Museums play an important role not only shaping a society's view of its past, but also its understanding of national identity in the present moment. This fascinating volume explores the varying ways in which Wales and Welsh identity have been represented in the nation's museums over the years. Beginning with a proposal for the creation of a National Museum in the 1880s and ending with devolution, "Museums, Nations, Identities" examines how Wales's museums are continually enlisted to narrate certain national stories as opposed to others--and what this indicates about the changing perceptions of Welsh identity in the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first centuries.