This article is about the particular significance of the year 1886 to Wales and its people.
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- William Owen "of Prysgol" – Y Perl Cerddorol yn cynnwys tonau ac anthemau, cysegredig a moesol (sol-fa edition)[19]
- 3 March – Jack Jones, Wales international rugby player (died 1951)
- 4 March – Rowland Griffiths, Wales international rugby player (died 1914)
- 5 March
- 14 March – David Watts, Wales international rugby union player (died 1916)
- 16 March – James Llewellyn Davies, VC winner (died 1917)
- 28 March – John Osborn Williams, entrepreneur (died 1963)
- 3 May – Morgan Jones, politician (died 1939)
- 4 May – Olive Wheeler, educationalist (died 1963)
- 6 June – John Morgan, Archbishop of Wales (died 1957)
- 17 June – David Brunt, meteorologist (died 1965)
- 11 July – Ernest Willows, aviation pioneer (died 1926)
- 13 July – Huw Menai (Huw Owen Williams), poet (died 1961)
- 22 September – Bil Perry, Welsh international rugby player (died 1970)
- 29 September – Jack Williams, VC recipient (died 1953)
- 9 November (probably) – S. O. Davies, politician (died 1972)
- 10 November – Fred Birt, Wales international rugby union player (died 1956)
- 22 December – David James Jones, philosopher and academic (died 1947)
- 28 February – John Jones, politician, 73[20]
- 12 March – Edward Arthur Somerset, politician, 69[21]
- 31 March – Edward Douglas-Pennant, 1st Baron Penrhyn, 85[22]
- 7 May – Timothy Richards Lewis, surgeon and pathologist, 44[23]
- 9 June – Edward Williams, iron-master, 60)[24]
- 9 July – Roger Edwards, minister and writer, 75[25]
- 13 October – John Prichard, architect, 69[26]
- 29 October – Evan Evans, ("Evans Bach Nantyglo"), minister, 82[27]
Dod's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage of Great Britain and Ireland, Including All the Titled Classes. Dod. 1921. p. 356.
National Museum of Wales (1935). Adroddiad Blynyddol. The Museum. p. 3.
Edward Arthur Copleston (1878). Where's where? Pt. 1. A concise gazetteer of Somerset. Pt. 2. Statistical, educational, parliamentary and practical information. p. 80.
Potter, Matthew (2016). The concept of the 'master' in art education in Britain and Ireland, 1770 to the present. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. p. 149. ISBN 9781351545471.
Henry Taylor (1895). "Popish recusants in Flintshire in 1625". Journal of the Architectural, Archaeological, and Historic Society for the County and the City of Chester and North Wales. Architectural, Archaeological, and Historic Society for the County and the City of Chester and North Wales: 304.
The Annual Register. Rivingtons. 1892. p. 179.
Reese, M. M. (1976). The royal office of Master of the Horse. London: Threshold Books Ltd. p. 348. ISBN 9780901366900.
Weyman, Henry T. (1929). "Shropshire M.P.s - Memoirs". T.S.A.S., Series 4, Volume XII. p. 28.
Lodge, Edmund (2020). Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire... Salzwasser-Verlag GMBH. p. 318. ISBN 9783752502664.
Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage. Burke's Peerage Limited. 1885. p. 1027.
Death Of The Bishop Of Llandaff, The Times, 25 January 1905; page 4; Issue 37613; col A
William Retlaw Williams (1895). The Parliamentary History of the Principality of Wales, from the Earliesr Times to the Present Day. E. Davis and Bell for the author. p. 132.