This article is about the particular significance of the year 1799 to Wales and its people.
Incumbents
Events
- April
- The Crumlin Arm of the Monmouthshire canal, with Fourteen Locks, is completed. It leaves the main line at Crindau, rising 358 feet (109m) through 32 locks to Crumlin (including the Cefn flight of Fourteen Locks).
- The quarterly periodical Trysorfa Ysprydol is launched by Thomas Charles.
- July/August â Iolo Morganwg travels to North Wales to collect material for the Myvyrian Archaiology.
- October â Anthony Bushby Bacon and his brother Thomas take over the Hirwaun ironworks. Thomas sells his interest in the Plymouth ironworks to the Hill family.
- 16 October â Evan Pritchard (Ieuan Lleyn), David Thomas (Dafydd Ddu Eryri) and Griffith Williams (Gutyn Peris) are "ordained" bards of the province of Gwynedd by Iolo Morganwg.
- 25 December â is wrecked off the Penmarks.
- unknown dates
- Following the failure of the Pembrokeshire fish harvest, Richard Fenton imports grain from the Mediterranean to relieve the plight of local people.
- Peter Price becomes manager of Neath ironworks, and brings his family, including his wife Anna and his son Joseph Tregelles Price.
- Japanner John Pyrke relocates to Usk from London.
- Ann Hatton and her husband take a lease on Swansea Bathing House.
- John Sevier, governor of Tennessee, writes of the alleged discovery of six skeletons in brass armour bearing the Welsh coat-of-arms.
- Baptist leader and colonist Morgan John Rhys moves to Somerset County, Pennsylvania.
- The Llandovery Bank is established, as W & D Jones & Co. Commonly known as the "Black Ox Bank" or "Banc yr Eidon", it is one of the earliest banks established in Carmarthenshire.
- Robert Nicholl Carne begins construction of Dimlands, near Llantwit Major.
Arts and literature
New books
Births
Deaths
- 1 March â Thomas Olivers, Methodist preacher and hymn-writer, 73
- May â John Evans, explorer, 29
- 15 July â John Breynton, clergyman, 80
- 3 September â William Thomas, academic and Chancellor of Llandaff Cathedral, 65
- 4 November â Josiah Tucker, economist, 87
- 14 December â Benjamin Francis, hymn-writer, 55
References