Dr Williams chatting after being made a university fellow
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The Archbishop of Canterbury has been made a fellow of the University of Wales, Aberystwyth.
Dr Rowan Williams described it as a "privilege", and said the university had a special place in Welsh history.
He received his award along with 207 students collecting their degrees on Thursday.
During the award ceremony, Dr Williams led a two-minute silence in remembrance of the victims of the London bombings.
Speaking about being made a fellow after the ceremony at the university's Great Hall, the Archbishop said: "I feel like it's a huge privilege.
"I am very conscious Aberystwyth is not only the mother college of the universities, but its history is bound up with aspirations about education.
"It has a particularly special place in the history of Wales and my own history."
Dr Williams getting his graduation ceremony robe on Thursday morning
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Of his links with Aberystwyth, he added: "I used to come here quite regularly when working in Wales.
"I preached here for the millennium in one of the chapels here. I'm no stranger and my first lecture I ever gave in Welsh, I gave in Aberystwyth and a very frightening experience it was."
Dr Williams also answered questions about the London bombings.
He said: "I feel we might have seen it coming and in a way we did at some time, but it was impossible to predict.
"The anxiety, of course, is the knowledge that it seems that it is British-born people who are responsible and it's just a reminder that terrorism does not know any boundaries."