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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Bardsey Island, the legendary "Island of 20,000 saints", lies 1.9 miles off the Ll n Peninsula in the Welsh county of Gwynedd. The Welsh name means The Island in the Currents; although its English name refers to the Island of the Bards. It is 0.6 miles wide and 1.0 mile long. The north east rises steeply from the sea to a height of 548 feet at Mynydd Enlli, while the western plain is low and relatively flat cultivated farmland; to the south the island narrows to an isthmus, connecting to a peninsula. Since…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Bardsey Island, the legendary "Island of 20,000 saints", lies 1.9 miles off the Ll n Peninsula in the Welsh county of Gwynedd. The Welsh name means The Island in the Currents; although its English name refers to the Island of the Bards. It is 0.6 miles wide and 1.0 mile long. The north east rises steeply from the sea to a height of 548 feet at Mynydd Enlli, while the western plain is low and relatively flat cultivated farmland; to the south the island narrows to an isthmus, connecting to a peninsula. Since 1974 it has been included in the community of Aberdaron. The island has been an important religious site since Saint Cadfan built a monastery in 516. In medieval times it was a major centre of pilgrimage and, by 1212, belonged to the Augustinian Canons Regular. The monastery was destroyed by Henry VIII in 1537, but the island remains an attraction for pilgrims to this day.