Religion in Wales has become increasingly diverse over the years. Christianity was the religion of virtually all of the Welsh population until the late 20th century, but it rapidly declined throughout the early 21st century. Today, a plurality (46.5%) of people in Wales follow no religion at all.

Religion in Wales (2021)[1]

  No religion (46.5%)
  Christianity (43.6%)
  Islam (2.2%)
  Hinduism (0.4%)
  Buddhism (0.3%)
  Other religions (0.7%)
  Not stated (6.3%)

Representing 43.6% of the Welsh population in 2021, Christianity is the largest religion in Wales. Wales has a strong tradition of nonconformism, particularly Methodism. The Church of England was the established church until 1920 when the disestablished Church in Wales, was set up as a self-governing, though still Anglican, church.

Most adherents to organised religion in Wales follow one of the Christian denominations such as the Presbyterian Church of Wales, Baptist and Methodist churches, the Church in Wales, Catholicism or Eastern Orthodoxy. Other religions Welsh people may be affiliated with include Buddhism, Hinduism, Judaism, Islam, Sikhism and Druidism, with most non-Christian Welsh people found in the large cities of Cardiff and Swansea. Some modern surveys have suggested that most Welsh people do not identify with any religion and record significantly less religious feeling in Wales than in other parts of the UK.

Census statistics

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Religion 2001[2][3] 2011[2][4] 2021[1]
Number % Number % Number %
No religion 537,935 18.5 982,997 32.1 1,446,398 46.5
Christianity 2,087,242 71.9 1,763,299 57.6 1,354,773 43.6
Islam 21,739 0.7 45,950 1.5 66,947 2.2
Hinduism 5,439 0.2 10,434 0.3 12,242 0.4
Buddhism 5,407 0.2 9,117 0.3 10,075 0.3
Sikhism 2,015 0.1 2,962 0.1 4,048 0.1
Judaism 2,256 0.1 2,064 0.1 2,044 0.1
Other religion 6,909 0.2 12,705 0.4 15,926 0.5
Religion not stated 234,143 8.1 233,928 7.6 195,041 6.3
Total population 2,903,085 100.0 3,063,456 100.0 3,107,494 100.0
  Christianity
  Other
  No religion
  Not stated

Christianity

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History

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Roman origins

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Although Christianity arrived in Wales sometime in the Roman occupation, it was initially suppressed. The first Christian martyrs in Wales, Julius and Aaron, were killed around AD 304. The earliest Christian object found in Wales is a vessel with a Chi-Rho symbol found at Caerwent. Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire in the 4th century.[5] After the Roman legions withdrew in the 5th century Anglo-Saxon invaders gradually conquered eastern and southern Britain but were unable to make inroads into Wales, cutting off Wales from the Celts in Scotland, Cornwall and Cumbria. The writer Gildas drew sharp contrasts between the Christian Welsh at this time and the pagan Anglo-Saxon invaders.[citation needed]

Emergence

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Eglwys-y-Grog, a 13th-century church in Mwnt, Ceredigion

The Age of the Saints (about AD 500–700) was marked by the establishment of monastic settlements throughout the country by religious leaders such as Saint David, Illtud, and Teilo. This was the period when the Welsh developed a shared national identity arising from their language and religious beliefs.[5][6]

The Welsh bishops refused to cooperate with Augustine of Canterbury's mission to the Anglo-Saxons. However, a combination of Celtic Christianity's reconciliation with Rome and the English conquest of Wales meant that from the Middle Ages, the Welsh dioceses became part of the Province of Canterbury. They were all Catholic until the Reformation broke with Rome and created the Church of England under the control of King Henry VIII. The Established Church in Wales was the Church of England until it was disestablished in Wales in 1920. The old Welsh dioceses became the new Church in Wales. It created two new dioceses: the Diocese of Monmouth in 1921, and the Diocese of Swansea and Brecon in 1923.[citation needed]

Reformation

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Bishop Richard Davies and dissident Protestant cleric John Penry introduced Calvinist theology to Wales. They used the model of the Synod of Dort of 1618–1619. Calvinism developed through the Puritan period, following the restoration of the monarchy under Charles II, and within Wales' Methodist movement. However, few copies of Calvin's writings were available in Welsh before the mid-19th century.[7]

Welsh as liturgical language

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Some books of the Bible and the Apocrypha had been translated in the Middle Ages, but the Acts of Union (1536–43) passed under King Henry VIII effectively banned the Welsh language from official use. However, under Queen Elizabeth I, the English Parliament passed the An Act for the Translating of the Bible and the Divine Service into the Welsh Tongue 1563. In 1567 William Salesbury, Richard Davies and Thomas Huet completed the first modern translation of the New Testament into Welsh and the first translation of the Book of Common Prayer (Welsh: Y Llyfr Gweddi Gyffredin). Then, in 1588, William Morgan completed a translation of the whole Bible. These translations were essential to the survival of the Welsh language and had the effect of conferring status on Welsh as a liturgical language and vehicle for worship. This had a significant role in its continued use as a means of everyday communication and as a literary language down to the present day despite the pressure of English.[citation needed]

Abuses did occur, and in the 18th century some bishops granted benefices in Welsh-speaking areas to English clergy who did not speak Welsh.[8] This contravened Article XXIV of the Articles of Religion of the Church of England: It is a thing plainly repugnant to the Word of God, and the custom of the Primitive Church, to have publick Prayer in the Church, or to minister the Sacraments in a tongue not understanded of the people.[9] In 1766 the churchwardens of the parish of St Beuno, Trefdraeth on Anglesey, supported by the Cymmrodorion, began a test case against an English clergyman, Dr Thomas Bowles, who could not conduct services in Welsh and whose attempt to do so had ended in ridicule.[8] In its verdict in 1773 the Court of Arches refused to deprive Dr Bowles of his living, but did lay down the principle that clergy should be examined and found proficient in Welsh in order to be considered for Welsh-speaking parishes.[8]

18th century conditions

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The condition of religion in Wales was bleak from the mid-17th century to the mid-18th century. The established Church of England recovered slowly from the widespread damage brought about by the English Civil War, and the Puritan Commonwealth of Cromwell, in the mid-17th century. Poverty was widespread in the overwhelmingly rural country. The clergy were impoverished and subsisted on their own farm work on their glebes. Facilities from personages to graveyards to churches to cathedrals were commonly in physical disrepair. Membership and participation was falling.[10]

Nonconformity, membership and revivals

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Nonconformity grew rapidly and came to dominate the religious life of Wales from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries. The Welsh Methodist revival of the 18th century was one of the most significant religious and social movements in the history of Wales. The revival began within the Church of England in Wales and at the beginning remained as a group within it, but the Welsh revival differed from the Methodist revival in England in that its theology was Calvinist rather than Arminian. Welsh Methodists gradually built up their own networks, structures, and even meeting houses (or chapels), which led eventually to the secession of 1811 and the formal establishment of the Calvinistic Methodist denomination in 1823 (which assumed as its alternative name the Presbyterian Church of Wales in 1928). Emotionalism had free rein; in contrast to Scotland with its four universities, good schools, and a strong theological tradition, Wales had no universities and widespread illiteracy.[citation needed]

The Welsh Methodist revival also had an influence on the older nonconformist churches, or dissenters – the Baptists and the Congregationalists – who in turn also experienced growth and renewal. As a result, by the middle of the nineteenth century, Wales was predominantly a nonconformist country.[citation needed]

Statistics of membership between 1680 and 1840 demonstrate that the established Church of England lost one-fifth of its membership. In addition, an ever-increasing number of nominal Anglicans also ceasing to practise. Nonconformity more than quadrupled, mainly from 1760 and especially after 1800. In 1800 there were twice as many Anglican churches as Nonconformist chapels; in 1850, chapels outnumbered churches by a ratio of 5 to 2. Roman Catholicism kept pace with demographic growth, but, even reinforced by Irish immigration, remained a limited force in 1840. Judaism and overt irreligion were both rare.[11]

In 1910, the nonconformist bodies numbered 550,000 members, as against 193,000 in the established Church of England. Nonconformists, led by Liberal David Lloyd George, increasingly controlled the politics of Wales, although the elite sectors were still dominated by the Anglicans.[12]

The 1904–1905 Welsh Revival was the largest full scale Christian Revival of Wales of the 20th century. At least 100,000 people became Christians during the 1904–1905 revival.[13] Even so, it did not put a stop to the gradual decline of Christianity in Wales, only holding it back slightly.[14] Despite this, by 2011 South Wales (and especially settlements in the former coalfield area) showed the highest proportions of no religion anywhere in the country, rising in places to over 50%.[15] The reasons for this are unclear.[citation needed]

Disestablishment – creation of the Church in Wales

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In reaction to the rise of nonconformity, some Anglicans came to recognise the weaknesses of the established church and its failure to counteract the popular aspects of nonconformity. The rigidity of the parish system and the distance between churches were quoted as examples of the failure of the church to adapt.[16]

The Welsh Church Act 1914 provided for the separation of the four dioceses of the Church of England located in Wales (known collectively as the Church in Wales) from the rest of the Church, and for the simultaneous disestablishment of the Church. The Act came into operation in 1920. Since then there has been no established church in Wales. Between 1996 and 2016, the number of signed-up Church in Wales members dropped from 91,247 to 45,759,[17] or 1.5% out of a total population of 3,113,150.[18] The number of signed-up Church in Wales members dropped further to 42,441 in 2018,[19] or 1.4% out of the total Welsh population of 3,187,203.[20]

Present-day Catholic Christianity

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Catholics are served by the Ecclesiastical Province of Cardiff, which comprises the Archdiocese of Cardiff-Menevia and the Diocese of Wrexham. The bishops of these dioceses are part of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales. In total, the two dioceses counted 209,451 Catholics out of a population of 3,112,451 inhabitants, equalling to a percentage of 6.7% Catholics. The two dioceses have 172 priests and 34 permanent deacons, 75 male religious and 267 female religious, and a total of 154 parishes as of 2016 (2017 for the diocese of Wrexham).[21] However, the province does not entirely coincide with Wales, as the Archdiocese of Cardiff also covers Herefordshire, in England.[citation needed]

Sabbatarianism

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The Sabbatarian temperance movement was strong among the Welsh in the Victorian period and the early twentieth century, the sale of alcohol being prohibited on Sundays in Wales by the Sunday Closing Act of 1881 – the first legislation specifically issued for Wales since the Middle Ages. From the early 1960s, local council areas were permitted to hold referendums every seven years to determine whether they should be wet or dry on Sundays: most of the industrialised areas in the east and south went wet immediately, and by the 1980s, Dwyfor in the northwest as the last of the dry regions went wet after a local referendum in 1982; however, in the next referendum it returned to a dry region on Sundays from 1989 to 1996. In early 1996 the reorganisation of local government in Wales resulted in Dwyfor district being abolished. The Dwyfor area is now covered by an area committee of the Gwynedd Council and there have been no further "Wet - Dry" referendums.[citation needed]

Saints

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A monastic community was founded by Saint David at what is now St David's. The present building of St David's Cathedral was started in 1181.

Saint David is the patron saint of Wales.[22]

Wales is particularly noted for naming places after either local or well-known saints – many or perhaps most places beginning in Llan e.g. Llanbedr – St Peter (Pedr); Llanfair – St Mary (Mair); Llanfihangel – St Michael (Mihangel); Llandecwyn – Saint Tecwyn. Because of the relatively small number of saints' names used, places names are often suffixed by their locality e.g. Llanfihangel Glyn Myfyr, Llanfihangel y Creuddyn, Llanfihangel-y-Pennant.[citation needed]

Islam

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The largest non-Christian faith in Wales is Islam, with about 46,000 adherents in 2011. Most Muslims live in Cardiff (23,656 in 2011, 6.8% of the population), but there are also significant numbers in Newport (6,859 in 2011) and Swansea (5,415 in 2011).[4]

There has been a Somali and Yemeni Islamic community in Cardiff since the mid-1800s, founded by seafarers to Cardiff Docks.[23][24]

Judaism

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Old building of the Cardiff United Synagogue.

Judaism has quite a long history in Wales, with a Jewish community recorded in Swansea from about 1730. In August 1911, in a period of public disorder and industrial disputes, Jewish shops across the South Wales coalfield were damaged by mobs. Since that time the Jewish population of that area, which reached a peak of 4,000–5,000 in 1913, has declined. In 2011 there were a total of 2,064 Jewish adherents in Wales, including 802 in Cardiff.[4]

Other faiths

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Buddhism, Hinduism and Sikhism

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Hinduism and Buddhism each have about 10,000 adherents in Wales, with the rural county of Ceredigion being the centre of Welsh Buddhism. Govinda's temple & restaurant, run by the Hare Krishnas in Swansea, is a focal point for many Welsh Hindus. There are about 3,000 Sikhs in Wales, with the first purpose-built gurdwara opened in the Riverside area of Cardiff in 1989.

Other religions

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In 2021 around 15,926 identified themselves being part from another religion including a reconstructed form of Druidry (modern), which was the pre-Abrahamic religion of Wales (not to be confused with the Druids of the Gorsedd at the National Eisteddfod of Wales).[25]


Other religions 2011[26] 2021[27]
Pagan Religions 4,550 6,481
Pagan 3,448 5,104
Wicca 740 867
Heathen 91 243
Druidism 243 222
Reconstructionist 28 45
Spiritualism and new religious movements 4,424 5,014
Spiritualist1 3,532 3,833
Satanism 93 303
Shamanism 38 265
Pantheism 111 146
Rastafari 249 145
Witchcraft 83 77
Animism 54 69
Universalist 61 42
Occult 28 33
Scientology 57 26
New Age 33 23
Thelemite 8 18
Eckankar 12 10
Mysticism 12 9
Unification Church 17 7
Brahma Kumari 8 6
– Church of all Religions 28 2
Indian Religions 108 111
Jainism 95 102
Ravidassia 13 9
Alevism 212
Mixed Religion(s) 1,659 420
Iranian Religions 325 312
Baha'í 275 227
Zoroastrian 50 64
Yazidi 21
East Asian Religions 278 245
Taoism 228 199
Shintoism 34 38
– Chinese Religions3 16 3
Other Religions 1,361 3,143
Theism2 181 131
– Own Belief System 107 130
Deism 57 57
Traditional African Religion 4 10
Druze 11 7
Vudun 10 11
Native American Church 8 8
– Other Religions 983 2,789
Total population 12,705 15,926
1 includes people who reported "spiritual"
2 includes people who reported "Believe in God"
3 includes people who reported "Confucianism"

Irreligion

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In the United Kingdom census, which asks the leading question, "What is your religion?", 46.5 per cent of Welsh people declared “No religion” in the 2021 census,[28] up from 32.1% in 2011; and over twice the 18.5% in 2001.[2] This included 66% of those aged 27.[29]

Commenting on the figures, Humanists UK said: "[T]he results show that Wales faces a non-religious future, and that public bodies need to keep up with today’s demographics."[30]

Notable places of worship

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The Norwegian Church, Cardiff, was established by the Church of Norway in 1868 to serve the religious needs of Norwegian sailors and expatriates.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Religion, England and Wales - Office for National Statistics". www.ons.gov.uk. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  2. ^ a b c "2011 Census: Key Statistics for Wales, March 2011". Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 15 December 2012.
  3. ^ "Religion (2001 Census)". data.gov.uk. 9 February 2010. Retrieved 17 December 2012.
  4. ^ a b c "2011 Census: KS209EW Religion, local authorities in England and Wales". Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 15 December 2012.
  5. ^ a b "The Age of the Saints". BBC Wales.
  6. ^ Lloyd, J.E. (1911). A History of Wales from the Earliest Times to the Edwardian Conquest. Vol. 1. London: Longman, Green, & Co. pp. 143–159.
  7. ^ D. Densil Morgan, "Calvinism in Wales: c.1590-1909," Welsh Journal of Religious History (2009), Vol. 4, p22-36
  8. ^ a b c The Cymmrodorion (1773). The Depositions, Arguments and Judgement in the Cause of the Church-Wardens of Trefdraeth, In the County of Anglesea, against Dr. Bowles; adjudged by the Worshipful G. Hay, L.L.D. Dean of the Arches: Instituted To Remedy the Grievance of preferring Persons Unacquainted with the British Language, to Livings in Wales. London: William Harris. Retrieved 19 June 2013.
  9. ^ Church of England; William Vickers, ed. (1785). The Book of Common Prayer, and Administration of the Sacraments. {{cite book}}: |author2= has generic name (help)
  10. ^ Alfred George Edwards, Landmarks in the History of the Welsh Church (1912) pp. 161ff
  11. ^ Clive D. Field, "Counting Religion in England and Wales: The Long Eighteenth Century, c. 1680–c. 1840." Journal of Ecclesiastical History 63#4 (2012): 693-720.
  12. ^ A. N. Wilson (2006). After the Victorians: The Decline of Britain in the World. St Martins Press. p. 97. ISBN 9780312425159.
  13. ^ E. Cynolwyn Pugh, "The Welsh Revival of 1904–1905." Theology Today 12.2 (1955): 226-235.
  14. ^ Clive D. Field, "'The Faith Society'? Quantifying Religious Belonging in Edwardian Britain, 1901–1914." Journal of Religious History 37.1 (2013): 39-63.
  15. ^ 2011 Census Religion tables for Urban Areas.
  16. ^ "Welsh Church Improvement". Welshman. 3 March 1865. p. 6. Retrieved 15 December 2018.
  17. ^ Wightwick, Abbie (20 May 2018). "Church in Wales to spend £10m to 'breathe new life' into its churches". WalesOnline. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  18. ^ "National level population estimates by year, age and UK country". statswales.gov.wales.
  19. ^ "Church in Wales Membership & Finance 2018" (PDF).
  20. ^ "Wales Population 2023 | Population UK".
  21. ^ "Cardiff (Archdiocese) [Catholic-Hierarchy]". www.catholic-hierarchy.org.
  22. ^ "St David: The greatest figure in the Welsh Age of Saints". VisitWales.
  23. ^ "Somali Seafarers in Wales". The Black Presence in Britain – Black British History Website. 9 October 2012. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  24. ^ "Immigration and Emigration, South East Wales, Somali Community". BBC. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  25. ^ "Religion (Detailed) - Office for National Statistics".
  26. ^ "QS210EW (Religion (detailed)) - Nomis - Official Census and Labour Market Statistics". www.nomisweb.co.uk. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
  27. ^ "Religion (detailed) - Office for National Statistics". www.ons.gov.uk. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
  28. ^ "Ethnic group, national identity, language and religion in Wales (Census 2021)". GOV.WALES. 29 November 2022. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  29. ^ "Oh God! Is religion dying in the UK?". Firstpost. 31 January 2023.
  30. ^ "2021 Census: Most people in Wales under 74 tick 'No religion'". Humanists UK. 30 January 2023.

Further reading

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  • Cragoe, Matthew. "George Osborne Morgan, Henry Richard, and the Politics of Religion in Wales, 1868–74." Parliamentary History 19.1 (2000): 118–130.
  • Davies, Ebnezer Thomas. Religion in the Industrial Revolution of South Wales (U. of Wales Press, 1965).
  • Field, Clive D. "Counting Religion in England and Wales: The Long Eighteenth Century, c. 1680–c. 1840." Journal of Ecclesiastical History 63.04 (2012): 693–720. New estimates of the religious composition of the population in 1680, 1720, 1760, 1800 and 1840.
  • Harris, Chris, and Richard Startup, eds. The Church in Wales: The Sociology of a Traditional Institution (U of Wales Press, 1999), the Church of England.
  • Jenkins, Geraint H. Literature, religion and society in Wales, 1660-1730 (University of Wales Press, 1978)
  • Jones, Anthony. Welsh chapels (National Museum Wales, 1996).
  • Jones, David Ceri, and Eryn Mant White. The Elect Methodists: Calvinistic Methodism in England and Wales, 1735-1811 (U of Wales Press, 2012).
  • Jones, J. Gwynfor. "Reflections on the religious revival in Wales 1904-05." Journal of the United Reformed Church History Society 7.7 (2005): 427–445.
  • Morgan, Barry. "The Church in Wales." in Ian S. Markham and J. Barney Hawkins IV, eds., The Wiley-Blackwell Companion to the Anglican Communion (2013): 452–463.
  • Morgan, D. Densil. The Span of the Cross: Christian Religion and Society in Wales, 1914-2000 (U of Wales Press, 1999) online
  • Morgan, D. Densil. Wales and the Word: Historical Perspectives on Religion and Welsh Identity (2008)
  • Morgan-Guy, John. Religion and Society in the Diocese of St Davids 1485–2011 (Routledge, 2016).
  • Pope, Robert, ed. Religion and National Identity: Wales and Scotland c. 1700-2000 (2001). online
  • Randall, Ian. "Martyn Lloyd-Jones and Methodist Spirituality." Wesley and Methodist Studies 5 (2013): 97–122. (1899-1981)
  • Thomas, James Edward. Social Disorder in Britain 1750-1850: The Power of the Gentry, Radicalism and Religion in Wales (IB Tauris, 2011).
  • Walker, David, ed. A History of the Church in Wales (Church in Wales Publications for the Historical Society of the Church in Wales, 1976).
  • Williams, Glanmor, ed. Welsh reformation essays (University of Wales Press, 1967)
  • Williams, Glanmor. Renewal and Reformation: Wales C. 1415-1642 (Oxford University, 1993) online.
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