Talley, Carmarthenshire, Wales Genealogy

A guide to genealogy in Talley, with information on where to find birth, baptism, marriage, death and burial records; census records; wills; cemeteries; maps; etc.

Talley (Welsh: Talyllychau) is a village, community and ecclesiastical parish in Carmarthenshire, Wales.

Before 1974 the village was in the historic county of Carmarthenshire and, between 1974 and 1996 in the County of Dyfed. In 1996 it became part of the modern county of Carmarthenshire.

History
TALLEY, otherwise TÀL-Y-LLYCHAU, a parish, in the union of LLANDILO-VAWR, lower division of the hundred of CAYO, county of CARMARTHEN, SOUTH WALES, 7½ miles (N.) from Llandilo-Vawr. This place, of which the name, signifying "the head of the lakes", is derived from two large pools, near the church, of about fifty acres in extent, was originally of much greater importance than at present, and the seat of one of the most extensive and venerable ecclesiastical establishments in this part of the principality. The parish comprises by admeasurement 7167 a. 2 r. 19 p., of which the arable proportion may consist of about two-thirds in relation to the pasture, and nearly 200 acres are woodland, and 290 a. 8 p. a common. The surface displays a continued succession of hill and dale, sideland and mountain top, and is rather woody. The seat, Edwinsford, stands in the north-west on the confines of the parish, of about half of which the owner of the house is the landed proprietor. The church, dedicated to St. Michael, having fallen into decay, was rebuilt in the Grecian style, in 1773 principally from the ruins of the ancient abbey. There are places of worship for Baptists and Calvinistic Methodists.

For more information on Talley see Talley at Genuki.

Maps and Gazetteers

 * Talley at Vision of Britain.