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Merthyr Tydfil to bid for Unesco world heritage status

BBC Published Jun 18, 2010 Reviewed Jun 30, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
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Wales currently has three World Heritage Sites.
3 · World Heritage Sites
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Councillor Derek Games said Merthyr Tydfil had four iron and steel works.
4 · iron and steel works
Councillor Derek Games, Merthyr Tydfil Heritage Champion
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The slate industry of north Wales submitted a bid to land UNESCO World Heritage status, a process that can take up to 10 years.
10 years · process duration
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Cefn Viaduct was built in 1866.
1866 year · Cefn Viaduct construction
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The first iron railway bridge was built in 1793.
1793 year · first iron railway bridge construction
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The first working steam-hauled locomotive and first constructed railway tunnel by Richard Trevithick was in 1804.
1804 year · first working steam-hauled locomotive and first constructed railway tunnel
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Cefn Viaduct was built in 1868.
1868 year · Cefn Viaduct construction
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Cefn Viaduct, noted for its gentle curve, was built in 1866 to carry the Brecon and Merthyr railway over the river Taff at Pontycapel

Merthyr Tydfil wants to see its industrial past recognised as world class by the United Nations heritage body Unesco.

The council is to put Cyfarthfa Heritage Area on Unesco's list of sites bidding for global classification.

Sited close to reserves of iron ore, coal, limestone and water, Merthyr developed early iron industries.

World Heritage Sites are chosen for their outstanding universal value to culture, history or science.

Wales currently has three World Heritage Sites: the castles and town walls of King Edward, in Gwynedd, the Blaenavon industrial landscape, in Blaenau Gwent, and the Pontcysyllte Aqueduct and Canal, in Wrexham.

Last week, the slate industry of north Wales submitted its own bid to land Unesco World Heritage status, in a process that can take up to 10 years.

Merthyr council said the 18th and 19th Century engineering "world firsts" in the town were "considered masterpieces of human genius".

the site of the first working steam-hauled locomotive and first constructed railway tunnel by Richard Trevithick in 1804

Councillor Derek Games, Merthyr Tydfil Heritage Champion, said: "It is vitally important we recall Merthyr Tydfil in the 1800s when it was described as the iron capital of the world, with its four iron and steel works - Cyfarthfa, Penydarren, Dowlais, and Plymouth.

"The original Cyfarthfa Furnace, once restored, has the potential to attract visitors from around the world.

"World Heritage status will give worldwide recognition to the heritage of Merthyr Tydfil."

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