This article is about the particular significance of the decade 1710–1719 to Wales and its people.
1710
- John Wynne obtains permission from the bishop's court to change the name of Trelawnyd to "Newmarket".
- A committee of the House of Commons declares Sir Humphrey Mackworth guilty of "many notorious and scandalous frauds".
1711
1712
1713
- Sir Humphrey Mackworth forms the Company of Mineral Manufacturers.
- Edmund Meyrick dies, leaving a large bequest to Jesus College for scholarships for students from North Wales.
1714
- May 8 - Bishop Adam Ottley complains that Griffith Jones (Llanddowror) has been "going about preaching on week days in Churches, Churchyards, and sometimes on the mountains, to hundreds of auditors".
- September 27 - Prince George, son of King George I, is invested as Prince of Wales. His wife, Caroline, becomes Princess of Wales, the first to receive the title at the same time as her husband[1] and the first Princess of Wales for over two hundred years.
1715
1716
1717
1718
1719
New books
1711
- Jonathan Edwards - A Vindication of the Doctrine of Original Sin from the exceptions of Dr. Daniel Whitby
1714
1718
- Thomas Taylor - The Principality of Wales exactly described... (London), the first atlas of Wales[5]
1719
1710
1711
1713
1714
1716
1717
1719
1712
1713
1714
1715
1716
1717
1718
1719
The Welsh Academy Encyclopedia of Wales. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. 2008.