A478 shield
A478
Map
Route information
Length31.8ย mi[1]ย (51.2ย km)
Major junctions
Northย endCardigan
Major intersections A487
A40
A4115
A477
A4218
A4139
Southย endTenby
Location
CountryUnited Kingdom
Primary
destinations
Cardigan
Tenby
Road network

The A478 road is a major road in Wales. The route is from its junction with the A487 at Cardigan, Ceredigion, to Tenby, Pembrokeshire. It crosses the Preseli Hills and winds through farmland for almost all of its route. The road just touches the very west of Carmarthenshire.[2]

History

edit

A road between Cardigan and Narberth was recorded between 1536 and 1642. The 1555 Highways Act made parishes responsible for the roads that crossed them. Most were unsuitable for wheeled traffic. Turnpike trusts were set up in the late 18th and early 19th centuries to manage road maintenance; at least part of this road came under the Whitland Trust. However, by the mid-19th century, some trusts were badly managed or abused, exacerbating rural poverty and in part leading to the Rebecca riots in the 1840s, some of the earliest of which were on this road, particularly at Efailwen in the Cilymaenllwyd Community. The trusts were reformed in 1844.[3]

The northern two-thirds of the A478 was a drovers' road, used for transporting goods and livestock to and from West Wales and Ireland. In the 18th and 19th centuries, Cardigan was a port, the commercial centre of the region and the most important port in South Wales, exporting fish, agricultural products and raw materials, and involved in emigration.[4] In 1815, it possessed 314 ships totalling 12,554 long tons (12,755ย t), seven times more than Cardiff and three times more than Swansea. It had a thriving shipbuilding industry, with over 200 vessels being built both in Cardigan and downstream in the village of Llandudoch (St Dogmaels).[5] When Cardigan was connected to the Carmarthen and Cardigan Railway in 1886, the decline of the port was hastened. The river silted up and larger vessels could no longer reach the port, which had largely become inactive by the early part of the 20th century.[6]

Route

edit

Cardigan to Crymych

edit
white-painted roadside pub with white-painted house and woods beyond under partly cloudy and blue sky
Pen-y-bryn Arms, Pen-y-bryn

Starting from the roundabout with the A487 south of Cardigan, the A478 soon crosses the county boundary into Pembrokeshire at Glanpwllafon, where it crosses Afon Piliau, a tributary of the River Teifi. The road passes through Pen-y-bryn in Bridell parish, crossing the River Plysgog, and climbs Rhoshill, crosses the B4332 Eglwyswrw-Cenarth road, then climbs the northern slopes of the eastern end of the Preseli Hills through Blaenffos village, bridging the River Nevern (near its source) at Riverlea, to Crymych village.[7]

Crymych to Narberth

edit

Still at an altitude of over 200 metres (660ย ft), the A478 passes through Pentre Galar hamlet, crosses the county boundary to Carmarthenshire and passes a viewpoint near the summit of Carn Wen, where it reaches its highest altitude of 260 metres (850ย ft).[7] The quarrying at Carn Wen (also known as Garnwen) is clearly visible from the road; quarrying was active in 2025.[8]

Front elevation of a white-painted two-storey rural pub with a central door, two lower and two upper windows edged with red, situated between two roads under a mostly-blue sky
Looking north, the A478 is on the right of The Cross Inn at Glandy Cross

Passing through Glandy Cross and Efailwen (the location of the first of the Rebecca Riots) the A478 crosses the county boundary back into Pembrokeshire, passing through Llandissilio to the railway station at Clunderwen. The A478 then crosses the A40 trunk road between Llanddewi Velfrey and Penblewin, to the west of St Clears, at the Penblewin roundabout and passes through Narberth town centre where it meets the B4314.[7]

Narberth to Tenby

edit

After Narberth, the road passes through Camp Hill and Templeton, then crosses the A4115 near Templeton Airfield. After passing the Folly Farm Adventure Park and Zoo and continuing through Begelly (Welsh: Begeli) it crosses the A477 road on a roundabout. The B4316, a left turn, is to Saundersfoot railway station and an alternative way to Saundersfoot. Continuing on the A478 and passing through Pentlepoir, Wooden and Moreton at the roundabout at Twycross it reconnects with the other end of the B4316; the preferred route to Saundersfoot. The A478 continues south through New Hedges following the coast. After its junction with the A4139 and Tenby High Street, the A478 runs to the side of North Beach and terminates at the harbour by the town wall.[9]

Traffic

edit

The majority of traffic on the A478 is local, agricultural and, in season, tourist traffic. In 2012, Pembrokeshire County Council said the A478 at New Hedges, near Tenby, carried an average of 9,900 vehicles a day.[10] There were 10 deaths as a result of road accidents on the A478 between 1999 and 2010, compared with the county's total of 80 road deaths for that period.[11]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Driving directions to Norton/A478". Google Maps. Google Maps. Retrieved 27 July 2014.
  2. ^ "Wales Directory". Retrieved 10 October 2020.
  3. ^ "Dyfed Archaeological Trust: Turnpike and copy editpre-turnpike roads" (PDF). p.ย 9. Retrieved 17 August 2019.
  4. ^ "Cardigan Bay Maritime History Project". Retrieved 10 October 2020.
  5. ^ "Dyfed Archaeological Trust: Cardigan". Retrieved 10 October 2020.
  6. ^ Cardigan Port Archived 5 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine at Gathering the Jewels.
  7. ^ a b c OS Landranger Series: Cardigan & Mynydd Preseli Map 145 (2007)
  8. ^ "Agg-net: Garnwen". Retrieved 19 September 2025.
  9. ^ Ordnance Survey Explorer Map OL36, 2008
  10. ^ "Pembrokeshire County Council Correspondence: 09.11.12". Retrieved 1 May 2014.
  11. ^ "Every death on every road in Great Britain". BBC News. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
edit

Wikimedia Commons logo Media related to A478 road (Wales) at Wikimedia Commons

51ยฐ53โ€ฒ39โ€ณN 4ยฐ42โ€ฒ49โ€ณW๏ปฟ / ๏ปฟ51.89429ยฐN 4.71348ยฐW๏ปฟ / 51.89429; -4.71348

๐Ÿ“š Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Rhoshill, Pembrokeshire

the A478 road, in the community and parish of Cilgerran, in Pembrokeshire, South-west Wales. The hamlet is situated at the crossroads between the A478 road

Tenby

19th-century Palmerston Fort. The town has an operating railway station. The A478 road from Cardigan, Ceredigion, connects Tenby with the M4 via the A477, the

Cardigan, Ceredigion

is Aberaeron. The town is bypassed by the A487 road along the coast, whose junction with the A478 road to Tenby lies to the south of the town. The settlement

A487 road

instead via the A478 road to Penblewin, then the A40 to Fishguard via Haverfordwest. However, there were still problems to some extent. The road continues to

A40 road

existing A40 to a new roundabout at Penblewin and the junction with the A478. This was originally known as the Blue and Purple routes during the Consultation

New Hedges

the coastal towns of Saundersfoot and Tenby. It lies astride the main A478 road that links Tenby with Cardigan and is a short distance from the Pembrokeshire

Cilymaenllwyd

southeast of Fishguard and 15 miles (24ย km) northeast of Haverfordwest. The A478 road runs through the community. Cilymaenllwyd has an area of 2,628 hectares

A486 road

The A486 is an A road in Wales linking New Quay, Ceredigion, with the A484 in Saron (Llangeler), Carmarthenshire. The road begins in New Quay near the