Traditionally, Whitland is seen as the site of an assembly of lawyers and churchmen, sometimes described as the first
Welsh parliament, called in 930 by King
Hywel Dda to codify the native
Welsh laws. Whitland takes its name from its medieval
Cistercian abbey. The monastery pre-dates
Tintern but now is very much a ruin. The "white land" of the name (
Latin:
Albalanda) may refer to the famous
Ty Gwyn (
English:
White House) where Hywel's parliament met, to the monks' unstained woollen cloaks, or to the abbey's limestone. Whitland was
dissolved during
Henry VIII's conversion to a reformed church. Much of its limestone was taken and used for other buildings. The limestone itself may have been from quarries in the Cotswolds as there is no quarry of this ' White' stone in the area. The country setting of the ruin and the Abbey's layout can still be viewed just north of the A40 roundabout and turning immediately left. Whitland has had a strong milk industry and, when the railway arrived in the 19th century, exported milk to London. Its dairy, run by
Dairy Crest, eventually closed in 1994 with the loss of 100 jobs. Despite losing its dairy and remaining high street bank, Whitland has an estimated 125 small businesses as well as Whitland Engineering, which services the dairy industry and in 2019 employed 90 people. ==Hywel Dda Centre==