A monument to St Dwynwen at Llanddwyn on Anglesey.
Gail Johnson/www.shutterstock.com
The Welsh legend of St Dwynwen is anything but romantic.
Gina Miller, whose challenge against the government has gone to the Supreme Court.
Victoria Jones/ PA Wire
Great expectations or much ado about nothing?
Alongside a road, under the ground a medieval manor lies waiting.
ender4000/Lost City of Trellech
Ploughing his life savings into buying the land under which the lost city lies, Stuart Wilson has made a once-in-a-lifetime discovery.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
Theresa May desperately needs room to manoeuvre after letting Brexit bravado get the best of her.
Miners engaged in rescue work in Aberfan in 1966.
PA Archive/PA Images
Press, television and radio can shape our memories of events - but is this a good thing?
Pantglas Primary School, in the Welsh town of Aberfan, buried under a mountain of pit waste in 1966.
PA Archive/Press Association Images
The 1966 event that killed 144 people in a small Welsh town is still shaping national identity today.
24-hour surveillance people.
Wikimedia
Scotland is about to greatly expand its use of tags to have more prisoners serve sentences in their homes and communities.
Wales and Welsh culture captivated the already curious soul of Roald Dahl.
Hardwick4/Wikimedia
An idyllic childhood in Wales inspired one of the world’s most treasured children’s writers in unexpected ways.
Komsan Loonprom/Shutterstock.com
We can’t keep blaming the MMR-autism scare – there are other forces at play.
Empty seats.
Fiona Skinner
Welcome to further education – unloved cousin of schools and universities.
Young people can help reshape academic research, bringing new focus to different issues that matter to them.
Ian Homer
Researchers and policy makers alike are missing out on a vital resource – young people themselves.
Community journalists are putting local news back on the agenda.
Volunteers are picking up where local media has abandoned UK towns.
The Wales team has more than just spirit.
Joe Giddens / PA Wire/Press Association Images
The beautiful game has been dominated by the best team with the worst historic record.
Wales have made the most of more opportunities for smaller teams.
EPA/GEORGI LICOVSKI
New formats, new nations, a new UEFA president and the legacy of a multi-venue event in four years time – Euro 2024 could be a very different beast.
‘And he’s missed it’.
EPA
Perverse mental processes take over when the chips are down. And there’s something you can do about it.
Glastonbury: home away from spiritual home.
Matt Crossick / PA Archive/Press Association Images
Jump on the Glastonbury bus, bring your tent back home afterwards, and promote long term behaviour change.
An uncertain future…
Union Jack via www.shutterstock.com
The UK’s regions – England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland – hold very different views about whether to remain in the EU, which means the country might not survive a Brexit in its current form.
Welsh triumph at Euro 2016.
PA
A great deal is at stake in an international football fixture between ancient rivals.
Britain has more in common with the people of Europe than politics.
REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
Music has helped Europeans develop a better understanding of British culture than Brits will ever have of Europe.
A political football?
Karen Katriyan
How will the football influence the vote? Here are the possibilities …