Eglwyseg Rocks

Eglwyseg Rocks is a valley located near Llangollen vale in Wales. Several Bronze Age burial mounds have been found in the valley and are the setting for Welsh folklore stories about giants. It is unclear when the area was settled and by whom, but many scholars believe Eglwseg Rocks dates back to the Middle Ages.

Quote from: "Llangollen Vale"

"Hard as th’ Eglwyseg rocks her heart remains,"

Brackish Pond, Devonshire, Bermuda

Brackish Pond is located in the Devonshire Parish of Bermuda. This parish is one of nine parishes in Bermuda. In 1612, the British claimed Bermuda as a colony and established its first settlement on the island. Bermuda is a part of the British Overseas Territories to this day. Brackish Pond is in the center of the island.

Quote from History of Mary Prince

Luss, Scotland

Luss is a village in the "Argyll and Bute" unitary authority council area of Scotland. It is located on the west bank of Loch Lomund, mentioned by Dorothy Wordsworth in the excerpt of Recollections of a Tour Made in Scotland.

Wordsworth comments that Luss was the village that she was told the rural part of Scotland began. This holds true in the modern day as Luss became a conservation village and a popular tourism location in the Loch Lomund National Park. Outside of the ones managed by the park, cars are a rarity in this location

Bermuda

Bermuda is an archipelago designated as a British Overseas Territory in the Atlantic Ocean. It is the location that Peter Finch compares the weather of the Western Peninsula of Britain to when describing Wales. 

Trefdraeth Wales

Among the many locations featured in Real Wales, Peter Finch mentions Trefdraeth as part of "Y Fro Efallai" (Welsh for "the vale maybe" - where he claims reality and fantasy mix in paragraph six.

Trefdraeth Wales

Among the many locations featured in Real Wales, Peter Finch mentions Trefdraeth as part of "Y Fro Efallai" (Welsh for "the vale maybe" - where he claims reality and fantasy mix in paragraph six.

Trefdraeth Wales

Among the many locations featured in Real Wales, Peter Finch mentions Trefdraeth as part of "Y Fro Efallai" (Welsh for "the vale maybe" - where he claims reality and fantasy mix in paragraph six.