The county of Brecknock was created in 1536 under the Laws in Wales Act 1535, which formally incorporated Wales into the Kingdom of England and extended English models of government, including counties, across all of Wales. Previously the Brecknockshire area had been subdivided into various smaller
marcher lordships and other territories. The largest of these were the
Lordship of Brecknock, which had its roots in the medieval Welsh kingdom of
Brycheiniog, and the
cantref of
Buellt.
Brycheiniog Brycheiniog was an independent kingdom in South Wales in the Early Middle Ages. It often acted as a buffer state between England to the east and the powerful south Welsh kingdom of
Deheubarth to the west. This kingdom covered the area which later became the southern part of Brecknockshire. The county's Welsh name (Sir Frycheiniog – the shire of Brycheiniog) is derived from the kingdom's name. The exact origins of Brycheiniog are unclear but the name is thought to derive from
Brychan mac Anlach, the 5th century ruler of the area. The lands of his kingdom supposedly formed a dowry from his father-in-law Tewdrig ap Teithfallt. Over the succeeding centuries many dynasties ruled the kingdom, alliances were made and broken, victories won and defeats suffered, but the kingdom maintained its integrity and identity up to Norman times.
Cantref of Buellt Buellt or Builth was a cantref in medieval Wales, located west of the River Wye. Unlike most cantrefs, it was not part of any of the major Welsh kingdoms for most of its history, but was instead ruled by an autonomous local dynasty. During the Norman invasion of Wales, the Marcher Lord
Philip de Braose conquered Buellt around 1095. The area then changed hands between multiple Norman and Welsh figures. In November 1282,
Edward I overran Buellt as part of his final conquest of Wales and the cantref became a crown possession.
Lordship of Brecknock Bernard de Neufmarché was a minor Norman lord who rose to power in the Welsh Marches before successfully undertaking the invasion and conquest of the Kingdom of Brycheiniog between 1088 and 1095. Bernard established a
Marcher Lordship in its place – the
Lordship of Brecknock. The lordship was ruled by numerous families over the next 400 years. By the early Tudor period, it was ruled by the Earls of Buckingham. When Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham, was executed for treason, having been suspected of plotting against King Henry VIII, the Lordship was forfeited to the crown.
Henry VIII combined it with the cantref of Buellt. By his Laws in Wales Acts, Henry converted the combined territory - the Lordships of Brecknock and Buellt - into Brecknockshire, subject to standard English law.
Creation of county The Laws in Wales Act 1535 created the County of Brecknock by combining a number of "lordships, towns, parishes, commotes and cantreds" in the "Country or Dominion of Wales". The areas combined were: "Brekenoke" (
Brecknock), "Crekehowell" (
Crickhowell) "Tretowre", "Penkelly", "Englisshe Talgarth", "Welsshe Talgarth", "Dynas", "The Haye" (
Hay-on-Wye), "Glynebogh", "Broynlles" (Bronllys), "Cantercely" (Cantref Selyf), "Llando Blaynllynby", "Estrodewe", "Buelthe" (
Builth), and "Llangors". The town of Brecknock or
Brecon was declared the county town. The county was divided into six
hundreds in 1542: Builth, Crickhowell, Devynnock, Merthyr, Penkelly, and Talgarth. Brecknock was the only
borough in the county. Other market towns were Builth, Crickhowell and Hay-on-Wye. Under the terms of the 1535 legislation one
member of parliament was returned for the borough and one for the county.
Breconshire County Council : County council's meeting place. Elected county councils were created in 1889 under the
Local Government Act 1888, taking over administrative functions which had previously been performed by unelected
magistrates at the
quarter sessions. The 1888 act also directed that
urban sanitary districts which straddled county boundaries should be placed wholly in the county which had the majority of the population. Along Brecknockshire's southern border with
Monmouthshire, there were four such urban sanitary districts which straddled the county boundary:
Brynmawr,
Ebbw Vale,
Rhymney, and
Tredegar. Brynmawr was placed entirely in Brecknockshire, whilst Ebbw Vale, Rhymney and Tredegar were placed entirely in
Monmouthshire. Brecknockshire therefore gained the southern parts of Brynmawr, but ceded to Monmouthshire the Llechryd area (in Rhymney district), the Dukestown area (in Tredegar district) and the
Beaufort and
Rassau areas (in Ebbw Vale district). The county council held its meetings at
Brecon Shire Hall, the county's main courthouse, which had been built in 1842 and was also the meeting place of the quarter sessions. The county council's main offices were at Watton Mount, a large house directly opposite the shire hall, until 1962 when New County Hall was built immediately behind the shire hall. Following the local government reorganisation in 1974, the New County Hall became an area office for
Powys County Council and also served as offices for the
Brecon Beacons National Park Authority for some years, but was demolished in 2016. The 1535 act which created the county had called it the "County or Shire of Brecknock", and also used the spelling Brecknock for the town. The spelling of the town's name was subsequently standardised to 'Brecon' instead, and there was occasional debate about the correct name of the county. In 1884, the county's magistrates at the quarter sessions decided that 'Brecknock' was the correct form, having been used in the statute creating the county. Efforts to get the two bodies to agree on a standard form of the name failed. The quarter sessions maintained that they had no authority to go against the form used in statute, whilst the county council went so far as to have erratum slips inserted in books of statistics advising readers that "the words 'Brecknock' and 'Brecknockshire' be throughout read as if the words 'Brecon' and 'Breconshire' had been printed in lieu thereof." Under the
Public Health Act 1848 and the
Local Government Act 1858 a number of towns were created local board districts or local government districts respectively, with
local boards to govern their areas. In 1875 these, along with the Borough of Brecknock, became urban
sanitary districts. At the same time the remainder of the county was divided into rural sanitary districts, some of which crossed county boundaries. The
Local Government Act 1894 redesignated these as
urban and
rural districts. Two
civil parishes were administered by rural district councils in neighbouring counties until 1934.
Abolition The administrative county of Brecknock was abolished in 1974 by the
Local Government Act 1972. The bulk of its area passed to the new county of
Powys, where it became the
Brecknock District, one of three
districts. Along Brecknockshire's southern boundary there were four communities that did not become part of Powys under the 1974 reforms:
Penderyn went to the
Cynon Valley district of
Mid Glamorgan,
Vaynor went to
Merthyr Tydfil district of Mid Glamorgan, and
Brynmawr and
Llanelly both went to
Blaenau Gwent. In 1996 a further
reorganisation of local government took place in Wales, and Powys became a
unitary authority.
Powys County Council established a Brecknockshire
"shire committee" consisting of councillors elected for electoral divisions within the former Borough of Brecknock. According to the 2001 census the area covered by the shire committee had a population of 42,075. The county council abolished its shire committees in 2018. ==Culture and community==