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History of the Centre  

 

 

 

1. Garden of all the trees
2. The Birch garden
3. The Willow garden
4. The Poplar garden
5. The Oak garden
6. The Ash garden
The Interpretive Centre
 
 
 

Gwefan Gymraeg
Welsh Website

      

 

 The Birch Garden

The three birch trees represent the laws of ‘Tort and Crime’ and the examples engraved on the five plaques illustrate the fairness and ‘common sense’ so evident in all sections of the laws.  Much emphasis was placed on paying compensation to the injured party:

 “Pob cyflafan a wnêl dyn o’i anfodd, diwygied o’i fodd”

 (All damage which a man does unwittingly, let him compensate for wittingly)

The next one speaks for itself:

 “Tystiolaeth a ellir ar air ac ar weithred ac ni ellir ar feddwl”

 (Testimony is possible for word and for deed and is not possible for thought)

i.e. the only offence we can bear witness to is one that we see or hear – what we ‘think’ or ‘believe’ is inadmissible.

If a starving man was caught stealing food when he had not been offered any hospitality or alms, he was set free.

                             

Title "birch garden" cut into slate plaque

  

   Sundial image of King Hywel Dda

  Sundial image of King Hywel Dda

symbolic gate into the main garden

You enter the main garden
through the symbolic gate designed and made by
Gideon Petersen, Llandissilio,
who also made the decorative
wrought iron panel at the end of the Willow garden.
 

hywel dda, king in the eye of the sun

interpretive centre from the entrance to the garden

 


St.Mary's Street, Whitland
Carmarthenshire
SA34 0PY
Tel: (01994) 240867
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