New Brighton's Welsh name Pentre Cythraul 'should be recognised'

  • Published
New Brighton signImage source, Google
Image caption,

The Welsh name for New Brighton is not officially recognised

People in a village in Flintshire are launching a bid to get recognition for a Welsh form of their village's name.

New Brighton is known by some locals as Pentre Cythraul, but a Welsh Language Commissioner list of names published in 2018 only recognises the English form.

The commissioner, Aled Roberts, has agreed to review this after "receiving inquiries about the name in the last few months".

His office is setting up a meeting with Flintshire council to discuss the name.

Pentre Cythraul roughly translates as "The Devil's Village" but is likely to originally have been named Pentre Catherall after industrialist Josiah Catherall who built a row of houses in the 19th Century which eventually became the village.

The commissioner's place-names standardisation panel wrote in 2018: "Certainly, as the district became more anglicised and the coal-mining links disappeared, the forms Pentre Catherall and Pentre Cythrel were largely forgotten.

"For this reason the panel recommends the form New Brighton alone."

Darren Morris, who lives in the village, hopes the name could be on road signs in future.

"It is not a written name, but it has been historically recognised by the people in the village," he said.

Related internet links

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.