Beaker, Wizards vs Aliens, Sex Education and Sherlock.[212]
The main local newspaper is the South Wales Echo; the national paper is the Western Mail. Both are based in Park Street in the city centre. Capital Times, Echo Extra and the South Wales edition of Metro are also based and distributed in the city.
There are several magazines, including Primary Times and a monthly papur bro, and a Welsh-language community newsletter called Y Dinesydd (The Citizen). Radio stations serving the city and based in Cardiff include Capital South Wales, Heart South Wales, BBC Radio Wales, BBC Radio Cymru, Nation Radio Wales, Radio Cardiff, Smooth Wales and Xpress Radio.
The Principality Stadium was one of the first six British landmarks to be fully mapped on Google Street View as a 360-degree virtual tour.[213]
Sport
[edit]
Cardiff hosts many high-profile sporting events at local, national and international level and in recognition of the city's commitment to sport for all was awarded the title of European Capital of Sport 2014.[214][215][216] Organised sports have been held in the city since the early 19th century.[217] national home sporting fixtures are nearly always played in the city. All Wales's multi-sports agencies and many of the country's sports governing bodies have their headquarters in Cardiff and the city's many top quality venues have attracted world-famous sports events, sometimes unrelated to Cardiff or to Wales. In 2008/09, 61% of Cardiff residents regularly participated in sport and active recreation, the highest percentage in ll 22 local authorities in Wales.[218]
Rugby union fans around the world have long been familiar with the old National Stadium, Cardiff Arms Park, and its successor the Principality Stadium, which hosted the FA Cup for six years (from 2001 to 2006) it took to rebuild Wembley Stadium. In 2009, Cardiff hosted the first Ashes cricket test between England and Australia to be held in Wales. Cardiff hosted eight football matches of the London 2012 Olympics.[219]

Cardiff City F.C. (founded 1899 as Riverside AFC) played their home games at Ninian Park from 1910 until the end of the 2008–09 season. The club's new home is the Cardiff City Stadium, which they initially rented to the Cardiff Blues, the city's professional rugby union team, the Blues returning to the Arms Park in 2012. Cardiff City have played in the English Football League since the 1920–21 season, climbing to Division 1 after one season.[220][221] Cardiff City are the only non-English team to have won the FA Cup, beating Arsenal in the 1927 final at Wembley Stadium.[221] They were runners up to Portsmouth in the 2008 final, losing 1–0 at the new Wembley Stadium.[222] In the 2013/14 and 2018/19 seasons Cardiff City played in the English Premier League.
Cardiff Metropolitan University F.C. of the Athletic Union of Cardiff Metropolitan University, based in Cyncoed, play in the Cymru Premier, having been promoted from Welsh League Division One in 2016. They were winners of the Welsh League Cup for the 2018–19 season. [223]
Cardiff has numerous smaller clubs including Bridgend Street A.F.C., Caerau (Ely) A.F.C., Cardiff Corinthians F.C., Cardiff Grange Harlequins A.F.C., and Ely Rangers A.F.C., which all play in the Welsh football league system.[224]
In addition to men's football teams Cardiff City Ladies of the FA Women's Premier League Southern Division are based in the city. Teams in the Welsh Premier Women's Football League are Cardiff Met. Ladies, Cyncoed Ladies and Cardiff City.
During the 1990s, London-based football club Wimbledon FC expressed interest in relocating to Cardiff, having been without a home of their own since exiting Plough Lane stadium in 1991 and sharing with Crystal Palace FC at Selhurst Park. The relocation of the club to Cardiff did not happen; in 2003, the club moved to Milton Keynes and a year later rebranded as Milton Keynes Dons.[225]
Cardiff Arms Park (Welsh: Parc yr Arfau Caerdydd), in central Cardiff, is among the world's most famous venues—being the scene of three Welsh Grand Slams in the 1970s (1971, 1976 and 1978) and six Five Nations titles in nine years—and was the venue for Wales's games in the 1991 Rugby World Cup.[226][227][228][229] The Arms Park has a sporting history dating back to at least the 1850s, when Cardiff Cricket Club (formed 1819) relocated to the site.[217] The ground was donated to Cardiff CC in 1867 by the Marquess of Bute. Cardiff Cricket Club shared the ground with Cardiff Rugby Football Club (founded 1876) — forming Cardiff Athletic Club between them — until 1966, when the cricket section moved to Sophia Gardens. Cardiff Athletic Club and the Welsh Rugby Union established two stadia on the site—Cardiff RFC played at their stadium at the northern end of the site, and the Wales national rugby union team played international matches at the National Stadium, Cardiff Arms Park, which opened in 1970. The National Stadium was replaced by the 74,500 capacity Millennium Stadium (Welsh: Stadiwm y Mileniwm) in 1999—in time for the 1999 Rugby World Cup—and is home stadium to the Wales national rugby and football teams for international matches.[217][226][230][231] In addition to Wales's Six Nations Championship and other international games, the Principality Stadium held four matches in the 2007 Rugby World Cup and six FA Cup finals (from the 2001–02 to 2005–06 seasons) while Wembley Stadium was being rebuilt.[227]

Cardiff Cricket Club was formed in 1819 and Glamorgan County Cricket Club has competed as a first-class county since 1921. Its headquarters and ground is the SWALEC Stadium, Sophia Gardens, since moving from Cardiff Arms Park in 1966. The Sophia Gardens stadium underwent multimillion-pound improvements since being selected to host the first "England" v Australia Test match of the 2009 Ashes series.[217][232] The Hundred franchise team Welsh Fire is also based at the stadium.
Cardiff has a long association with boxing, from 'Peerless' Jim Driscoll — born in Cardiff in 1880 — to more recent, high-profile fights staged in the city.[233] These include the WBC Lennox Lewis vs. Frank Bruno heavyweight championship fight at the Arms Park in 1993, and many of Joe Calzaghe's fights, between 2003 and 2007.
Cardiff's professional ice hockey team, the Cardiff Devils, plays in the 3,000-seat Ice Arena Wales in the Cardiff International Sports Village. It plays in the 12-team professional Elite Ice Hockey League. Founded in 1986, it was one of the most successful British teams in the 1990s.
Cardiff's only American-flag football team is the Hurricanes. It won the British Championship in 2014 after falling short by 2 points in a quarter-final to eventual winners, the London Rebels, the previous year. It is based at Roath Recreational Ground.

The 1958 Commonwealth Games were hosted by Cardiff. These involved 1,130 athletes from 35 national teams competing in 94 events.[234] One of the venues for those Games—The Wales Empire Swimming Pool—was demolished in 1998 to make way for the Principality Stadium. The GBP32m Cardiff International Pool in Cardiff Bay, opened to the public on 12 January 2008 — part of the GBP1bn International Sports Village (ISV) — is the only Olympic-standard swimming pool in Wales. When complete, the ISV complex will provide Olympic standard facilities for sports including boxing and fencing, gymnastics, judo, white water events (including canoeing and kayaking) and wrestling as well as a snow dome with real snow for skiing and snowboarding, an arena for public ice skating and ice hockey and a hotel.[235][236] Some of the sports facilities at the ISV were to be used as training venues for the London 2012 Olympics.[237]

The Principality Stadium hosts motor-sport events such as the World Rally Championship, as part of Wales Rally GB. The first indoor special stages of the World Rally Championship were held at the Principality Stadium in September 2005 and have been an annual event since.[238] The British Speedway Grand Prix, one of the World Championship events, is held at the Principality Stadium.[231] While the track—a temporary, purpose built, shale oval—is not universally loved, the venue is considered the best of the World Championship's 11 rounds.[239]
The Cardiff International Sports Stadium, opened 19 January 2009, replacing the Cardiff Athletics Stadium, demolished to make way for the Cardiff City Stadium. It has a 4,953 capacity as a multi sport/special event venue, offering certificated international track and field athletics facilities, including an international standard external throws area.[240][241][242] The stadium houses the Headquarters of Welsh Athletics, the sport's governing body for Wales.[243] The city's indoor track and field athletics sports venue is the National Indoor Athletics Centre, an international athletics and multi sports centre at the University of Wales Institute, Cardiff Campus, Cyncoed.[244]
The Cardiff Half Marathon takes place each October and is one of the largest road races in the United Kingdom, attracting over 20,000 participants and many overseas visitors annually. The event is organised by the not-for-profit social enterprise Run 4 Wales, and has grown considerably since its establishment in 2003. It has hosted the World (2016) Commonwealth (2018) British (2014/2015) and Welsh (Annually) Half Marathon Championships and has held a World Athletics Elite Road Race Label since 2017.[245] The race is also a part of the SuperHalfs, a series of leading international half marathon races which also includes Lisbon, Prague, Berlin, Valencia and Copenhagen.
Notable people
[edit]Many notable people have hailed from Cardiff, ranging from historical figures such as the 12th-century Welsh leader Ifor Bach to more recent figures such as Roald Dahl, Ken Follett, Griff Rhys Jones, Catrin Dafydd, and the former Blue Peter presenter Gethin Jones.
Notable actors include Ioan Gruffudd (Fantastic 4), Iwan Rheon (Game of Thrones) and Matthew Rhys (The Americans).
Also notable is Siân Grigg, BAFTA winner and Oscar nominated Hollywood make-up artist.
The city has been the birthplace of sports stars such as Tanni Grey-Thompson and Colin Jackson, as well as many Premier League, Football League and international footballers, such as Craig Bellamy, Gareth Bale, Ryan Giggs, Joe Ledley, and former managers of the Wales national football team Terry Yorath and John Toshack. International rugby league players from Cardiff include Frank Whitcombe, Billy Boston, David Willicombe and Colin Dixon. International rugby union players include Sam Warburton, Jamie Roberts, Jamie Robinson, Nicky Robinson, Rhys Patchell, and baseball internationals include George Whitcombe and Ted Peterson.
Saint Teilo (c. 500 – 9 February c. 560) is the patron saint of Cardiff. He was a British Christian monk, bishop, and founder of monasteries and churches. Reputed to be a cousin, friend, and disciple of Saint David, he was Bishop of Llandaff and founder of the first church at Llandaff Cathedral, where his tomb is. His Saint's Day is 9 February.
Cardiff is also well known for its musicians. Ivor Novello inspired the Ivor Novello Awards. Idloes Owen, founder of the Welsh National Opera, lived in Llandaff. Dame Shirley Bassey was born and raised in Cardiff. Charlotte Church is famous as a crossover classical/pop singer. Shakin' Stevens was one of the top-selling male artists in the UK during the 1980s. Tigertailz, a popular glam metal act in the 1980s, also hailed from Cardiff. A number of Cardiff-based bands, such as Catatonia and Super Furry Animals, were popular in the 1990s. Drum and bass artist Mr. Traumatik, born and raised in Cardiff, gained popularity in the 2010s.
Taff Groves, notably born and raised in Cardiff's Ely and Cathays districts is a former SAS soldier. He gained recognition during the 2013 Westgate shopping mall attack in Nairobi, Kenya, where he helped rescue hundreds of civilians while unarmed [1].
Twinning
[edit]Cardiff is twinned with:
Namesakes
[edit]In the United States both Cardiff-by-the-Sea in Encinitas, California and Cardiff, Alabama were named after Cardiff in Wales. In New Zealand Cardiff, Taranaki was also named after Cardiff in Wales.
Diplomatic presence
[edit]A total of 28 countries have a diplomatic presence in Cardiff.[248] Many of these, such as Germany, Italy, Switzerland, Denmark, Canada, Thailand and the Czech Republic, are represented by honorary consulates. The United States Embassy to the UK operates a satellite office.[249][250][251][252][253][254][255][256]
Freedom of the City
[edit]The following people and military units have received the Freedom of the City of Cardiff; they are listed with the date that they received the honour.[257]
Individuals
[edit]- Andrew Fulton: 31 March 1886
- Alfred Thomas, 1st Baron Pontypridd: 13 August 1888
- William Gladstone: 6 July 1889
- Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence and Avondale: 17 September 1890
- Sir Henry Morton Stanley: 27 March 1891
- Sir David Evans: 1 July 1892
- Field Marshal Lord Roberts of Kandahar: 26 January 1894
- Sir Edward Reed: 28 September 1895
- Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII): 27 June 1896
- Robert Windsor-Clive, 1st Earl of Plymouth: 3 June 1897
- David Jones: 18 April 1898
- Field Marshal Herbert Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener: 2 December 1897
- Lieutenant General Lord Baden-Powell: 29 May 1903
- William Lewis, 1st Baron Merthyr : 10 March 1905
- Prince of Wales (later King George V): 29 June 1905
- David Lloyd George: 24 June 1908
- Godfrey Morgan, 1st Viscount Tredegar: 25 October 1909
- Francis John Beavan: 10 October 1910
- Sir William James Thomas: 12 April 1915
- William Morris Hughes: 24 March 1916
- Lord Rhondda: 27 October 1916
- William Massey: 8 May 1917
- Field Marshal Jan Smuts: 27 October 1917
- Sir Robert Borden: 24 July 1918
- Maharaja Sir Bhupinder Singh of Patiala: 24 July 1918
- Prince of Wales (later King Edward VIII): 26 June 1919
- Sir Charles Hayward Bird: 5 July 1923
- Duke of York: 22 October 1926
- William Tatem, 1st Baron Glanely: 26 March 1928
- Sir William Reardon Smith: 26 March 1928
- Lord Davies of Llandinam: 26 October 1931
- Sir Illtyd Thomas: 26 October 1931
- Prince George, Duke of Kent: 25 October 1932
- John Sankey, 1st Viscount Sankey: 5 March 1934
- Sir Goscombe John: 26 October 1936
- Ivor Windsor-Clive, 2nd Earl of Plymouth: 26 October 1936
- William Morris, 1st Viscount Nuffield: 15 October 1937
- Wyndham Portal, 1st Viscount Portal: 15 October 1937
- Duchess of Edinburgh (later Queen Elizabeth II): 27 May 1948
- Sir Winston Churchill: 16 July 1948
- Sir William Richard Williams: 11 May 1954
- Sir Herbert Hiles: 11 May 1954
- Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh: 1 December 1954
- Major Lord Tenby of Bulford: 26 October 1956
- Prince of Wales (Later King Charles III): 5 July 1969
- Lord Callaghan of Cardiff: 16 March 1975
- Lord Tonypandy: 16 March 1975
- Diana, Princess of Wales: 29 October 1981
- Pope John Paul II: 2 June 1982
- Sir Cennydd Traherne: 29 January 1985
- Philip Dunleavy: 25 January 1993
- Nelson Mandela: 16 June 1998
- Cledwyn Hughes, Baron Cledwyn of Penrhos: 4 December 2000
- Baroness Grey-Thompson: 27 November 2003
- Colin Jackson: 27 November 2003
- Major Sir Tasker Watkins: 12 April 2006
- Dame Shirley Bassey: 23 February 2012
Military units
[edit]- The Welch Regiment: 10 June 1944
- The Welsh Guards: 27 April 1957
- The Royal Regiment of Wales: 11 June 1969
- The Royal Welch Fusiliers: 7 November 1973
- The 1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards: 29 July 1985
- HMS Cardiff, RN: 3 February 1988
- The Merchant Navy Association (Wales): 3 September 2001
- 203 (Welsh) Field Hospital (Volunteers) RAMC: 21 April 2014
- HMS Dragon, RN: 18 May 2014
See also
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External links
[edit]- Cardiff Council Archived 1 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine
- Visit Cardiff
- Cardiff Records: the full text of the edition of historical records for Cardiff, edited by J. H. Matthews (1898–1905). Part of British History Online.
Cardiff
View on GrokipediaEtymology
Name Origins
The name Cardiff is the anglicized form of the Welsh Caerdydd, which derives from Middle Welsh Caerdyf, literally meaning "fort on the [River] Taff."[9][10] The element caer signifies a fortified enclosure or stronghold in Welsh, a term inherited from Latin castrum via Brythonic languages, while -dyf/-dydd represents a lenited or genitive form of Taf, the name of the river flowing beside the city's ancient castle site.[11][12] Although dydd in contemporary Welsh means "day," the place-name component has no connection to diurnal concepts and instead preserves the hydronym Taf, attesting to the site's strategic defensibility along the waterway.[13] This etymology reflects the location's prehistoric and Roman-era significance as a fortified settlement overlooking the River Taff, with the Roman fort (castrum) established circa 75 AD likely inspiring the caer designation in post-Roman Welsh nomenclature.[10] The anglicization to "Cardiff" emerged during the Norman period and medieval English influence, standardizing the toponym in records by the 12th century, as seen in early maps and charters referring to it as Kardiff or similar variants.History
Prehistoric and Early Origins
Archaeological investigations in the Cardiff area reveal human activity dating to the Neolithic period, around 6000 years ago, with compelling evidence from excavations at Caerau Hillfort, including pottery and tools indicative of early farming communities.[15] These findings, uncovered by the Caerau and Ely Rediscovering (CAER) Heritage Project, suggest settlement in the vicinity of modern Cardiff during the transition from hunter-gatherer to agricultural societies, though direct evidence remains sparse compared to later periods. Mesolithic traces, such as flint tools from post-glacial hunter-gatherers, are limited in the immediate locale but align with broader patterns of seasonal occupation along the Glamorgan coast.[16] During the Bronze Age (c. 2500–800 BCE), activity intensified, as demonstrated by recent digs at Trelai Park in southwest Cardiff, where a rectilinear enclosure, roundhouse structure dated to approximately 1500 BCE, and a rare clay furnace—only the second known in Wales—were unearthed beneath modern playing fields.[17] [18] This site, part of ongoing CAER excavations, also yielded three cremation burials, marking a Bronze Age burial ground and providing the oldest recorded dwelling in Cardiff, reflecting organized communities engaged in metalworking and ritual practices.[19] [20] Further evidence includes unique feasting residues, such as processed pork bones from large-scale gatherings, analyzed via lipid biomarkers and dating to prehistoric contexts, highlighting dietary and social patterns distinct from contemporaneous European sites.[21] The Iron Age (c. 800 BCE–43 CE) saw the construction of prominent hillforts, with Caerau Hillfort—one of the largest in Wales, spanning over 30 acres—serving as a defended enclosure likely originating in the late Bronze Age and continuously occupied into the Iron Age.[22] Geophysical surveys and targeted digs confirm ditched boundaries, gateways, and internal structures, indicating a population of Celtic-speaking peoples, specifically the Silures tribe, who controlled southeast Wales and resisted early Roman incursions through fortified strongholds.[23] These settlements exploited the strategic confluence of the Rivers Taff and Ely, facilitating trade and defense, while burial and feasting evidence underscores hierarchical societies with ritual complexity prior to Roman conquest.[24]Roman and Post-Roman Period
The Roman fort at Cardiff, situated on a strategic river terrace beside the River Taff, was established during the conquest of the Silures tribe in south-east Wales, likely as a vexillation fortress around AD 55-60 under the campaigns led by Governor Sextus Julius Frontinus.[25] This initial wooden fortification supported Roman military operations, providing access to the Bristol Channel and guarding inland routes from Caerleon to Carmarthen.[26] By around AD 75, following the consolidation of control over Wales, the fort was rebuilt on a reduced scale, approximately 3 hectares in area, to house a cohort of auxiliary troops focused on local security and craftsmanship workshops.[27] Archaeological evidence indicates a period of possible abandonment or reduced activity from the mid-second century AD until the late third century, after which a larger stone-walled Saxon Shore fort was constructed, measuring about 8 hectares with bastions and defensive ditches, likely to counter maritime threats from Irish raiders (Scotti).[25] This final phase, comparable to other coastal defenses like Lavernock nearby, featured robust fortifications including a wall up to 3 meters thick and towers, remnants of which survive beneath Cardiff Castle.[28] The fort's garrison, possibly including units like the Cohors I Astragumata, maintained Roman presence until the early fifth century, facilitating trade and administration in the province of Britannia Superior.[25] Following the Roman withdrawal from Britain around AD 410, the Cardiff fort site shows no direct evidence of continuous occupation or structured settlement, aligning with broader patterns of infrastructure decay in sub-Roman Wales amid economic contraction and insecurity.[29] Local Romano-British populations may have persisted in rural enclosures or farmsteads in the surrounding Vale of Glamorgan, but urban-scale activity at the fort ceased, with the area reverting to fragmented native control under post-Roman kingdoms like Glywysing.[29] Sparse archaeological finds, such as occasional post-Roman artifacts in nearby caves like Lesser Garth, suggest intermittent human use rather than organized communities, reflecting the demographic and material decline characteristic of fifth- and sixth-century Britain.[30] This interregnum persisted until Norman incursions in the late eleventh century, marking a hiatus in Cardiff's prominence as a fortified center.[31]Norman Conquest and Medieval Development
The Norman conquest of Glamorgan, part of the broader extension of Norman control into Wales following the 1066 invasion of England, culminated in the subjugation of the region by Robert Fitzhamon around 1091. Fitzhamon, a Norman lord and companion of William the Conqueror, defeated the Welsh ruler Iestyn ap Gwrgant and established the Lordship of Glamorgan, with Cardiff as its administrative center. He constructed a motte-and-bailey castle at Cardiff, reusing the strategic site of the Roman fort to assert dominance over the fertile lowlands and control river access.[32][31][33] Upon Fitzhamon's death in 1107, the lordship passed to his nephew Robert, an illegitimate son of King Henry I, who was elevated to Earl of Gloucester in 1122 and further fortified the castle with a stone keep. The settlement of Cardiff grew southward from the castle as a planned borough, attracting merchants and craftsmen under the protection of the marcher lords. By the 12th century, timber defenses had given way to stone town walls by 1184, enclosing an area of about 40 acres and including gates that facilitated trade in wool, hides, and agricultural goods via the River Taff.[34][32] Medieval Cardiff remained a modest administrative and ecclesiastical hub under successive lords, including the Clare family after the Gloucester line's extinction in 1147, and later the Despensers. A charter of 1340 granted by Hugh Despenser the Younger confirmed burghal privileges, including markets and fairs, and designated the castle constable as de facto mayor, underscoring the town's dependence on seigneurial authority rather than royal incorporation. The population reached 2,000–3,000 by the mid-14th century, making Cardiff the largest urban center in Wales, though vulnerability to Welsh resistance persisted, as evidenced by the sacking of the town by Owain Glyndŵr's forces in 1404.[32][35][36]Industrial Era and Dock Expansion
Cardiff's transition into an industrial center accelerated in the early 19th century, fueled by the extraction of steam coal and iron from the nearby South Wales coalfield, which necessitated efficient export facilities at the port.[37] The Second Marquess of Bute, recognizing the potential of these resources, spearheaded dock infrastructure to handle the burgeoning trade, beginning with the West Bute Dock, which opened on 8 October 1839 after construction prompted by the limitations of earlier canal systems like the Glamorganshire Canal completed in 1794.[38][39] This tidal dock, initially termed the Bute Ship Canal, spanned approximately 1.25 miles in length and enabled larger vessels to load coal and iron directly, marking the onset of Cardiff's dominance in global coal shipments.[39] Dock expansion continued rapidly to accommodate surging demand, with the East Bute Dock constructed between 1852 and 1855 to supplement the original facility amid rising exports that reached 344,000 tons by 1839 alone.[40][39] The Bute family further integrated rail networks, such as the Taff Vale Railway, to transport minerals from the valleys directly to the quayside, optimizing logistics and reducing costs.[41] By the 1880s, additional basins like the Roath Dock—initiated in 1883 and completed in 1887—expanded capacity, positioning Cardiff as the world's leading coal port with exports climbing from 2 million tonnes in 1862 to nearly 11 million tonnes by 1913.[42][37] This infrastructure boom, largely financed by Bute estate revenues, catalyzed Cardiff's population growth from under 2,000 in 1801 to over 164,000 by 1901, as immigrant labor flocked to support shipping, engineering, and ancillary industries.[43] The docks' strategic design, including hydraulic machinery and deep-water berths, reflected pragmatic engineering to exploit coal's high demand for steamships and industry, earning Cardiff the moniker "coal metropolis of the world" during its zenith.[37][44]19th-20th Century Urban Growth
Cardiff's population expanded dramatically during the 19th century, rising from 1,871 in 1801 to 164,333 by 1901, driven primarily by its role as the principal export port for coal mined in the surrounding valleys.[45] [43] This surge was fueled by the Industrial Revolution's demand for steam coal, with the Taff Vale Railway, constructed starting in 1836, facilitating efficient transport from inland mines to the port.[46] The Bute family, lords of the manor, spearheaded dock infrastructure, opening the West Bute Dock in 1839 to handle increasing coal shipments, which reached 2 million tonnes by 1862.[44] [37] Subsequent dock expansions, including the East Bute Dock in 1855 and Roath Basin in 1861, accommodated larger vessels and sustained trade volumes, peaking at nearly 11 million tonnes of coal exports by 1913.[47] [37] Urban development accompanied this economic boom, with migration from rural Wales, England (comprising a quarter of the population by 1841), Ireland, and seafaring communities from Yemen and Somalia contributing to a diverse workforce in Tiger Bay.[48] [49] Municipal improvements, such as slaughterhouses established from 1835, reflected efforts to manage rapid urbanization and public health challenges.[36] In the early 20th century, Cardiff attained city status in 1905, recognizing its commercial prominence, though coal trade dominance waned post-World War I due to global shifts and competition from newer ports like Barry.[43] Population continued to grow, reaching approximately 222,000 by the 1930s, supported by electric trams introduced in 1902, which expanded from horse-drawn lines started in 1872 and connected suburbs to the docks and city center.[36] [50] Economic diversification began, with the Coal Exchange building (1883–1886) symbolizing the trade's scale before its decline, while interwar infrastructure like railways sustained freight until mid-century.[51] By 1955, designation as Wales's capital underscored its administrative evolution amid industrial transition.[48]Post-War Reconstruction and Devolution
During World War II, Cardiff experienced multiple Luftwaffe bombing raids known as the Cardiff Blitz, spanning from July 1940 to March 1944, with the most devastating occurring on January 2, 1941, when over 100 bombs caused widespread destruction and resulted in 165 deaths.[52] [53] Key landmarks such as Llandaff Cathedral suffered direct hits, necessitating substantial post-war rebuilding, while the city center and residential areas faced extensive damage, including the loss of Victorian iron railings repurposed for the war effort.[54] [55] Post-war reconstruction in the late 1940s and 1950s focused on addressing housing shortages and urban repair, with the UK government prioritizing new worker accommodations amid lingering industrial needs and slum clearance initiatives.[56] Cardiff's efforts included rebuilding infrastructure and erecting modernist structures, reflecting broader British trends in public architecture, though the city's docks began a decline as coal exports waned, shifting emphasis toward administrative and service sectors. In 1955, Cardiff was officially designated the capital of Wales, formalizing its status amid these recovery phases and underscoring its evolving role beyond industrial ports.[57] The push toward devolution gained momentum in the late 20th century, culminating in the 1997 referendum where 50.3% of voters approved the creation of a Welsh Assembly, with turnout at 50.1%, establishing limited legislative powers separate from Westminster.[58] [59] The National Assembly for Wales convened for the first time in 1999, initially operating from temporary sites in Cardiff before relocating to the purpose-built Senedd in Cardiff Bay in 2006, designed by architect Richard Rogers as part of the area's post-industrial regeneration from derelict docks into a political and cultural hub.[60] [61] This development symbolized Cardiff's transformation into Wales's political center, though devolved powers remained constrained, particularly on fiscal matters, with ongoing debates over further autonomy.[62]Governance
Local Administration
Cardiff is governed by Cardiff Council, the unitary authority responsible for the City and County of Cardiff, one of 22 principal areas in Wales established under the Local Government (Wales) Act 1994, which reorganized local government into single-tier authorities handling all principal local services.[63] As a unitary authority, the council delivers a wide range of functions including education, social services, housing, environmental health, planning, waste management, highways, and cultural facilities, while coordinating with the Welsh Government on devolved matters like transport and economic development.[64] The council consists of 79 elected councillors representing 28 electoral wards, with members serving four-year terms until boundary reforms extended the next election cycle; the most recent elections occurred on 5 May 2022, resulting in a Labour majority of 44 seats, followed by Conservatives with 15, Plaid Cymru with 7, independents with 6, Liberal Democrats with 5, and Greens with 2. Governance operates under a leader and cabinet executive model, as mandated by the Local Government (Wales) Measure 2011, where the full council elects a leader—currently Councillor Huw Thomas of Labour, in office since 2017—who appoints up to nine cabinet members to oversee policy portfolios such as finance, children’s services, and adult social care.[65] [66] The cabinet makes key executive decisions, subject to scrutiny by committees like the Audit and Governance Committee, while the full council handles regulatory functions, budget approval, and major policy. Administrative operations are supported by a senior management team led by a chief executive, with directorates covering areas like education and lifelong learning, social services, and economic development; the structure emphasizes integrated service delivery amid fiscal constraints from Welsh Government funding settlements.[67] In 2025, an independent peer review by the Welsh Local Government Association commended the council's leadership and financial governance but highlighted ongoing challenges in service demand and budget balancing.[68] Community councils exist in some wards for hyper-local issues, but primary authority rests with the unitary council.[69]Devolved Politics and Fiscal Realities
The Senedd Cymru (Welsh Parliament), established following the 1997 referendum and commencing operations in 1999, is located in Cardiff Bay, serving as the devolved legislature for Wales with law-making powers expanded under the Government of Wales Act 2006 and further in 2017.[70] Cardiff, as the national capital, hosts the majority of Welsh Government civil service functions, contributing to a concentration of public sector employment that accounts for over 25% of the city's jobs, though this has been critiqued for fostering economic dependency rather than private sector dynamism.[71] Politically, Welsh Labour has held government continuously since devolution, forming a minority administration after the 2021 Senedd election with 30 of 60 seats, relying on tacit Plaid Cymru support amid internal scandals including the resignation of First Minister Mark Drakeford in 2024 and subsequent leadership under Vaughan Gething until his ousting in July 2024, replaced by Eluned Morgan.[70] This dominance reflects a left-leaning consensus on expanded public services, but fiscal constraints limit policy autonomy, with opposition parties like Conservatives and Plaid Cymru highlighting inefficiencies in spending on initiatives such as free school meals without corresponding economic growth.[72] Fiscally, the Welsh Government receives an annual block grant from the UK Treasury, calculated via the Barnett formula, averaging £22.4 billion for 2026-27 to 2028-29, supplemented by limited devolved revenues from taxes like Welsh Rates of Income Tax and Land Transaction Tax, which generated forecasts outpacing adjustments by £312 million in 2026-27.[73][74] However, real-terms day-to-day spending growth is projected at 1.6% annually through the 2025 Spending Review period, trailing the UK's 2.6%, exacerbating pressures from inflation and demand in health and education, which consume over 70% of the budget.[75] For Cardiff specifically, the city council's finances are heavily reliant on grants from the Welsh Government, funding approximately 74% of its budget, with council tax covering 26%; facing a £38.4 million shortfall for 2026-27, officials project service cuts or tax hikes of up to 7.5% absent efficiencies, despite a 5.3% grant increase in recent settlements deemed insufficient against rising costs like decarbonization and social care.[76][77] This dependency underscores devolution's fiscal realities: while enabling localized policy, it perpetuates a net fiscal transfer from the UK—estimated at £13-15 billion annually—to subsidize Wales' structural deficit, with Cardiff's public sector boom masking stagnant private investment and GVA per head lagging UK averages by 20-25%.[78][79]Key Controversies in Public Administration
In 2023, Cardiff City Council faced a significant corruption scandal within its Waste Management Division, where a whistleblower's allegations led to the conviction of five men for bribery and corruption offenses that resulted in financial losses exceeding £400,000.[80] The scheme involved improper awarding of contracts and kickbacks, highlighting vulnerabilities in procurement processes despite internal oversight mechanisms.[80] Financial mismanagement came under scrutiny in 2024 when the council agreed to pay £16 million to HMRC to settle a decade-old dispute over landfill tax liabilities, stemming from the misclassification of waste materials at council sites.[81] This settlement, covering assessments from 2014 onward, underscored longstanding compliance failures in environmental taxation and resource management, with critics attributing it to inadequate auditing and operational controls.[81] Workplace culture issues have persisted, including 2025 investigations into allegations of bullying, harassment, and surveillance by managers in council departments, described by complainants as creating an "unbearable" toxic environment.[82] Separate claims involved the constructive dismissal of a Bute Park manager amid disputes over cafe operations and park maintenance, exacerbating perceptions of internal dysfunction.[83] Additionally, the expulsion of a senior Labour councillor in 2025 followed an upheld complaint of sexual harassment against a teenager, revealing deeper disquiet over accountability in party-dominated local politics.[84] Earlier instances include a 2015 case where two former council employees pleaded guilty to corruption in awarding contracts, prompting reviews of tendering procedures but exposing recurrent risks in public procurement.[85] During the COVID-19 pandemic, accusations surfaced against a council-funded domestic abuse service for manipulating waiting lists and dropping hundreds of cases, potentially compromising victim support amid resource strains.[86] These episodes reflect broader challenges in oversight, with Labour's long control of the council—since 1999—drawing criticism for entrenching patronage over rigorous governance.[87]Geography
Physical Setting
Cardiff occupies a low-lying coastal position on the south coast of Wales, United Kingdom, at approximately 51.48°N latitude and 3.18°W longitude.[88] The city covers an area of about 140 square kilometres, encompassing both urban and suburban expanses along the estuary.[89] The central area features flat alluvial terrain shaped by sedimentary deposits from rivers, with average elevations around 17 metres above sea level and rising gradually to surrounding hills in the north, east, and west.[90] [91] These hills, part of the broader South Wales landscape, reach up to 55 metres on average across the city region, transitioning into steeper valleys of the South Wales Coalfield further inland.[91] Three principal rivers—the Taff, Ely, and Rhymney—drain into the Severn Estuary near Cardiff, contributing freshwater inflows to this funnel-shaped inlet of the Bristol Channel, which experiences extreme tidal ranges exceeding 15 metres.[92] The River Taff, originating in the Brecon Beacons, flows 40 kilometres southward through the city centre before meeting the estuary, historically influencing settlement patterns and now channelled through urban infrastructure.[93] The Ely and Rhymney provide additional drainage from western and eastern catchments, respectively, with low-permeability soils and bedrock limiting groundwater contributions and emphasising surface water flows.[92] In the southwest, the Cardiff Bay area represents a modified estuarine environment, where the 2000-completed Cardiff Bay Barrage impounds the lower Taff and Ely, creating a 200-hectare brackish lagoon that mixes tidal seawater with river outflows and alters natural sedimentation dynamics.[92] This engineering intervention has stabilised water levels but reduced tidal flushing, impacting local hydrology and coastal processes in an otherwise dynamic, tide-dominated setting.[92]Urban Layout and Cityscape
Cardiff's urban layout revolves around a historic core centered on Cardiff Castle and the River Taff, extending northward to the Civic Centre in Cathays Park and southward to the regenerated Cardiff Bay waterfront, with Victorian-era expansions forming the bulk of the central districts. The city center remains compact and pedestrian-oriented, encompassing medieval street patterns in areas like St Mary Street and High Street, interspersed with 19th-century covered shopping arcades that originated with the Royal Arcade in 1858, serving as early indoor retail innovations amid industrial growth.[94] The Civic Centre, developed in the early 20th century within Cathays Park, features a cluster of Edwardian Baroque buildings, including City Hall, constructed between 1901 and 1904 and opened in 1906 following Cardiff's elevation to city status, characterized by its Portland stone facade, 60-meter clock tower topped with a Welsh dragon, and Marble Hall housing statues of Welsh historical figures. Adjacent structures like the Law Courts, completed in 1904, contribute to a formal axial layout emphasizing civic grandeur and administrative functions.[95][96] South of the center, Cardiff Bay underwent extensive regeneration starting in the 1980s, culminating in the barrage's construction from 1994 to 1999, which impounded a 200-hectare freshwater lake and facilitated mixed-use development including 4,800 residential units, office spaces such as Crickhowell House, and leisure facilities at Mermaid Quay and the Red Dragon Centre, transforming former docklands into a waterfront district linked to the city center via pedestrian bridges and rail. This area integrates higher-density modern architecture, contrasting the low-rise historic skyline.[97][98] The cityscape blends low- to mid-rise Victorian and Edwardian edifices with emerging high-rises, notably the 28-storey Gramercy Tower in Atlantic Wharf, Wales's tallest building as of 2024, amid ongoing developments adding residential and commercial towers that alter visibility corridors, as guided by local planning policies preserving key vistas like those toward Cardiff Castle. Green spaces mitigate urban density, with Bute Park's 130 acres of landscaped grounds along the Taff providing a central recreational axis equivalent in size to 75 football pitches, supporting biodiversity and public access amid built environments.[99][100]Climate and Environment
Weather Patterns
Cardiff exhibits a temperate oceanic climate classified as Cfb under the Köppen-Geiger system, marked by mild temperatures year-round, high humidity, and persistent precipitation influenced by its proximity to the Atlantic Ocean and Bristol Channel.[101] Winters are cool and damp with infrequent severe frost, while summers remain moderate without extremes of heat; annual mean daily maximum temperatures average 14.95 °C, and minimums 7.26 °C, based on 1991–2020 data from Cardiff Bute Park.[102] Precipitation totals exceed 1,200 mm annually, concentrated in autumn and winter months, contributing to over 150 wet days per year (defined as days with ≥1 mm rain).[102] Seasonal patterns show July as the warmest month with a mean maximum of 21.79 °C and minimum of 13.12 °C, alongside peak sunshine at 199.56 hours; conversely, December records the lowest temperatures (maximum 9.06 °C, minimum 2.84 °C) and sunshine (50.44 hours), with heaviest rainfall at 139.58 mm.[102] Air frost occurs on approximately 33 days yearly, primarily in winter (e.g., 7.95 days in December), but summers experience none.[102] Wind speeds, while not quantified in station averages, align with broader regional patterns of moderate westerlies, occasionally intensified by Atlantic depressions.| Month | Mean Max Temp (°C) | Mean Min Temp (°C) | Rainfall (mm) | Sunshine Hours | Wet Days |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | 8.58 | 2.50 | 126.97 | 53.53 | 15.60 |
| February | 9.15 | 2.47 | 92.97 | 76.15 | 12.00 |
| March | 11.31 | 3.91 | 85.29 | 116.59 | 12.29 |
| April | 14.35 | 5.73 | 72.07 | 176.98 | 10.73 |
| May | 17.38 | 8.48 | 78.45 | 198.37 | 11.17 |
| June | 20.07 | 11.27 | 73.54 | 195.21 | 10.37 |
| July | 21.79 | 13.12 | 83.58 | 199.56 | 11.23 |
| August | 21.43 | 12.92 | 104.82 | 185.30 | 12.40 |
| September | 19.10 | 10.70 | 86.31 | 151.89 | 11.80 |
| October | 15.25 | 7.99 | 129.05 | 103.87 | 15.03 |
| November | 11.61 | 4.87 | 130.65 | 65.02 | 15.60 |
| December | 9.06 | 2.84 | 139.58 | 50.44 | 15.17 |
| Annual | 14.95 | 7.26 | 1203.28 | 1572.91 | 153.39 |
Environmental Pressures and Sustainability Claims
Cardiff faces significant flood risks due to its coastal location along the Bristol Channel and low-lying topography, exacerbated by projected sea-level rise from climate change. A 2024 assessment ranked Cardiff with a vulnerability score of 45.88 out of 100 for sea-level threats, placing it among cities at elevated risk globally, with projections indicating that by 2050, areas currently inhabited could experience annual flooding affecting hundreds of millions worldwide, including Welsh coastal zones.[104][105] Local data from Cardiff Council identifies over 245,000 properties at risk from river, sea, and surface water flooding, with climate-driven increases in rainfall intensity amplifying these threats; the city's 2025-2026 Flood Risk Strategy acknowledges worsening conditions but relies on defenses that may prove insufficient against long-term rises.[106] Air quality in Cardiff remains relatively favorable compared to more industrialized urban centers, with annual PM2.5 concentrations averaging 11.5 μg/m³ in 2019, falling within WHO "good" thresholds, though episodic spikes from traffic and urban heating occur.[107] Real-time monitoring at sites like Cardiff Centre reports low PM10 levels (e.g., 12 μg/m³ daily means) and ozone indices in the low band, but proximity to major roads contributes to localized nitrogen dioxide exceedances, linked to vehicle emissions in a city with over 300,000 residents and heavy commuter traffic.[108] Broader environmental strains include deteriorating river health in the region, attributed to combined pressures from agricultural runoff, urban development, and altered precipitation patterns, as noted in 2025 reports on Welsh waterways.[109] Sustainability efforts in Cardiff center on the "One Planet Cardiff" framework, which pledges carbon neutrality by 2030 through emissions reductions and green infrastructure, though empirical progress has been incremental and contested. Cardiff Council reported an 18% drop in operational emissions (excluding procurement) as of September 2025, crediting energy efficiency measures, yet independent analyses highlight persistent barriers to net-zero goals, including reliance on fossil fuel imports and insufficient scaling of renewables amid rising energy demands from population growth.[110][111][112] Official claims of advancing sustainable transport and urban greening face scrutiny for underdelivering on targets, with studies indicating that public skepticism toward climate policies erodes when perceived governmental delays prioritize rhetoric over enforceable cuts; for instance, while tree-planting and low-emission zones are touted, overall per-capita emissions remain above Welsh averages due to incomplete modal shifts from cars.[113][112] These initiatives, often amplified by local academia and council reports, reflect aspirational commitments but are constrained by fiscal realities and land-use legacies from industrial eras, yielding measurable gains in select metrics yet falling short of transformative causal impacts on core pressures like flooding resilience.[114]Demographics
Population Dynamics
Cardiff's population for the unitary authority area stood at 362,400 according to the 2021 census, reflecting a 4.7% increase from 346,100 recorded in the 2011 census.[115] This growth rate exceeded the 1.4% rise observed across Wales during the same decade.[116] Recent mid-year estimates indicate accelerated expansion, with a 3.4% rise from mid-2022 to mid-2023, the largest percentage increase among Welsh local authorities, primarily fueled by positive net international and internal migration.[117] Growth moderated to 1.1% between mid-2023 and mid-2024, supported by natural increase—where births outnumbered deaths—and inflows from international migration, despite net outflows from internal UK migration.[118] Across Wales, such patterns underscore migration's dominance over natural change in driving urban population shifts, as fertility rates remain below replacement levels at approximately 1.41 children per woman in 2024.[119] Historically, Cardiff's demographics shifted from rapid industrialization-era expansion—tied to coal exports and port activity—to mid-20th-century stagnation amid deindustrialization, followed by resurgence linked to devolution, education hubs, and service-sector jobs attracting migrants.[120] Projections suggest continued but subdued growth, with a forecasted 3.2% rise over the subsequent decade from recent baselines, lagging behind many UK core cities due to constrained housing supply and regional migration balances.[121] These trends highlight migration's causal role in offsetting limited endogenous growth from low birth rates and aging demographics.[117][119]Ethnicity, Migration, and Integration Outcomes
According to the 2021 Census, Cardiff's population of 362,400 residents was 79.2% White, with ethnic minorities accounting for 20.8%, a rise from 15.3% in 2011.[115][122] The largest minority group was Asian, Asian British, or Asian Welsh at 9.7%, up from 8.1% a decade earlier, followed by Black, Black British, Caribbean or African at 3.8%, mixed or multiple ethnic groups at 3.9%, and other ethnic groups including Arab at 3.9%.[115][123] This diversity concentration exceeds the Welsh average, where ethnic minorities comprise about 9%, reflecting Cardiff's role as an economic and administrative hub attracting inflows.[124] Migration has driven much of this shift, with 16.5% of residents born outside the UK in 2021, the highest rate among Welsh local authorities and more than double the national figure of 6.9%.[124] Net international migration contributes significantly to population growth, with Cardiff projected to see the highest such inflows in Wales, alongside internal UK movements and natural increase.[121] Primary origins include South Asia, Africa, and EU accession countries post-2004, though EU-born shares remain lower than UK averages at around 4% of the workforce.[125] Empirical data indicate that immigration accounts for nearly 90% of recent national population increases, with local dynamics in Cardiff amplifying this through job opportunities in services and regeneration sectors.[89] Integration outcomes reveal persistent disparities. Employment rates for ethnic minorities aged 16-64 hover around 50-60%, compared to over 70% for White residents, yielding higher economic inactivity—often linked to barriers like qualifications recognition and language proficiency rather than discrimination alone.[126][127] Educational attainment varies, with ethnic minority pupils showing mixed results: some groups outperform Whites at Key Stages 2 and 3, but overall gaps persist in higher progression rates, exacerbated by free school meal eligibility correlations.[128] Criminal justice data highlight further challenges, with arrest rates for Black and mixed-ethnicity individuals in Wales at 2-3 times higher per 1,000 population than for Whites, based on 2022 figures including Cardiff.[129][130] Surveys report that 50% of ethnic minorities have faced racial abuse, contributing to social tensions, though causal factors include socioeconomic deprivation and urban density over inherent cultural incompatibility.[131] Local taskforces acknowledge these inequalities in health, justice, and cohesion, attributing them partly to systemic data gaps and policy focus on outputs rather than root causes like family structure and skill mismatches.[132] Despite policy efforts, outcomes lag, with ethnic minorities overrepresented in low-wage sectors and under in professional roles.[133]Language Use and Cultural Shifts
In Cardiff, English remains the dominant language of everyday communication, with Welsh spoken by 12.2% of residents aged three and over according to the 2021 Census, marking a modest increase from 11.1% in 2011 and adding approximately 6,000 speakers despite the city's rapid population growth driven by in-migration.[134][115] This uptick contrasts with Wales-wide stagnation at 17.8% Welsh speakers in 2021, down from 18.7% in 2011, highlighting Cardiff's urban context where commercial and multicultural pressures limit broader adoption.[135] Historical data indicate Welsh usage in Cardiff has long lagged behind rural Welsh heartlands, with early 20th-century censuses recording around 12,000 monolingual or bilingual Welsh speakers amid industrialization and English influxes that anglicized the port city by the 1900s; a general decline persisted through 1971 before policy-driven stabilization around 11-15% in recent decades.[136][137] Revival efforts since the Welsh Language Act 1993 and the 2011 Measure have embedded bilingualism in public administration, yet daily Welsh use remains low, with Annual Population Survey estimates for Wales showing only 14% of speakers using it daily as of 2024, likely lower in Cardiff's diverse, English-centric environment.[138] In education, Welsh-medium instruction covers 18% of Year 1 pupils as of recent reports, short of the Welsh Government's 2032 target of 25-29%, reflecting parental preferences for English-medium schools amid perceived economic advantages of English proficiency in a globalized capital.[139] Public services adhere to Welsh Language Standards, mandating equal treatment since 2011, with Cardiff Council tracking compliance via annual reports that note progress in signage, documents, and staff training but persistent gaps in spontaneous community use.[140][141] Cultural shifts stem partly from sustained net migration, which has diversified Cardiff's population—historical waves from over 50 nations since the 19th century, plus recent EU and non-EU inflows—introducing non-Welsh languages and diluting transmission rates, as only a fraction of migrants acquire Welsh proficiency despite targeted outreach.[142][143] Some migrants pursue Welsh for cultural immersion or social capital rather than economic gain, fostering "new speakers" who contribute to urban vitality, but empirical patterns show limited household transmission and competition from English in multicultural neighborhoods, underscoring causal tensions between inclusivity goals and organic language vitality.[144][145]Religion and Social Cohesion
In the 2021 census, 132,631 Cardiff residents identified as Christian, accounting for 38% of the city's population of approximately 362,400, a decline from 46% in 2011. An identical 38% reported no religious affiliation, surpassing Christianity as the largest category and reflecting broader secularization trends in urban Wales. Muslims constituted 33,065 individuals or 9.1%, the highest proportion in any Welsh local authority and more than double the national average, concentrated in areas like Riverside and Butetown due to post-war immigration from Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia. Hindus numbered 5,195 (1.4%), with smaller Buddhist (around 1,600) and Sikh (under 1,000) communities, while Jews totaled about 700, primarily in Cyncoed.[146][147][123] Historic Christian institutions persist, including Llandaff Cathedral, a 12th-century Anglican site serving as the seat of the Bishop of Llandaff, though weekly attendance across Welsh churches fell below 1% of the population by 2020. Over 20 mosques operate in Cardiff, such as the Al-Rahman Mosque in Riverside, catering to the growing Muslim demographic, which has expanded via family reunification and recent Middle Eastern migration. Nonconformist chapels, once central to Welsh identity, have converted to other uses amid dwindling congregations, underscoring Christianity's retreat in favor of irreligion among younger cohorts, where no-religion rates exceed 50%.[146] Social cohesion linked to religion shows mixed outcomes, with interfaith efforts like mosque open days promoted by imams to build community ties and counter isolation in ethnic enclaves. Academic studies of religious tribunals, including Cardiff's Jewish Beth Din and Catholic matrimonial courts, indicate parallel legal systems functioning alongside civil law without widespread disruption, though they raise questions about dual loyalties in family matters. However, Islamist radicalisation has strained cohesion; between 2013 and 2014, at least three Cardiff Muslims joined ISIS in Syria, part of a group of 20-30 local recruits, prompting counter-terrorism interventions and highlighting grooming networks within segregated communities. Local expert analysis in 2014 described this as an entrenched issue tied to socioeconomic marginalization and ideological imports, not fully resolved by subsequent deradicalisation programs.[148][149] Tensions occasionally flare, as in 2023 when Christian and Muslim leaders jointly denounced an Islamophobic social media post targeting a Cardiff mosque by a far-right figure, signaling collaborative pushback against hate but also underlying frictions amplified by national events like the 2024 UK riots elsewhere. Neighborhood segregation, with Muslims overrepresented in deprived wards exhibiting higher crime rates, correlates with lower trust metrics in cohesion surveys, though Cardiff has evaded large-scale religious violence seen in other multicultural UK cities. Empirical data suggest that while overt conflict remains rare, rapid shifts toward a Muslim minority exceeding 10% by projections could test integration limits absent stronger assimilation policies.[150][146]Health Metrics and Public Welfare
Cardiff exhibits life expectancy at birth of 78.2 years for males and 82.7 years for females, based on the period 2021-2023.[151] These figures align closely with Wales-wide averages of 78.1 years for males and 82.0 years for females over the same timeframe, though significant intra-city disparities persist due to socioeconomic gradients.[152] In Cardiff and Vale, life expectancy for males varies by nearly 12 years between the most and least deprived areas, reflecting causal links between material deprivation, behavioral risks, and health outcomes.[153] Key modifiable risk factors contribute to these patterns. Adult smoking prevalence in Wales stands at approximately 12.6-13%, with Cardiff's rates mirroring this national figure amid broader declines.[154] [155] Obesity affects around 60% of Welsh adults as overweight or obese, a 44% rise over two decades, driven by dietary and inactivity patterns; Cardiff-specific data indicate similar burdens, exacerbating non-communicable diseases.[156] [157] Alcohol-related harms, including higher consumption in lower socioeconomic groups, compound these issues, with drug and alcohol deaths showing pronounced inequalities across Wales.[158] Public welfare metrics underscore vulnerabilities tied to deprivation. Under the Welsh Index of Multiple Deprivation (WIMD) 2019, 19.2% of Cardiff's Lower Super Output Areas rank in Wales's 10% most deprived, the third-highest proportion nationally, spanning income, employment, health, and housing domains.[159] This multidimensional deprivation correlates with elevated under-75 mortality from cardiovascular diseases and wider healthy life expectancy gaps, where males in deprived zones lose up to 7.8 years compared to affluent peers.[158] Cardiff and Vale University Health Board reports annual resident deaths around 4,561, with 45.6% occurring in hospitals, highlighting systemic pressures on NHS capacity amid persistent inequalities.[160] These patterns suggest that while aggregate metrics stabilize, causal drivers like economic inactivity and poor lifestyle adherence perpetuate poorer outcomes in affected locales, independent of institutional narratives on social determinants.Economy
Major Industries and Employment
Cardiff's economy is heavily oriented toward services, with public administration, defence, education, and health forming the largest sector, accounting for 82,800 jobs or 31.1% of total workplace employment in 2019. This dominance reflects the city's status as the Welsh capital, hosting the Senedd (Welsh Parliament), major NHS facilities, and institutions like Cardiff University, which alone supports significant employment and contributes to a talent pool of over 31,000 students. Wholesale, retail, trade, transport, hotels, and food services follow as the second-largest sector, with 58,200 jobs or 21.9%, underscoring the role of retail and tourism in sustaining urban employment.[161][162] Professional, scientific, and technical activities, alongside administrative and support services, employ 45,700 people or 17.2%, bolstered by finance and insurance activities at 15,700 jobs or 5.9%. The financial and professional services sector has grown notably, attracting firms such as Starling Bank (900 employees) and legal practices like Hugh James, with fintech adding over 1,000 jobs since 2021 through initiatives like FinTech Wales. Manufacturing (under production) persists at 17,900 jobs or 6.7%, exceeding some UK urban averages in gross value added per worker (£91,200 vs. UK £78,000), though it represents a smaller share amid deindustrialization.[161][162] Emerging sectors are expanding employment opportunities, particularly in technology and creative industries. The tech sector has driven 22% of office space take-up from 2019 to 2023, part of a £8.5 billion industry with over 45,000 jobs regionally, fueled by 2,000+ startups and £100 million in venture capital in 2023. Creative industries employ 15,000 in Cardiff, with 20% growth over the past decade and projected 16% further expansion, including media production tied to BBC Wales and film/TV clusters contributing £350 million regionally. The space sector adds £79 million annually and over 600 jobs across 85 organizations. Overall, resident employment reached 74.6% for ages 16-64 in the year ending December 2023, with unemployment at 3.7%—below the UK average of 4.1%—indicating a robust job market despite reliance on public sector stability.[161][163][162]Urban Regeneration Projects
Cardiff's urban regeneration efforts gained momentum in the late 1980s with the establishment of the Cardiff Bay Development Corporation in April 1987, tasked with revitalizing 1,100 hectares of derelict docklands in Cardiff and Penarth.[98] [164] The project included constructing a barrage across the River Taff estuary, completed in 1999 at a cost exceeding £220 million over more than 11 years of initial phases, transforming former industrial wasteland into a mixed-use waterfront district featuring residential properties, offices, retail spaces, and public amenities. This redevelopment facilitated the relocation of the Welsh Assembly (now Senedd) to the area, boosting political and administrative presence while attracting tourism and business investment that supported economic growth in South Wales.[165] By 2017, thirty years after inception, the initiative had achieved significant physical transformation, though evaluations noted uneven distribution of benefits amid persistent local challenges like poverty in adjacent Butetown.[164] [166] In the city centre, the St David's 2 extension, a £675 million project completed in 2009, expanded the existing shopping centre to over 1 million square feet, drawing high-profile retailers such as Apple, John Lewis, and Victoria's Secret.[167] This development enhanced Cardiff's retail appeal, positioning it as one of the UK's top shopping destinations and contributing to increased footfall and economic activity in the core urban area. The initiative formed part of broader efforts to counter post-industrial decline by prioritizing commercial and leisure infrastructure, with reported success in regenerating the immediate vicinity through job creation in retail and services.[168] Central Square's regeneration, initiated around 2016 as part of a £400 million scheme, replaced the former bus station with modern office towers, including the £100 million BBC Cymru Wales headquarters opened in 2018 and additional developments adding up to 1 million square feet of mixed-use space.[169] [170] Legal & General's £1 billion investment in the area, including the Interchange project, aims to create capacity for 13,000 new jobs through offices, residential units, and transport hubs.[171] However, by 2025, critics described the plaza as a "bleak expanse of concrete" and "urban desert," highlighting concerns over public realm quality and vibrancy despite architectural completions.[172] [173] Ongoing initiatives, such as the Atlantic Wharf redevelopment proposing 30 acres of new housing and commercial space in Butetown, build on these foundations to extend Bay-area renewal, with council plans emphasizing job growth and green infrastructure amid post-pandemic recovery strategies.[174] [168] Evaluations of these projects underscore physical and economic successes in attracting investment—evidenced by developments like the Principality Stadium integration—but reveal limitations in addressing broader social cohesion and inclusive growth, as regeneration priorities often prioritize visible infrastructure over equitable outcomes.[175] [176]Economic Challenges and Structural Weaknesses
Despite Cardiff's economic expansion in recent decades, significant structural weaknesses persist, rooted in its post-industrial legacy and over-dependence on the public sector for employment and wage support. The city's economy has transitioned from heavy reliance on manufacturing and coal industries, which historically provided relatively high wages, to a service-oriented model that includes a disproportionately large public sector footprint. This shift has left residual vulnerabilities, including lower average earnings compared to UK counterparts, as the decline in high-paying extractive sectors has not been fully offset by private sector dynamism.[177][178] Public sector austerity measures exacerbate these issues, with anticipated real-terms spending reductions of over 10% across Wales projected to disproportionately impact Cardiff due to its fiscal ties to government funding. Employment data underscores this exposure: while headline unemployment stood at approximately 5.0% for the year ending December 2023—higher than the UK average in some metrics—the claimant count remains lower, masking underemployment in deprived wards. Cardiff hosts some of Wales' most deprived communities, where inequality endures despite city-wide growth, with pockets of high economic inactivity linked to skills mismatches and limited high-value private job creation.[163][175] Productivity lags represent another core weakness, with Cardiff exhibiting high job volumes but output per worker below that of comparable European cities, attributable to a bifurcated labor market: a skilled professional class alongside a high share of low-skilled workers in low-wage roles. This structural duality hinders inclusive growth, as post-industrial areas struggle with persistent barriers to upskilling and business formation, compounded by connectivity deficits and procurement delays in regeneration projects, such as the £5.25 million dispute over Aberthaw Power Station redevelopment. Broader Welsh economic traits, including deficits in innovation networks, further constrain Cardiff's potential, ranking it low among UK regions in fostering high-growth sectors independent of public support.[179][180][181]Infrastructure
Transport Networks
Cardiff's transport networks encompass road, rail, bus, air, and limited water connections, supporting the city's role as a regional hub in south Wales. The M4 motorway provides primary east-west access, linking Cardiff to Swansea, Newport, and beyond, while the A4232 and A470 handle local traffic. Public transport, coordinated by Transport for Wales (TfW) and local operators, emphasizes integration through the South Wales Metro initiative, which aims to deliver higher-frequency services and multimodal interchanges.[182] Congestion on key routes, particularly the M4, remains a persistent challenge, exacerbated by limited capacity and urban growth.[183] The road network centers on the M4, a two-lane section east of Cardiff prone to severe delays due to high volumes and incidents, with average speeds dropping below 40 mph during peaks. Efforts to mitigate include variable speed limits and ITS strategies for real-time traffic management, though expansion proposals have faced environmental and cost barriers. Local arterial roads like the A4232 Leckwith Interchange suffer from bottlenecks, contributing to daily gridlock affecting over 100,000 vehicles. Cycling and pedestrian infrastructure has expanded, with over 200 km of paths promoted under sustainable mobility plans, though uptake lags behind targets due to safety concerns on shared routes.[184] Rail services radiate from Cardiff Central and Cardiff Queen Street stations, forming the Valleys network with TfW operating commuter lines to destinations like Pontypridd, Caerphilly, and Barry. The South Wales Metro, a £1 billion upgrade, has introduced battery-electric tram-trains on core routes, targeting 12 trains per hour between Pontypridd and Cardiff by late 2025, with full electrification and signaling enhancements completing by 2026. Metro Central, a new interchange at Cardiff Central, integrates rail, bus, and active travel, operational since 2024 upgrades. Freight lines persist via the South Wales Mainline, but passenger focus drives electrification progress amid delays from supply chain issues.[185][182] Bus operations, led by Cardiff Bus with a fleet of over 300 low-floor vehicles, provide 24/7 coverage on key corridors like the X1 to Newport, carrying millions annually under franchised and commercial models. A new TfW-operated bus station in Cardiff Central opened in spring 2024, replacing a 2015-demolished facility and enabling better Metro linkage. Complementary services from operators like Adventure Travel extend to rural areas, supported by contactless payments and integrated ticketing via the Network Rider scheme. Modal shift to buses has been modest, hindered by road congestion reducing reliability.[186][187] Cardiff Airport (CWL), located 12 km southwest in Rhoose, handled 928,000 passengers in the 12 months to September 2025, a 5.3% rise from prior year, driven by routes to Europe and domestic links via Ryanair and TUI. Primarily short-haul, it features direct rail access via a shuttle to Rhoose station, though capacity constraints limit long-haul growth. Waterborne transport via Cardiff Docks supports freight and occasional cruises, but passenger ferries are negligible compared to historical coal export volumes.[188] Overall, networks prioritize decarbonization, with Metro electrification reducing emissions, yet infrastructure funding shortfalls and M4 bottlenecks constrain efficiency gains.[189]Telecommunications and Digital Access
Cardiff benefits from extensive fixed broadband infrastructure, with major providers including BT Openreach, Virgin Media, and regional operators like Ogi and Elevate delivering high-speed services via cable, DSL, and full fibre to the premises (FTTP). As of October 2025, gigabit-capable broadband is available to approximately 89% of premises across Wales, with full fibre coverage at 80.64%, and Cardiff's urban density supports even higher penetration rates in central and commercial districts.[190] In April 2025, Elevate completed a £7 million full fibre network rollout across the city, enhancing connectivity for businesses in areas such as Ocean Way and Central Square with symmetrical speeds exceeding 1 Gbps.[191] [192] Mobile telecommunications in Cardiff feature robust 4G coverage from all major UK networks (EE, O2, Vodafone, Three), transitioning to widespread 5G deployment. By August 2025, EE's standalone 5G network reached over 34 million people UK-wide, including urban centres like Cardiff, enabling lower latency and higher capacity for applications such as IoT and remote work.[193] Private 5G networks are also emerging, with deployments in high-density areas like the city centre market via initiatives such as BrightSites, which integrate public Wi-Fi with dedicated spectrum for improved reliability.[194] Coverage maps indicate near-universal 5G availability in Cardiff's core zones, though rural outskirts within the city boundary lag slightly behind national urban averages.[195] Digital access initiatives in Cardiff address inclusion gaps, with Cardiff Council pursuing a "digital by default" strategy that embeds accessibility in public services while providing support for non-users. Local authorities report digital inclusion levels exceeding 70% in Cardiff, higher than the Welsh average, supported by programs like Adult Learning Cardiff's device lending and training services.[196] [197] [198] Recent Welsh Government efforts, including a 2025 accessibility guide co-developed with Cardiff University, emphasize practical design for diverse users, mitigating barriers for older residents and low-income households amid rising reliance on online public services.[199] Despite these advances, disparities persist in peripheral wards, where full fibre adoption trails central areas due to deployment costs and legacy infrastructure.[200]Education
Primary and Secondary Systems
Primary and secondary education in Cardiff is administered by Cardiff Council under the oversight of the Welsh Government, which sets the national Curriculum for Wales. This curriculum, fully implemented across all schools by the 2023-2024 academic year, emphasizes four purposes for learner development: ambitious, capable, enterprising, creative, and ethical individuals, with a focus on progression steps rather than traditional key stages. Compulsory education begins at age five in reception year and extends to age 16, with primary education covering ages 3-11 (including nursery and foundation phase) and secondary covering ages 11-16, often extending to 18 for post-16 qualifications.[201] Cardiff maintains 123 state-funded schools, comprising 98 primary schools with an average enrollment of 323 pupils each, serving approximately 31,654 children. These include English-medium, Welsh-medium, and dual-language provision, reflecting the city's bilingual policy, with around 20% of primary pupils receiving Welsh-medium education. Secondary education is provided in 15 comprehensive schools, enrolling about 15,000-16,000 pupils, with no selective grammar schools following the abolition of academic selection in Wales. Notable institutions include Cardiff High School (240 places annually) and Fitzalan High School (300 places), both offering broad curricula including vocational pathways.[202][203] Performance metrics, as evaluated by Estyn inspections, show Cardiff's secondary schools outperforming the Welsh national average in standards, with higher proportions judged "excellent," while primary schools align closely with national benchmarks. However, broader Welsh trends indicate challenges, including attainment levels comparable to disadvantaged pupils in England, persistent inequality, and lower overall outcomes in reading and numeracy compared to UK peers, though Cardiff's urban regeneration efforts aim to address these through targeted interventions like the "Cardiff Schools 2020 Vision," which sought top-quartile UK core-city performance but has faced implementation hurdles amid post-devolution reforms. Free school meals eligibility stands at around 19-20% of pupils, lower than the Welsh average, correlating with relatively better outcomes in less deprived areas.[204][205]Higher Education Institutions
Cardiff University, established in 1883 as the University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire, is a public research-intensive institution and the largest university in Wales.[206] It belongs to the Russell Group of leading UK universities focused on research excellence and joined the group in 1997.[207] As of 2023/24, it enrolls 33,000 students, including 24,450 undergraduates and 8,570 postgraduates from over 150 countries.[207] The university operates across 24 academic schools organized into three colleges, emphasizing interdisciplinary research in areas such as medicine, engineering, and social sciences.[207] Cardiff Metropolitan University, with origins tracing to 1865 through predecessor teacher training colleges, achieved full university status in 2011 after operating as the University of Wales Institute, Cardiff.[208] It serves approximately 12,000 students across five schools, prioritizing practice-based learning in fields like sport, health, art and design, and management.[208] The institution holds a Silver rating in the Teaching Excellence Framework for its focus on employability and professional accreditation.[208] Its campuses in Cardiff emphasize small class sizes and industry partnerships.[209] The University of South Wales operates a dedicated Cardiff campus, formed in 2013 from mergers of prior institutions, concentrating on creative industries including journalism, film, and digital media.[210] This campus provides access to professional facilities like media loan resources and supports practical, industry-linked programs within the broader university's top-50 UK ranking per the Guardian University Guide 2026.[211][211] The Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama functions as Wales's national conservatoire, delivering specialized conservatory-level training in music, acting, stage management, and design to over 800 students annually.[212] Founded in 1949 and granted royal status in 1979, it maintains facilities including a concert hall and theater in central Cardiff, fostering professional performance pathways.[213]Culture
Performing Arts and Music
The Wales Millennium Centre, located in Cardiff Bay, serves as the national arts centre for Wales and hosts a wide array of performances including musicals, opera, ballet, and contemporary dance. Opened in 2004, it features multiple auditoria such as the Donald Gordon Theatre with 1,906 seats and the home of the Welsh National Opera.[214] The centre stages over 300 performances annually, drawing audiences for both national and international productions.[215] Cardiff's theatre landscape includes the Sherman Theatre, a producing venue focused on new Welsh and English-language plays, often targeting local and young audiences through collaborations with schools and communities. The New Theatre, established in 1906 and renovated multiple times, presents touring musicals, drama, and pantomime, accommodating up to 1,100 spectators in its proscenium auditorium.[216] [217] The Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama, the national conservatoire, trains performers in acting, musical theatre, and opera, staging public productions that contribute to the city's performing arts output.[212] The Welsh National Opera, founded in 1943, is resident at the Wales Millennium Centre and performs classic and contemporary works across Wales and the UK, emphasizing artistic excellence and accessibility.[218] [219] Its orchestra, formed in 1970, is regarded as one of the UK's leading ensembles for operatic accompaniment.[220] Amateur and university groups, such as the Cardiff Philharmonic Orchestra—known for its broad repertoire including film scores and symphonies—and the Cardiff University Symphony Orchestra, provide additional classical music performances.[221] [222] Cardiff's music scene encompasses rock, indie, electronic, and hip-hop genres, supported by venues like Clwb Ifor Bach and Womanby Street clusters, which host emerging local acts. Designated the UK's first Music City in 2022, the city experienced a venue crisis in 2017 due to redevelopment pressures but saw revival through council policies protecting grassroots spaces and nurturing talent.[223] [224] The inaugural Cardiff Music City Festival in 2024 highlighted this ecosystem, featuring over 100 events to promote Welsh artists internationally.[225]
Visual Arts and Heritage
The National Museum Cardiff maintains one of Europe's premier art collections, encompassing five centuries of paintings, drawings, sculptures, silverwork, and ceramics originating from Wales and global sources.[226] This includes significant holdings of Impressionist and modern works, alongside pieces by prominent Welsh artists such as Richard Wilson, known for landscapes, and Thomas Jones, a pioneer in abstraction.[227] The institution's art galleries represent the largest public collection in Wales, with over 15,000 items in its Welsh porcelain and pottery subsets alone, acquired through bequests and purchases that substantially expanded holdings in the mid-20th century.[228][229] Contemporary visual arts in Cardiff are prominently supported by the Chapter Arts Centre, founded in 1971 in repurposed school buildings in Canton. This venue functions as an international hub for modern exhibitions, artist studios, and galleries, fostering interdisciplinary work in visual media alongside film and performance.[230] It hosts regular shows of emerging and established artists, contributing to Cardiff's role as a center for innovative Welsh cultural expression.[231] Heritage preservation in Cardiff centers on institutions under Amgueddfa Cymru, which employ conservation techniques to stabilize artifacts for display and research, including advanced monitoring of archaeological and artistic objects.[232] St Fagans National Museum of History, located on the outskirts, exemplifies this through its open-air reconstruction of over 40 historic Welsh buildings relocated from across the country, illustrating rural life from the medieval period to the 20th century with live demonstrations of traditional crafts.[233] These efforts ensure the safeguarding of tangible cultural heritage amid urban development pressures.Media Landscape
Cardiff functions as the primary media hub for Wales, concentrating national broadcasting and publishing operations due to its status as the capital. Major public service broadcasters maintain headquarters in the city, facilitating production of Welsh-language and regional content. According to Ofcom's Media Nations 2025 report, television remains the dominant news source in Wales, accessed by 60% of adults weekly, with BBC One leading consumption, while digital platforms and social media follow closely at 52%.[234] Radio reaches 43% weekly, underscoring the sector's reliance on broadcast media amid shifting consumption patterns.[234] Broadcasting centers include BBC Cymru Wales, which relocated its headquarters to Central Square opposite Cardiff Central Station in July 2020, consolidating around 1,000 staff for radio, television, and online services previously split across sites.[235] ITV Cymru Wales broadcasts from studios at 3 Assembly Square in Cardiff Bay, having moved there on June 30, 2014, to enhance proximity to the Senedd and improve production efficiency.[236] S4C, the Welsh-language public broadcaster, operates a key office at 3 Y Sgwâr Canolog in Cardiff, supporting content creation alongside its Caernarfon base, with live sports and drama transmissions available via Freeview channel 4 in Wales.[237] Local television includes Cardiff TV, one of three regional stations in Wales as of 2019, focusing on city-specific programming.[238] Print media in Cardiff centers on titles produced by Reach plc's Media Wales division, including the daily broadsheet Western Mail, which covers national Welsh affairs, and the tabloid South Wales Echo, distributed locally with emphasis on Cardiff news.[239] These outlets have experienced circulation declines, reflecting broader UK trends, with Wales lacking a fully independent national newspaper and relying partly on UK-wide publications like The Sun and Daily Mail for mass readership. Digital media extends these operations through WalesOnline, the online platform aggregating content from Western Mail, South Wales Echo, and other regional titles, delivering real-time news, sports, and events coverage for Cardiff and Wales.[239] Independent digital producers and agencies, such as Curve Media in Cardiff, contribute to unscripted factual content for broadcasters like BBC Two, while outdoor digital advertising firms like Route Media operate LED screens across the city.[240] The sector's growth in employment has been notable, driven by public funding and urban regeneration around sites like Central Square, though challenges persist from digital disruption and bilingual content demands.[241]Sports and Recreation
Professional Sports Teams
Cardiff is home to several professional sports teams, primarily in football, rugby union, ice hockey, and cricket. These teams compete in national and international leagues, drawing significant local support and contributing to the city's sporting identity.[242] Cardiff City F.C. is the city's professional association football club, founded in 1899 and currently competing in EFL League One, the third tier of the English football league system, during the 2025–26 season following relegation from the Championship.[243][244] The team plays home matches at Cardiff City Stadium, a 33,280-capacity venue opened in 2009.[245] Cardiff Rugby, the professional rugby union team representing the Cardiff Blues region, participates in the BKT United Rugby Championship, a cross-hemisphere competition involving teams from Europe, Africa, and the Americas.[242][246] As of October 2025, the team has issued statements affirming its ongoing viability amid discussions by the Welsh Rugby Union regarding regional structures, with assurances that a professional team will continue operating in Cardiff.[247] Home games are primarily held at Cardiff Arms Park. The Cardiff Devils are a professional ice hockey team in the Elite Ice Hockey League (EIHL), the top tier of British ice hockey, and won the 2025 Continental Cup as European champions.[248][249] They play at Vindico Arena, with a focus on competitive play in domestic and international fixtures.[250] Glamorgan County Cricket Club, based at Sophia Gardens in Cardiff, competes in the Rothesay County Championship, the first-class county cricket competition in England and Wales.[242] The club has historically represented Glamorgan county, with Cardiff serving as its primary home ground for professional matches.[242]| Team | Sport | League/Competition | Home Venue |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cardiff City F.C. | Football | EFL League One | Cardiff City Stadium |
| Cardiff Rugby | Rugby union | United Rugby Championship | Cardiff Arms Park |
| Cardiff Devils | Ice hockey | Elite Ice Hockey League | Vindico Arena |
| Glamorgan CCC | Cricket | County Championship | Sophia Gardens |
Recreational Facilities and Events
Cardiff maintains an extensive network of parks and green spaces for public recreation, with Bute Park serving as a primary urban oasis spanning grounds adjacent to Cardiff Castle and accessible from the city center.[100] These areas support activities such as walking, cycling, and picnicking, contributing to the city's emphasis on accessible outdoor leisure.[251] Indoor and aquatic facilities are operated through municipal leisure centers, including the Cardiff International Pool, which features a 50-meter Olympic-standard swimming pool, a leisure pool with slides and interactive features, and a gym equipped with over 70 stations alongside more than 80 weekly fitness classes.[252] Other centers, such as Llanishen Leisure Centre and those managed by Better under Cardiff Council contracts, provide swimming pools, gyms, and group exercise programs tailored to various fitness levels and age groups.[253][254] The Sport Wales National Centre in central Cardiff offers public access to high-standard amenities like group fitness sessions and racket sports courts, mirroring facilities used by elite athletes.[255] Cardiff City House of Sport in Leckwith further supports community-level training with indoor and outdoor multi-sport venues.[256] Recreational events in Cardiff include the annual Cardiff Food and Drink Festival, held in July at Cardiff Bay, which showcases local producers, street food vendors, and cooking demonstrations to promote regional cuisine.[257] Additional gatherings such as the Cardiff Bay Family Fun Park and open-air concerts in Bute Park provide seasonal family-oriented activities and entertainment, often drawing crowds for casual leisure.[258] Outdoor adventure options, including self-guided treasure hunts around Mermaid Quay in Cardiff Bay, encourage interactive exploration of waterfront areas.[259] These events typically occur from spring through autumn, leveraging the city's parks and bayfront for public engagement.[260]Landmarks
Historic Monuments
Cardiff Castle stands as the city's most prominent historic monument, with origins tracing back to a Roman fort established around AD 55 to defend against coastal raids.[31] The fort featured stone walls up to 3 meters thick and 3.5 meters high, portions of which remain visible in the castle's undercroft and grounds today.[261] In the late 11th century, Norman lord Robert Fitzhamon constructed a motte-and-bailey castle atop the Roman site, marking the transition to feudal control under William the Conqueror's regime.[31] The structure evolved through medieval ownership by families like the Herberts and Windsors, before the 3rd Marquess of Bute commissioned extensive Gothic Revival interiors by architect William Burges between 1865 and 1881, blending historical layers with Victorian opulence.[31] Llandaff Cathedral, located in the suburb of Llandaff, represents one of Wales's oldest ecclesiastical sites, with a Christian community founded by Saint Teilo in the 6th century.[262] The current Norman-era building dates primarily from 1120, initiated by Bishop Urban to house relics of Saint Dyfrig, featuring a Romanesque sanctuary arch and early English architectural elements.[262] Severely damaged during Owain Glyndŵr's rebellion in 1404 and again by Luftwaffe bombing on January 2, 1941, which collapsed the roof and nave, the cathedral underwent restorations, including George Pace's 1950s modernist interventions like the Christ in Majesty sculpture by Jacob Epstein above the ruined arch.[262] St John the Baptist Church, situated in Cardiff's city center, is the oldest surviving medieval parish church, originating as a 12th-century chapel of ease to the flood-prone St Mary's Church.[263] Rebuilt in the mid-15th century following destruction in Glyndŵr's 1404 uprising, it features a perpendicular Gothic tower completed by 1463 and retains elements like the rood screen from 1520.[263] The church served as Cardiff's principal place of worship after St Mary's abandonment in 1607 due to flooding.[263] Other notable remnants include the scheduled Iron Age hillfort at Caerau, enclosing 12 hectares with ramparts dating to around 500 BC, and prehistoric barrows on nearby Garth Hill, evidencing pre-Roman occupation.[264] These monuments collectively illustrate Cardiff's layered history from prehistoric settlements through Roman, Norman, and medieval periods.Modern Developments and Attractions
The redevelopment of Cardiff Bay represents one of the most significant modern urban transformations in the United Kingdom, initiated by the Cardiff Bay Development Corporation in April 1987 to regenerate 1,100 hectares of derelict docklands.[164] The project culminated in the completion of the 1.1-kilometer Cardiff Bay Barrage in 2000, which created a 200-hectare freshwater lake and facilitated the shift from industrial decline to a mixed-use waterfront district featuring residential, commercial, and leisure facilities.[265] This initiative has attracted over £1 billion in private investment, resulting in approximately 25,000 jobs and a population of around 20,000 residents in the area by the 2010s.[164] Key modern attractions within Cardiff Bay include the Senedd, the seat of the Senedd Cymru (Welsh Parliament) opened in 2006, designed by Richard Rogers with sustainable features like natural ventilation and a glass facade symbolizing transparency.[164] Adjacent is the Wales Millennium Centre, a performing arts venue inaugurated in 2004, known for its copper-clad exterior inspired by Welsh slate and coal industries, hosting operas, musicals, and concerts with a capacity of over 1,900 seats in its main auditorium. The Pierhead Building, a Grade I listed Victorian structure repurposed as a visitor center, contrasts with contemporary developments like the BBC Cymru Wales headquarters completed in 2010s, underscoring the blend of heritage and modernity. Ongoing urban projects continue to shape Cardiff's skyline and appeal. In August 2025, plans were approved for a 50-story residential tower at Callaghan Square, set to become Wales' tallest building at approximately 170 meters, incorporating 500 apartments and amenities to address housing demand.[266] The proposed Cardiff Arena, a 16,500-capacity entertainment venue, aims to boost urban regeneration through enhanced cultural offerings, with construction targeted for completion in the late 2020s.[267] Additionally, in May 2024, announcements confirmed developments for a major aquarium—one of the UK's largest—and an adventure park in Cardiff Bay, expected to draw significant tourism.[268] These initiatives reflect Cardiff's evolution into a dynamic capital, prioritizing economic growth and visitor experiences amid challenges like infrastructure integration.[269]Notable Figures
Individuals Born in Cardiff
Roald Dahl, born on September 13, 1916, in Llandaff, a suburb of Cardiff, was a Norwegian-Welsh author renowned for children's literature including Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (1964) and Matilda (1988), with global sales exceeding 250 million copies.[270] His works often featured dark humor and moral undertones drawn from personal experiences, such as his childhood in Cardiff and wartime service as a fighter pilot.[270] Ivor Novello, born David Ivor Davies on January 15, 1893, in Cardiff, was a composer, playwright, and actor whose song "Keep the Home Fires Burning" (1914) became a World War I anthem, selling over a million copies.[271] He starred in and wrote West End revues, influencing British musical theater with productions like Glamorous Night (1935).[271] Ken Follett, born on June 5, 1949, in Cardiff, is a historical fiction author whose novel The Pillars of the Earth (1989) has sold more than 27 million copies worldwide and spawned adaptations including a 2010 miniseries.[272] His Century Trilogy, covering 20th-century events, combines meticulous research with thriller elements.[272] Dame Shirley Bassey, born on January 8, 1937, in Tiger Bay, Cardiff, rose from local performances to international fame as a singer, recording three James Bond theme songs: "Goldfinger" (1964), "Diamonds Are Forever" (1971), and "Moonraker" (1979).[273] Her powerful contralto voice earned her Damehood in 1999 and sales of over 20 million records.[273] Charlotte Church, born on February 21, 1986, in Llandaff, Cardiff, gained prominence as a child soprano with albums like Voice of an Angel (1998), which sold 10 million copies globally by age 12.[274] She later transitioned to pop and activism, releasing Back to Scratch (2010).[274] In sports, Ryan Giggs, born on November 29, 1973, in Canton, Cardiff, holds Manchester United's record for appearances (963) and trophies (36), including 13 Premier League titles, as a winger known for longevity and assists.[275] Gareth Bale, born on July 16, 1989, in Cardiff, scored 105 goals for Real Madrid, winning five Champions Leagues, and captained Wales to Euro 2016 semifinals with feats like a 40-yard free-kick against Belgium.[276]Prominent Residents and Contributors
The transformation of Cardiff from a minor settlement into a thriving industrial port owes much to the patronage and infrastructure investments of the Bute family, particularly the second and third marquesses, who, though not born in the city, resided there as lords of the manor and shaped its economic and architectural landscape. John Crichton-Stuart, 2nd Marquess of Bute (1793–1848), oversaw the construction of the West Bute Dock, which opened on 9 October 1839 despite cost overruns exceeding £150,000 (equivalent to over £20 million in 2023 terms), enabling large-scale exports of iron and coal from the South Wales coalfield. This initiative catalyzed rapid urbanization, with Cardiff's population surging from 6,342 in 1801 to 58,090 by 1851, establishing it as the world's leading coal port by the late 19th century.[277][278] The 3rd Marquess, John Patrick Crichton-Stuart (1847–1900), born in London but a long-term resident of Cardiff through his estates, further enhanced the city's cultural and built heritage as one of Victorian Britain's foremost architectural patrons. From 1868, he funded the Gothic Revival reconstruction of Cardiff Castle, collaborating with English architect William Burges (1827–1881), who relocated to Cardiff and lived on-site during much of the 20-year project to oversee intricate details like the rooftop gardens, animal wall, and opulent interiors blending medievalism with Pre-Raphaelite aesthetics. The marquess's expenditures, totaling hundreds of thousands of pounds, not only preserved a Norman-era landmark but also stimulated local craftsmanship and employment in stonework, stained glass, and metalwork.[279][278] Burges himself, though English-born, contributed enduringly to Cardiff's aesthetic identity during his residency, infusing the castle with symbolic elements reflective of the city's rising status, such as zodiac-themed clock towers and heraldic motifs tied to Welsh lore. His work, completed posthumously in 1927 under subsequent Bute oversight, remains a testament to external expertise driving local prominence. Beyond the Butes, Cardiff has attracted transient contributors in politics and academia, including former UK Labour leader Neil Kinnock (born 1942 in Tredegar), who resided there while studying at what is now Cardiff University in the 1960s and later represented Welsh interests from the city as an MP.[280]References
- https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Caerdydd
- https://www.wales.com/about/[language](/page/Language)/place-names-wales
