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I edited my profile with Thomas' Myspace Editor V4.1The Welsh rugby union team, as the highest level of Welsh rugby union, represent Wales at the national sport of rugby union. Wales compete annually in the Six Nations Championship (which they have won outright 23 times, the last being in 2005) and in the World Cup every four years (best result so far: 3rd in 1987), which they also hosted in 1999. They are also one of the four contributing nations to the British and Irish Lions. Historically, Wales have been known as one of the best rugby union teams, with the key players of their 1970s teams in particular being acknowledged as some of the best in the history of the game. Many poor results in the late 1980s and 1990s have hurt that reputation, but a resurgence in form in the 2000s have led to them being acknowledged as being competitive with the top teams once again.Rugby union took root in Wales when Reverend Rowland Williams became Vice-Principal and introduced the sport to St David's College, Lampeter, in 1850. The Welsh Rugby Union was formed in 1881 in Glamorganshire, to organise a match between England and Wales. This match was played on February 19, 1881 and resulted in a win for the English, so much so that a return fixture the following year was refused by the Rugby Football Union of England. However, rugby union in Wales quickly developed and by the turn of the century Wales was one of the most feared teams in international rugby with a system that would alter the face of the game. This "four three-quarter" formation came into its own in 1893 when Wales became champions for the first time. They went on to win the (then) British Championship six times and finish runners-up six times in its first twelve years. Between 1900 and 1913 they were unbeaten at home. During this period they lost only seven games and famously became the only side to beat the All Blacks 'originals' on their tour of the Home nations at Cardiff in 1905. Famous players from this period include Gwyn Nicholls and Rhys Gabe. In 1911 Wales earned the first official Grand Slam by winning all their matches in the British Championship; they would wait nearly forty years for a second. The Great War came in 1914 and rugby was suspended for four seasons.

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.. width="425" height="350" ..Wales play all their home matches at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, which currently has a capacity of 74,500. It is also the national stadium of Wales, and at present, the largest football ground in Wales. The stadium is owned by Millennium Stadium plc which is a subsidiary company of the WRU. The stadium's first major event was Wales' first ever victory over the Springboks, on June 26, 1999. Millennium Stadium was built in 1999 on the site of the old national stadium, Cardiff Arms Park, constructed for use at the 1999 World Cup, which Wales primarily hosted, including the final. The construction cost the WRU £126 million, which was funded by private investment, £46 million of public funds from the National Lottery, the sale of debentures to supporters (which offered guaranteed tickets in exchange for an interest-free loan), and loans.St. Patrick was a Welshman. On March 17th, when St. Patrick's Day is widely celebrated in so many communities in the United States (where much more fuss is made than is found in Ireland), most Americans assume that Patrick was an Irishman. It is not so. Though Patrick's birthplace is debatable, most scholars seem to agree that he was born in the area of southeastern Scotland known as Strathclyde, a former Celtic kingdom and Welsh-speaking at the time. (However, a few scholars continue to regard St. David's in Pembrokeshire as the saint's birthplace; the tiny city was formerly directly in the path of missionary and trade routes to Ireland).When the city of Rome fell to the invading Goths under Alaric, Roman Britain, which had experienced hundreds of years of comparative peace and prosperity, was left to its own defenses under its local Romano-British leaders. One of these may have been a tribal chieftain named Arthur, who seems to have held off the invaders for a while. Centuries of constant warfare, however, meant that the majority of the British kingdoms eventually crumbled under the onslaught of Germanic tribes.More than two hundred years of fighting between the native Celts, brave but always completely disorganized, and the ever-increasing number of highly organized and disciplined German settlers eventually resulted in Britain sorting itself out into three distinct areas: the Britonic West, the Teutonic East and the Gaelic North. These areas later came to be identified as Wales, England and Scotland, all with their very separate cultural and linguistic characteristics. (Ireland, of course, remained Gaelic: many of its peoples migrated to Scotland, taking their language with them to replace the native Pictish).Many scholars believe that Patrick (Patricius or Padrig) was born in the still Welsh-speaking Northern Kingdom of Strathclyde of Romano-Brythonic stock around 385 AD at a place called Bannavem Taberniae (Banwen). His father was a deacon, Calpurnius. Not much is known of Patrick's early life, but it is believed he was captured and sold into slavery in Ireland. Escaping to Gaul, he then underwent religious instruction under Germanus and returned to Ireland to join other early missionaries, probably settling in Armagh. In his Confessio, a spiritual biography, Patrick describes his early adventures. His seventh century biographers claimed that he converted all of Ireland to Christianity. Other Information concerning his life comes from the Latin, "The Life of St. David", written in the late 11th century by Rhigfarch (Rhygyfarch) but supplemented by Geraldus Cambrensis around 1200.In "The Life", Patrick is told of coming to Wales as a bishop and vowing to serve God at Glyn Rhosyn (now St. David's). But, he was warned in a dream that the place was reserved for someone who would arrive thirty years later. He was then shown Ireland in the distance by an angel as he stood on a rock called "the seat of St. Patrick." Patrick's mission was to evangelize the distant land, a task that he carried out in a remarkably short period.Rhigfarch is also responsible for what little we know of St. David, adopted as the patron saint of Wales in the 18th century. David died about 590 AD with March 1st, the reputed day of his death, celebrated by a holiday in Wales. St. Patrick's Day is much better known. It has become an American national festival celebrated with monstrous parades silly green hats, fake shamrocks and prodigious amounts of alcoholic beverages, including -- horror of horrors -- green beer

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