This article is about the particular significance of the year 1890 to Wales and its people.
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- 6 February - In a gas explosion at Llanerch Colliery, Pontypool, 176 miners are killed.[20]
- 10 March - In a gas explosion at Morfa Colliery, Port Talbot, 86 miners are killed.[21]
- 7 April - An Easter Monday conference at Llangefni leads to agreement with employers on a shorter working day for male agricultural labourers.
- 13 April - At a by-election in Caernarfon, David Lloyd George wins the seat for the Liberals from the Conservatives, defeating H. J. E. Nanney, the local squire; Lloyd George remains the constituency MP until his death in 1945.
- 22 May - Y Cymro is launched by Isaac Foulkes (Llyfrbryf) in Liverpool as a liberal weekly Welsh language "national newspaper for Welshmen at home and abroad"; it is published until 1909.
- Summer - Queen Elisabeth of Romania visits Llandudno, staying for five weeks and later remembering it as "a beautiful haven of peace"; the phrase is later translated into Welsh and used as the town's motto.
- 21 December - Beginning of a 3-week period of severe winter weather causing deaths and disruption to daily life in many parts of Wales.
- Opening of the Rock Mill watermill for woollen milling at Capel Dewi, Llandysul.
Music
Events
- The National Musical Association of Wales is formed, with Joseph Parry as a sponsor.[24]
Works
- John Thomas Rees - "Duw sydd noddfa"[25]
- 2 January - Madoline Thomas, actress (died 1989)
- 21 January - Jack Anthony, jockey (died 1954)
- 14 February - Nina Hamnett, artist and Bohemian (died 1956)[26]
- 1 March - Jack Beames, rugby player (died 1970)
- 16 February - Thomas Ifor Rees, diplomat (died 1977)[27]
- 20 April - Ernest Roberts, politician (died 1969)[28]
- 5 May - George Littlewood Hirst, Wales international rugby player (died 1967)
- 14 June - Dai Hiddlestone, Wales international rugby player (died 1973)
- 21 June - W. J. A. Davies, rugby player (died 1967)
- 28 July - Horace Thomas, Wales international rugby player (died 1916)
- 30 August - Llewelyn Wyn Griffith, novelist (died 1977)[29]
- 13 September - Johnny Basham, boxer (died 1947)
- 19 September - Jim Griffiths, politician, first Secretary of State for Wales (died 1975)[30]
- 22 November (in Lancashire) - Harry Pollitt, Communist trade union leader and parliamentary candidate for Rhondda East (died 1960)[31]
- 6 December - Dion Fortune, born Violet Firth, English occultist and novelist (died 1946)
- 16 December - P. J. Grigg, politician (died 1964)
- 17 January - Christopher Rice Mansel Talbot, landowner, industrialist and politician, 86[9]
- 20 January - Guillermo Rawson, Argentinian politician and patron of Patagonian Welsh colony, 68[32]
- 4 March - Henry Davies, journalist, publisher and librarian, 86[33]
- 19 March - Edmund Swetenham, MP for Caernarfon, 67[34]
- 8 April - William Jones, Army officer, 81/2
- 21 March - Benjamin Thomas Williams, politician, 57[35]
- 29 June - Henry Herbert, 4th Earl of Carnarvon, 59[36]
- 12 July - David Pugh, politician, 84[37]
- 20 July - David Davies "Llandinam", industrialist, 71[38]
- 6 August - Thomas Babington Jones, cricketer, 39
- 10 October - Charles Herbert James, politician, 73[39]
- 27 October - Enoch Salisbury, barrister, politician and bibliophile, 70[40]
- unknown date - John Cambrian Rowland, painter, 70
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.
The county families of the United Kingdom; or, Royal manual of the titled and untitled aristocracy of England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland. Dalcassian Publishing Company. 1860. p. 443.
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
Francis, Hywel (1998). The Fed : a history of the South Wales miners in the twentieth century. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. p. 80. ISBN 9780708314227.
Kõiva, Mare (1995). Folk belief today. Tartu: Estonian Academy of Sciences, Institute of the Estonian Language & Estonian Museum of Literature. p. 112. ISBN 9789985851111.
"History". Welsh Music Guild. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
Morgan, Kevin (1993). Harry Pollitt. Manchester New York New York: Manchester University Press Distributed exclusively in the USA and Canada by St. Martin's Press. p. 1. ISBN 9780719032479.
Cheltenham Looker-In, March 1890
James Louis Garvin; Franklin Henry Hooper; Warren E. Cox (1929). The Encyclopedia Britannica. The Encyclopedia Britannica Company. p. 891.