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Tucked away on the Pembrokeshire peninsula, a jagged finger of
rock pointing the way to Ireland, is Britain's smallest city,
St. David's.
You see first a small collection of houses and cottages and then
suddenly revealed, set in a hollow to avoid the attentions of
early Viking marauders, is the beautiful and historically important
St. David's cathedral, originally founded in the 6th Century and
said to house the remains of the patron saint of Wales.
It was believed in the middle-ages that three visits to St. David's
were worth one visit to Rome, which made it a busy centre of pilgrimage
from Ireland and Wales
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