Roath's main shopping streets are Albany Road, City Road, and Wellfield Road. The area is characterised by its several tree-lined avenues and Victorian era terraced streets. Roath houses a very diverse population including a large number of students, being very close to the main university campuses, a large ethnic minority population and many young professionals. Subdivision of the large Victorian properties is starting to occur in the areas at the south end of the district.[citation needed]
Its close proximity to the city centre, its number of local amenities, churches, shops and restaurants and public houses and Roath Park make it a popular area to live.[2]
The area has five primary schools, Albany Primary School,[3] Marlborough Primary School, Roath Park Primary School,[4] St Peter's R.C. Primary School and Stacey Primary School.[5] Community facilities include the YMCA Plas community centre[6] and the Mackintosh Sports Club.[7]
Etymology
Samuel Lewis stated that the original name was Rhâth, adding that this was a common element in Welsh toponymy denoting ancient earthworks (cognate with rati, meaning a fortified enclosure in Gaulish and ráth, a ringfort in Old Irish).[8] Lewis further states that several of these earthworks were still visible in his time (likely referring to the earthworks and ditches which had surrounded the old manor house for centuries), suggesting that the area may have been home to an important fortified settlement of the Silures tribe.[9]
Roath has also been identified with Ratostabius, a disputed placename found in Ptolomey's Geographia. Both William Camden and Iolo Morganwg believed this place was in the vicinity of modern Cardiff, with Iolo suggesting that the Latin name was derived from "Rhath Taff".[10][11]
History
Roath Court is a nineteenth-century villa on the site of the medieval manor house of Roath.[12] Since 1952 it has been a funeral home.[13] Its Georgian portico, designed by Robert Adam in 1766 for Bowood House, Wiltshire, was moved there in 1956.[12]
Roath contains the Church of Saint Margaret of Antioch, built in 1870 in Gothic revival style on the site of an earlier Norman chapel. Designed by Llandaff architect John Prichard on a Greek Cross plan, it was financed by the third Marquess of Bute, in spite of his conversion to Catholicism in 1868. Inside is an opulent mausoleum housing tombs of nine members of the Bute family, including the first marquess and his two wives. The tower of St Margaret's was finally completed in 1926.
Roath once had a railway station on the South Wales Main Line, but this closed in 1917.[14][15]
Prior to the 2010s the community was known as Plasnewydd, though was renamed as Roath, being a name that was more widely recognised.[16]
Starting in 2009, the Made in Roath arts festival took place each October. The event showcased art, music, performance and literature in a variety of venues including peoples' homes.[19] The tenth festival took place in 2018.[20] Made in Roath now exists as a community arts organisation that arranges exhibitions and residencies.[21]
Between 2013 and 2016, local organisers Wayne Courtney and Nathan Wyburn hosted the 'Roath Bake Off'[22] festival in St Andrews United Reformed Church, Roath. In December 2018, they announced that the event would be revived for 2019[23] as part of the campaign to raise funds for the church it was held in.
Nathan Wyburn, artist and local events organiser alongside Wayne Courtney aka Wyburn & Wayne.
William Erbery (1604-1654), curate of St Woolos, Newport between 1630 and 1633 then Vicar of St Mary's Church in Cardiff before being forced to leave his post due to his Puritanism. He established the first nonconformist congregation in Cardiff
^Morganwg, Iolo (1848). The Iolo Manuscipts:A Selection of Ancient Welsh Manuscripts, in Prose and Verse, from the Collection Made by the Late Edward Williams, Iolo Morganwg, for the Purpose of Forming a Continuation of the Myfyrian Archaiology; and Subsequently Proposed as Materials for a New History of Wales. W. Rees; sold by Longman and Company, London. p. 375.
^Morganwg, Dafydd (1874). Hanes Morganwg (in Welsh). Jenkin Howell. p. 230.
^J. Childs. Roath, Splott and Adamsdown. The History Press 1995.
^Quick, M. E. (2002). Railway passenger stations in England, Scotland and Wales – a chronology. Richmond: Railway and Canal Historical Society. p. 364. OCLC931112387.