Language Cornish language to
Penzance, in the English and
Cornish languages A member of the
Brythonic branch of the
Celtic language family, Cornish is closely related to the other Brythonic languages (
Breton and
Welsh), and less so to the
Goidelic languages (
Scottish Gaelic,
Irish and
Manx). Cornish is recognised under Part III of the
European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages, placing it alongside the other the Celtic languages of the UK. Cornish died out in the late 18th century. There has been a revival of the language by academics and optimistic enthusiasts since the mid-19th century that gained momentum from the publication of
Henry Jenner's
Handbook of the Cornish Language in 1904. It is a social networking community language rather than a social community group language. Cornwall Council encourages and facilitates language classes within the county, in schools and within the wider community. In 2002, Cornish was named as a UK regional language in the
European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages. As a result, in 2005 its promoters received limited government funding. Several words originating in Cornish are used in the mining terminology of English, such as
costean,
gossan,
gunnies, kibbal,
kieve and
vug.
English dialect The Cornish language and culture influenced the emergence of particular pronunciations and grammar not used elsewhere in England. The Cornish dialect is spoken to varying degrees; however, someone speaking in broad Cornish may be practically unintelligible to one not accustomed to it. Cornish dialect has generally declined, as in most places it is now little more than a regional accent and grammatical differences have been eroded over time. Marked differences in vocabulary and usage still exist between the eastern and western parts of Cornwall.
Flag Saint Piran's Flag is the national flag and ancient banner of Cornwall, and an emblem of the Cornish people. The banner of Saint Piran is a white cross on a black background (in terms of
heraldry 'sable, a cross argent'). According to legend Saint Piran adopted these colours from seeing the white tin in the black coals and ashes during his discovery of tin. The Cornish flag is an exact reverse of the former
Breton black cross
national flag and is known by the same name "
Kroaz Du".
Arts and media Museum in St Ives Since the 19th century, Cornwall, with its unspoilt maritime scenery and strong light, has sustained a vibrant visual art scene of international renown. Artistic activity within Cornwall was initially centred on the art-colony of
Newlyn, most active at the turn of the 20th century. This
Newlyn School is associated with the names of
Stanhope Forbes,
Elizabeth Forbes,
Norman Garstin and
Lamorna Birch. Modernist writers such as
D. H. Lawrence and
Virginia Woolf lived in Cornwall between the wars, and
Ben Nicholson, the painter, having visited in the 1920s came to live in St Ives with his then wife, the sculptor
Barbara Hepworth, at the outbreak of the
Second World War. They were later joined by the Russian emigrant
Naum Gabo, and other artists. These included
Peter Lanyon,
Terry Frost,
Patrick Heron,
Bryan Wynter and
Roger Hilton. St Ives also houses the Leach Pottery, where
Bernard Leach, and his followers championed Japanese inspired studio pottery. Much of this modernist work can be seen in
Tate St Ives. The Newlyn Society and
Penwith Society of Arts continue to be active, and contemporary visual art is documented in a dedicated online journal. Local television programmes are provided by
BBC South West &
ITV West Country. Radio programmes are produced by
BBC Radio Cornwall in Truro for the entire county,
Heart West,
Source FM for the Falmouth and Penryn areas,
Coast FM for west Cornwall,
Radio St Austell Bay for the St Austell area,
NCB Radio for north Cornwall &
Pirate FM.
Music Cornwall has a
folk music tradition that has survived into the present and is well known for its unusual folk survivals such as
Mummers Plays, the
Furry Dance in
Helston played by the famous
Helston Town Band, and
Obby Oss in
Padstow.
Newlyn is home to a food and music festival that hosts live music, cooking demonstrations, and displays of locally caught fish. As in other former mining districts of Britain, male voice choirs and
brass bands, such as
Brass on the Grass concerts during the summer at
Constantine, are still very popular in Cornwall. Cornwall also has around 40 brass bands, including the six-times National Champions of Great Britain, Camborne Youth Band, and the bands of
Lanner and St Dennis. Cornish players are regular participants in inter-Celtic festivals, and Cornwall itself has several inter-Celtic festivals such as
Perranporth's Lowender Peran folk festival. Contemporary musician
Richard D. James (also known as Aphex Twin) grew up in Cornwall, as did
Luke Vibert and
Alex Parks, winner of
Fame Academy 2003.
Roger Taylor, the drummer from the band
Queen was also raised in the county, and currently lives not far from
Falmouth. The American singer-songwriter
Tori Amos now resides predominantly in North Cornwall not far from Bude with her family. The
lutenist, composer and festival director
Ben Salfield lives in Truro.
Mick Fleetwood of
Fleetwood Mac was born in
Redruth.
Literature Cornwall's rich heritage and dramatic landscape have inspired numerous writers.
Fiction Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch, author of many novels and works of literary criticism, lived in Fowey: his novels are mainly set in Cornwall.
Daphne du Maurier lived at
Menabilly near Fowey and many of her novels had Cornish settings:
The Loving Spirit,
Jamaica Inn,
Rebecca, ''
Frenchman's Creek, The King's General (partially), My Cousin Rachel, The House on the Strand and Rule Britannia. She is also noted for writing Vanishing Cornwall
. Cornwall provided the inspiration for The Birds'', one of her terrifying series of short stories, made famous as a film by
Alfred Hitchcock. , reputedly
King Arthur's birthplace
Conan Doyle's ''
The Adventure of the Devil's Foot'' featuring
Sherlock Holmes is set in Cornwall.
Winston Graham's series
Poldark,
Kate Tremayne's
Adam Loveday series,
Susan Cooper's novels
Over Sea, Under Stone and
Greenwitch, and
Mary Wesley's
The Camomile Lawn are all set in Cornwall. Writing under the pseudonym of Alexander Kent,
Douglas Reeman sets parts of his
Richard Bolitho and Adam Bolitho series in the Cornwall of the late 18th and the early 19th centuries, particularly in Falmouth.
Gilbert K. Chesterton placed the action of many of his stories there. Medieval Cornwall is the setting of the trilogy by
Monica Furlong,
Wise Child,
Juniper and
Colman, as well as part of Charles Kingsley's
Hereward the Wake.
Hammond Innes's novel,
The Killer Mine;
Charles de Lint's novel
The Little Country; and Chapters 24–25 of
J. K. Rowling's
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows take place in Cornwall (Shell Cottage, on the beach outside the fictional village of Tinworth). David Cornwell, who wrote espionage novels under the name
John le Carré, lived and worked in Cornwall.
Nobel Prize-winning novelist
William Golding was born in
St Columb Minor in 1911, and returned to live near Truro from 1985 until his death in 1993.
D. H. Lawrence spent a short time living in Cornwall.
Rosamunde Pilcher grew up in Cornwall, and several of her books take place there, including her 1987 best-selling novel,
The Shell Seekers. St. Michael's Mount in Cornwall (under the fictional name of Mount Polbearne) is the setting of the Little Beach Street Bakery series by
Jenny Colgan, who spent holidays in Cornwall as a child. The book series includes
Little Beach Street Bakery (2014),
Summer at Little Beach Street Bakery (2015),
Christmas at Little Beach Street Bakery (2016), and
Sunrise by the Sea (2021). In the
Paddington Bear novels by
Michael Bond the title character is said to have landed at an unspecified port in Cornwall having travelled in a
lifeboat aboard a
cargo ship from darkest
Peru. From here he travels to
London on a train and eventually arrives at
Paddington Station.
Enid Blyton's 1953 children's novel
Five Go Down to the Sea (the twelfth book in
The Famous Five series) is set in Cornwall, near the fictional coastal village of Tremannon.
Poetry promontory beyond The late
Poet Laureate Sir John Betjeman was famously fond of Cornwall and it featured prominently in his poetry. He is buried in the churchyard at
St Enodoc's Church, Trebetherick.
Charles Causley, the poet, was born in Launceston and is perhaps the best known of Cornish poets.
Jack Clemo and the scholar
A. L. Rowse were also notable Cornishmen known for their poetry; The Rev.
R. S. Hawker of Morwenstow wrote some poetry which was very popular in the Victorian period. The Scottish poet
W. S. Graham lived in West Cornwall from 1944 until his death in 1986. The poet
Laurence Binyon wrote "For the Fallen" (first published in 1914) while sitting on the cliffs between
Pentire Point and The Rumps and a stone plaque was erected in 2001 to commemorate the fact. The plaque bears the inscription "FOR THE FALLEN / Composed on these cliffs, 1914". The plaque also bears below this the fourth stanza (sometimes referred to as
"The Ode") of the poem: :They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old :Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn :At the going down of the sun and in the morning :We will remember them
Other literary works Cornwall produced a substantial number of
passion plays such as the
Ordinalia during the Middle Ages. Many are still extant, and provide valuable information about the Cornish language. See also
Cornish literature Colin Wilson, a prolific writer who is best known for his debut work
The Outsider (1956) and for
The Mind Parasites (1967), lived in
Gorran Haven, a small village on the southern Cornish coast. The writer
D. M. Thomas was born in Redruth but lived and worked in Australia and the United States before returning to his native Cornwall. He has written novels, poetry, and other works, including translations from Russian.
Thomas Hardy's drama
The Queen of Cornwall (1923) is a version of the Tristan story; the second act of
Richard Wagner's opera
Tristan und Isolde takes place in Cornwall, as do
Gilbert and Sullivan's operettas
The Pirates of Penzance and
Ruddigore.
Clara Vyvyan was the author of various books about many aspects of Cornish life such as
Our Cornwall. She once wrote: "The Loneliness of Cornwall is a loneliness unchanged by the presence of men, its freedoms a freedom inexpressible by description or epitaph. Your cannot say Cornwall is this or that. Your cannot describe it in a word or visualise it in a second. You may know the country from east to west and sea to sea, but if you close your eyes and think about it no clear-cut image rises before you. In this quality of changefulness have we possibly surprised the secret of Cornwall's wild spirit—in this intimacy the essence of its charm? Cornwall!". A level of
Tomb Raider: Legend, a game dealing with Arthurian Legend, takes place in Cornwall at a museum above King Arthur's tomb. The adventure game
The Lost Crown is set in the fictional town of Saxton, which uses the Cornish settlements of Polperro, Talland and Looe as its model. The fairy tale
Jack the Giant Killer takes place in Cornwall.
The Mousehole Cat, a children's book written by
Antonia Barber and illustrated by
Nicola Bayley, is set in the Cornish village
Mousehole and based on the legend of
Tom Bawcock and the continuing tradition of
Tom Bawcock's Eve.
Sports The main sports played in Cornwall are
rugby,
football and
cricket. Athletes from Truro have done well in
Olympic and
Commonwealth Games fencing, winning several medals.
Surfing is popular, particularly with tourists, thousands of whom take to the water throughout the summer months. Some towns and villages have bowling clubs, and a wide variety of British sports are played throughout Cornwall. Cornwall is also one of the few
places in England where
shinty is played; the
English Shinty Association is based in
Penryn. The
Cornwall County Cricket Club plays as one of the
National Counties of English and Welsh cricket. Of these, the highest ranked is
Truro City, who play in the
National League in the 2025–26 season. Other notable Cornish teams include
Mousehole A.F.C.,
Helston Athletic F.C., and
Falmouth Town F.C. and since the 20th century,
rugby union has emerged as one of the most popular spectator and team sports in Cornwall (perhaps the most popular), with professional Cornish rugby footballers being described as a "formidable force", In 1985, sports journalist
Alan Gibson made a direct connection between the love of rugby in Cornwall and the ancient parish games of hurling and wrestling that existed for centuries before rugby officially began. At an amateur level, the county is represented by
Cornish Rebels.
Surfing and watersports rowing championships take place annually in the
Isles of Scilly. . Due to its long coastline, various maritime sports are popular in Cornwall, notably sailing and
surfing. International events in both are held in Cornwall. Cornwall hosted the Inter-Celtic
Watersports Festival in 2006. Surfing in particular is very popular, as locations such as
Bude and
Newquay offer some of the best surf in the UK.
Pilot gig rowing has been popular for many years and the
world championships take place annually on the
Isles of Scilly. On 2 September 2007, 300 surfers at
Polzeath beach set a new world record for the highest number of surfers riding the same wave as part of the Global Surf Challenge and part of a project called Earthwave to raise awareness about
global warming.
Fencing As its population is comparatively small, and largely rural, Cornwall's contribution to
British national sport has been limited; the county's greatest successes have come in fencing. In 2014, half of the men's GB team fenced for Truro Fencing Club, and three Truro fencers appeared at the 2012 Olympics.
Cuisine Cornwall has a strong culinary heritage. Surrounded on three sides by the sea amid fertile fishing grounds, Cornwall naturally has fresh seafood readily available;
Newlyn is the largest fishing port in the UK by value of fish landed, and is known for its wide range of restaurants. Television chef
Rick Stein has long operated a fish restaurant in
Padstow for this reason, and
Jamie Oliver chose to open his second restaurant,
Fifteen, in
Watergate Bay near
Newquay.
MasterChef host and founder of Smiths of Smithfield,
John Torode, in 2007 purchased Seiners in
Perranporth. One famous local fish dish is
Stargazy pie, a fish-based pie in which the heads of the fish stick through the piecrust, as though "star-gazing". The pie is cooked as part of traditional celebrations for
Tom Bawcock's Eve, but is not generally eaten at any other time. Cornwall is perhaps best known though for its
pasties, a savoury dish made with pastry. Today's pasties usually contain a filling of beef steak, onion, potato and
swede with salt and white pepper, but historically pasties had a variety of different fillings. "Turmut, 'tates and mate" (i.e. "Turnip, potatoes and meat", turnip being the Cornish and Scottish term for swede, itself an abbreviation of 'Swedish Turnip', the British term for
rutabaga) describes a filling once very common. For instance, the licky pasty contained mostly leeks, and the herb pasty contained watercress, parsley, and shallots. Pasties are often locally referred to as
oggies. Historically, pasties were also often made with sweet fillings such as jam, apple and blackberry, plums or cherries. The wet climate and relatively poor soil of Cornwall make it unsuitable for growing many arable crops. However, it is ideal for growing the rich grass required for dairying, leading to the production of Cornwall's other famous export,
clotted cream. This forms the basis for many local specialities including Cornish
fudge and Cornish
ice cream. Cornish clotted cream has
Protected Geographical Status under EU law, and cannot be made anywhere else. Its principal manufacturer is
A. E. Rodda & Son of Scorrier. Local cakes and desserts include
Saffron cake,
Cornish heavy (hevva) cake,
Cornish fairings biscuits, figgy 'obbin,
Cream tea and whortleberry pie. There are also many types of beers brewed in Cornwall—those produced by
Sharp's Brewery,
Skinner's Brewery, Keltek Brewery and
St Austell Brewery are the best known—including
stouts,
ales and other beer types. There is some small scale production of wine,
mead and
cider. ==Politics and administration==