This article is about the particular significance of the year 1974 to Wales and its people.
Incumbents
Events
Arts and literature
- Kyffin Williams is elected to the Royal Academy.
- Andrew Vicari is appointed official painter to the Saudi royal family.
- The Cory Brass Band is the first Welsh band to win the British National Championship.
- The BBC Welsh Symphony Orchestra achieves full symphony status.
- Foundation of the Welsh Jazz Society.
- Journalist Hugh Cudlipp is created Baron Cudlipp of Aldingbourne.
- Glyn Daniel becomes Professor of Archaeology at Cambridge.
Awards
New books
English language
Welsh language
Music
Film
Welsh-language films
Broadcasting
Welsh-language television
English-language television
- Richard Burton is banned from BBC productions after complaints about his derogatory comments about Winston Churchill and others in power during World War II.
- Windsor Davies makes his first appearance as Sergeant Major Williams in It Ain't Half Hot Mum.
Sport
Births
- 5 January â Iwan Thomas, athlete
- 30 January â Christian Bale, actor
- 15 March <small>(in Zambia)</small> â Vaughan Gething, politician, First Minister
- 3 May â Barry Jones, boxer
- 11 May â Darren Ward, footballer
- 29 May â Jenny Willott, politician
- 3 June â Kelly Jones, rock singer-songwriter-guitarist
- 25 June â David Park, golfer
- 11 August â Dafydd Trystan Davies, chair of Plaid Cymru
- 1 September â Tony Bird, footballer
- 3 September â Rob Page, footballer
- 5 September â Becky Morgan, golfer
- 13 September â Andy Gorman, footballer
- 20 September <small>(in Suva, Fiji)</small> â Owen Sheers, poet and actor
- 17 October â Beverley Jones, athlete
- 18 October â Robbie Savage, footballer
- 24 October â David Evans, squash player
- 8 November â Matthew Rhys, actor
- 12 November â Jonathan Morgan, politician
- date unknown â Bedwyr Williams, installation and performance artist
Deaths
- 9 January â Dora Herbert Jones, singer and administrator, 83
- 11 January â Joe Jones, dual-code rugby player, 57
- 21 January â Sandy Griffiths, football referee, 65
- 11 February â D. Jacob Davies, Unitarian minister, broadcaster, writer and journalist, 57
- 12 February â Alec Harris, spiritualist medium, 76
- 3 April
- David Davies, actor)
- Desmond Donnelly, politician, 53 (suicide)
- 5 April â Cecil Spiller, cricketer, 73
- 14 April â Sir Archibald Lush, schools inspector, 74
- 13 May â Islwyn Evans, Wales international rugby player, 75
- 11 June â William Jones, dean of Brecon, 76
- 29 August <small>(in Oxford)</small> â Harold Arthur Harris, academic, 71
- 9 September â Neil McBride, MP for Swansea East, 64
- 28 October <small>(in Harrow)</small> â David Jones, poet and artist, 78
- November â Bessie Jones singer, 87
- 14 November - Gomer Hughes, rugby player, 64
- 24 November - Ivor Jones, footballer, 75
- 29 December â William Charles Fuller, Victoria Cross recipient, 80
See also
References