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Kingdom of Gwynedd

The Kingdom of Gwynedd (Medieval Latin: Venedotia / Norwallia; Middle Welsh: Guynet)[1][13] was a Welsh kingdom and a Roman Empire successor state that emerged in sub-Roman Britain in the 5th century during the Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain.[14]

Kingdom of Gwynedd
Teyrnas Gwynedd (Welsh)
401–1216
Cadwaladr circa 7th century, flag of Gwynedd and Wales
Llywelyn banner of the House of Aberffraw
Anthem: Unbennaeth Prydain
"The Monarchy of Britain"[1][2][3]
Medieval kingdoms of Wales.
CapitalChester (?)
Deganwy (6th century)[4]
Llanfaes (9th century)[5]
Aberffraw(9–13th century)[6][7]
Rhuddlan (11th century)[8]
Abergwyngregyn (12–13th century)[9]
Common languagesWelsh, Latin[10][a][b]
Religion
Celtic Christianity[11]
GovernmentMonarchy[12]
• 401–440
Cunedda
• 520–547
Maelgwn Gwynedd
• 625–634
Cadwallon ap Cadfan
• 1081–1137
Gruffudd ap Cynan
• 1137–1170
Owain Gwynedd
• 1195–1240
Llywelyn the Great
• 1253–1282
Llywelyn ap Gruffudd
• 1282–1283
Dafydd ap Gruffydd
Historical eraMiddle Ages
• Established
401
• Declaration of the Principality of Wales
1216
Currencyceiniog cyfreith
ceiniog cwta[1][failed verification]
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part of

United Kingdom

^ In Latin, Gwynedd was often referred to in official medieval charters and acts of the 13th century as Principatus Norwallia (Principality of North Wales).

Based in northwest Wales, the rulers of Gwynedd repeatedly rose to dominance and were acclaimed as "King of the Britons" before losing their power in civil wars or invasions.[15] The kingdom of Gruffydd ap Llywelyn—the King of Wales from 1055 to 1063—was shattered by a Saxon invasion in 1063 just prior to the Norman invasion of Wales, but the House of Aberffraw restored by Gruffudd ap Cynan slowly recovered and Llywelyn the Great of Gwynedd was able to proclaim the Principality of Wales at the Aberdyfi gathering of Welsh princes in 1216.[16][17][18] In 1277, the Treaty of Aberconwy between Edward I of England and Llewelyn's grandson Llywelyn ap Gruffudd granted peace between the two but would also guarantee that Welsh self-rule would end upon Llewelyn's death, and so it represented the completion of the first stage of the conquest of Wales by Edward I.[19][c]

Welsh tradition credited the founding of Gwynedd to the Brittonic polity of Gododdin (Old Welsh Guotodin, earlier Brittonic form Votadini) from Lothian invading the lands of the Brittonic polities of the Deceangli, Ordovices, and Gangani in the 5th century.[20] The sons of their leader, Cunedda, were said to have possessed the land between the rivers Dee and Teifi.[21] The true borders of the realm varied over time, but Gwynedd proper was generally thought to comprise the cantrefs of Aberffraw, Cemais, and Cantref Rhosyr on Anglesey and Arllechwedd, Arfon, Dunoding, Dyffryn Clwyd, Llŷn, Rhos, Rhufoniog, and Tegeingl at the mountainous mainland region of Snowdonia opposite.[22]

Etymology

The name Gwynedd is believed to be a borrowing from early Irish (reflective of Irish settlement in the area in antiquity), either cognate with the Old Irish ethnic name Féni, "Irish People", from Primitive Irish *weidh-n- "Forest People"/"Wild People" (from Proto-Indo-European *weydh- "wood, wilderness"), or (alternatively) Old Irish fían "war band", from Proto-Irish *wēnā (from Proto-Indo-European *weyH1- "chase, pursue, suppress").[23][24][25][26]

Ptolemy in the 1st century marks the Llŷn Peninsula as the "Promontory of the Gangani",[27] which is also a name he recorded in Ireland, it's theorised in the 1st century BC some of the Gangani tribe may have landed in what is now the Llŷn Peninsula and drove out the Deceangli or the Ordovices tribe from that area either peacefully or by force. The late and post-Roman eras, Irish from Leinster[20] may have arrived in Anglesey and elsewhere in northwest Wales with the name Llŷn derived from Laigin, an Old Irish form that means "Leinstermen, or simply Leinster."[28]

The 5th-century Cantiorix Inscription now in Penmachno church seems to be the earliest record of the name.[20] It is in memory of a man named Cantiorix, and the Latin inscription is Cantiorix hic iacit/Venedotis cives fuit/consobrinos Magli magistrati: "Cantiorix lies here. He was a citizen of Gwynedd and a cousin of Maglos the magistrate".[20] The use of terms such as "citizen" and "magistrate" may be cited as evidence that Romano-British culture and institutions continued in Gwynedd long after the legions had withdrawn.[20]

History, background and familial descent

The background involving the Kingdom of Gwynedd starts with the history of Wales. After the last ice age, Wales was settled during the prehistoric times.[29] Stone Age sites have been discovered with tools made from flint, such as near Llanfaethlu, a site was rediscovered from 6000 years ago which was originally used for cooking.[30] Further examples of human activity in Gwynedd and Anglesey are involved in places such as Bryn Celli Ddu on Anglesey,[31] which was built in phases starting 5000 years ago.[32] Archeological findings from the Bronze Age, millenniums ago include findings such as the Arthog cauldron, a bronze cauldron from 1100 BC found near the Merioneth border, also named 'The Nannau Bucket' (similar to the Dowris bucket). And the Moel Hebog shield which is also 3,000 years old (similar to the Rhyd-y-gors example), and more recently the Trawsfynydd tankard, which was used to drink mead and beer between 100 BC and 75 AD.[33][34]

 
Bryn Eryr, recreation of pre Roman roundhouse, it's a 2,000-year-old Celtic Iron Age home.[35]

Examples of early settlement in Gwynedd are Bryn Eryr near Llansadwrn, Anglesey, now found at the St Fagans National Museum of History, and Garn Boduan, a Celtic hillfort on the Llŷn Peninsula.[36] Iron Age forts were being adapted until after the Roman conquest of Britain, 'Castle of Buan' (Garn Boduan) in Llŷn was recorded as being fortified until the 7th century.[37][38] During the Roman period, new roads and forts were constructed throughout the Roman empire and for centuries in Wales and England, Welsh examples include Caer Gybi (fort) on Anglesey, and Segontium in Caernarfon, Gwynedd.[32][39] The establishment of Christianity in Wales also gave rise to a new era; the Romans founded towns with churches and installed governors. During the centuries of sub-Roman Britain, new political structures were established.[40] The Brythonic Kingdom of Gwynedd was established in the 5th century, and it proved to be the most durable of these Brythonic states, surviving until the late 13th century.[14]

Boundaries and names emerging from the 1st millennium AD onwards are still being used today to define towns and counties of the region.[41] Noteworthy descendants from the Kingdom of Gwynedd include royalty such as Owain Glyndŵr,[42][43] and the titular Prince of Wales,[44][45] also the Salusbury family via Katheryn of Berain.[46] The people mentioned can be associated with the Anglesey based Tudors of Penmynydd family. The Tudors were ancestors and namesake to the former English Royal House of Tudor, they were descended from the Welshman Maredudd ap Tudur,[45] Ednyfed Fychan being his famous ancestor, his family were seneschals to the Kings of Gwynedd.[47] The Tudor dynasty became ancestors to the House of Stuart, and the Stuarts formed the European Jacobite family, they include direct descendants in United Kingdom, Ireland, France, Germany, Italy and other countries on the continent of Europe, and all around the world.[48][49]

Gwynedd in the Early Middle Ages

Cunedda and his sons

The region became known as Venedotia in Latin. The name was initially attributed to a specific Irish colony on Anglesey but broadened to refer to Irish settlers as a whole in North Wales by the 5th century.[50][51] According to 9th-century monk and chronicler Nennius, North Wales was left defenseless by the Roman withdrawal and subject to increasing raids by marauders from the Isle of Man and Ireland, a situation which led Cunedda,[52] his sons and their entourage, to migrate in the mid-5th century from Manaw Gododdin (now Clackmannanshire) to settle and defend North Wales against the raiders and bring the region within Romano-British control. Whether they were invited to keep out the invaders or were raiders themselves however is unknown.[20][53] According to traditional pedigrees, Cunedda's grandfather was Padarn Beisrudd, Paternus of the red cloak, "an epithet which suggests that he wore the cloak of a Roman officer",[20] and perhaps it was evidence of a high-ranking officer.[53] Nennius (translated by John Allen Giles who wrote that Cunedda arrived in Gwynedd 146 years before the reign of his great-grandson Maelgwn backdated in the usual Welsh Calendrical calculations from his death date in 547, which makes 401 the year of his arrival [54]) recounts how Cunedda (flourished in the 5th century) brought order to North Wales and after his death Gwynedd was divided among his sons: Dynod was awarded Dunoding, another son Ceredig received Ceredigion," Afloeg by Aflogion in Lleyn, Dogfael by Dogfeiling in Dyffryn Clwyd, and Edern by Edeirnion ... Osfeilion of Osfael has not yet been located; Tybion, the eldest son, is said to have died in Manaw Gododdin, but his son Meirion (Marianus) comes into the picture as lord of Meirionydd. Einion Yrth completes the number". Cadwallon Lawhir ap Einion one of his grandsons, was the final leader to defeat of the Irish on Anglesey.[53] However, this overly neat origin myth has been met with scepticism,[d]

"Early Welsh literature contains a wealth of stories seeking to explain place-names, and doubtless the story is propaganda aimed at justifying the right of Cunedda and his descendants to territories beyond the borders of the original Kingdom of Gwynedd. That kingdom probably consisted of the two banks of the Menai Straits and the coast over towards the estuary of the River Conwy, the foundations upon which Cunedda's descendants created a more extensive realm."[20]

The inhabitants of Gwynedd remained conscious of their Romano-British heritage, and an affinity with Rome survived long after the Empire retreated from Britain, particularly with the use of Latin in writing and sustaining the Christian religion. The ruling classes continued to emphasise Roman ancestors within their pedigrees as a way to link their rule with the old imperial Roman order, suggesting stability and continuity with that old order.[20][55] According to Professor John Davies, "[T]here is a determinedly Brythonic, and indeed Roman, air to early Gwynedd."[20] So palpable was the Roman heritage felt that Professor Bryan Ward-Perkins of Trinity College, Oxford, wrote "It took until 1282, when Edward I conquered Gwynedd, for the last part of Roman Britain to fall [and] a strong case can be made for Gwynedd as the very last part of the entire Roman Empire, east and west, to fall to the barbarians."[55][e] Nevertheless, there was generally quick abandonment of Roman political, social, and ecclesiastical practices and institutions within Gwynedd and elsewhere in Wales. Roman knowledge was lost as the Romano-Britons shifted towards a streamlined militaristic near-tribal society that no longer included the use of coinage and other complex industries dependent on a money economy, architectural techniques using brick and mortar, and even more basic knowledge such as the use of the wheel in pottery production.[55] Ward-Perkins suggests the Welsh had to abandon those Roman ways that proved insufficient, or indeed superfluous, to meet the challenge of survival they faced: "Militarized tribal societies, despite their political fragmentation and internecine strife, seem to have offered better protection against Germanic invasion than exclusive dependence on a professional Roman army (that in the troubled years of the fifth century was all too prone to melt away or mutiny)."[55]

Reverting to a more militaristic tribal society allowed the Welsh of Gwynedd to concentrate on those martial skills necessary for their very survival, and the Romano-Britons of western Britain did offer stiffer and an ultimately successful resistance.[55] The region of Venedotia, however, had been under Roman military administration and included established Gaelic settlements, and the civilian element there was less extensive, perhaps facilitating technological loss.[citation needed]

 
Kingdom of Gwynedd c. 620

In the post-Roman period, the earliest rulers of Wales and Gwynedd may have exerted authority over regions no larger than the cantrefi (hundreds) described in Welsh law codified centuries later, with their size somewhat comparable in size to the Irish tuath. These early petty kings or princelings (Lloyd uses the term chieftain) adopted the title rhi in Welsh (akin to the Irish Gaelic ), later replaced by brenin, a title used to "denote a less archaic form of kingship," according to Professor John Davies. Genealogical lists compiled around 960 bear out that a number of these early rulers claimed degrees of association with the old Roman order, but do not appear in the official royal lineages. "It may be assumed that the stronger kings annexed the territories of their weaker neighbours and that the lineages of the victors are the only lineages to have survived," according to Davies. Smaller and weaker chieftains coalesced around more powerful princelings, sometimes through voluntary vassalage or inheritance, though at other times through conquest, and the lesser princelings coalesced around still greater princelings, until a regional prince could claim authority over the whole of north Wales from the River Dyfi in the south to the Dee in the east, and incorporating Anglesey.[20][page needed]

Other evidence supports Nennius's claim that a leader came to north Wales and brought the region a measure of stability [57] although an Irish Gaelic element remained until the mid-5th century. Cunedda's heir Einion Yrth ap Cunedda defeated the remaining Gaelic Irish on Anglesey by 470, while his son, Cadwallon Lawhir ap Einion, appears to have consolidated the realm during the time of relative peace following the Battle of Badon, where the Anglo-Saxons were defeated. During that peace he established a mighty kingdom. After Cadwallon, Gwynedd appears to have held a pre-eminent position among the petty Cambrian states in the post-Roman period.[citation needed] The great-grandson of Cunedda, Maelgwn Hir (Maelgwn the Tall),[53][58][59] was regarded as an able military leader, impetuous and generous.[60] There are several legends about his life concerning either his own trickery and craftiness[61] or, on the other hand, miracles performed against him by Christian saints.[62] He is attributed in some old stories as hosting the first Eisteddfod,[63] and he is also one of five Celtic British kings castigated for their sins by the contemporary Christian writer Gildas (who referred to him as Maglocunus, meaning 'Prince-Hound' in Brittonic),[64] written in the De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae. Maelgwn was curiously described as "the dragon of the island" by Gildas which was possibly a title, but explicitly as the most powerful of the five named British kings. "[Y]ou the last I write of but the first and greatest in evil, more than many in ability but also in malice, more generous in giving but also more liberal in sin, strong in war but stronger to destroy your soul."[65]

Maelgwn eventually died from the plague in 547,[60] leaving a succession crisis in his wake. His son-in-law, Elidyr Mwynfawr of the Kingdom of Strathclyde, claimed the throne and invaded Gwynedd to displace Maelgwn's son, Rhun Hir ap Maelgwn. Elidyr was killed in the attempt,[66] but his death was then avenged by his relatives, who ravaged the coast of Arfon. Rhun counter-attacked and exacted the same penalty on the lands of his foes in what is now South and Central Scotland.[67] The long distances these armies travelled suggests they were moving across the Irish Sea, but, because almost all of what is now northern England was at this point (c. 550) under Brittonic rule, it is possible that his army marched to Strathclyde overland. Rhun returned to Gwynedd, and the rest of his reign was for the majority uneventful until the relatives of Elidir renewed their aggressions against Rhun who was killed in the conflict.[citation needed] He was succeeded by his son or in some accounts nephew Beli in c. 586.[68]

On the accession of Beli's son Iago ap Beli in c. 599, the situation in Britain had deteriorated significantly. Most of northern England had been overrun by the invading Angles of Deira and Bernicia, who were in the process of forming the Kingdom of Northumbria. In a rare show of common interest, it appears that Gwynedd and the neighbouring Kingdom of Powys acted in concert to rebuff the Anglian advance but were defeated at the Battle of Chester in 613. Following this catastrophe, the approximate borders of northern Wales were set with the city of Caerlleon (now called Chester) and the surrounding Cheshire Plain falling under the control of the Anglo-Saxons.[citation needed] Beli's grandson was Cadfan ap Iago from the line of Maelgwn, his tombstone in Gwynedd wrote in Latin: "Catamanus rex sapientisimus opinatisimus" (most renowned), he was an ancestor of the future Kings of Gwynedd.[69][70]

Cadwallon ap Cadfan

 
Gravestone of Cadfan ap Iago, father of Cadwallon ap Cadfan

The Battle of Chester did not end the ability of the Welsh to seriously threaten the Anglo-Saxon polities.[71] Among the most powerful of the early kings was Cadwallon ap Cadfan (c. 624 – 634),[72][73] grandson of Iago ap Beli. He became engaged in an initially disastrous campaign against Northumbria where following a series of epic defeats he was confined first to Anglesey,[74] and then just to Puffin Island,[citation needed] before being forced into exile across the Irish Sea to Dublin, – a place which would come to host many royal refugees from Gwynedd. All must have seemed lost but Cadwallon (Welsh: Meigen) raised an enormous army and after a brief time in Guernsey he invaded Dumnonia, relieved the West Welsh who were suffering a Mercian invasion and forced the pagan Penda of Mercia into an alliance against Northumbria.[citation needed] With new vigour Cadwallon returned to his Northumbrian foes, defeated their armies and slew a series of their kings. In this furious campaign his armies devastated Northumbria, captured and sacked York in 633 and briefly controlled the kingdom.[74] At this time, according to Bede, many Northumbrians were slaughtered, "with savage cruelty", by Cadwallon.[75]

[H]e neither spared the female sex, nor the innocent age of children, but with savage cruelty put them to tormenting deaths, ravaging all their country for a long time, and resolving to cut off all the race of the English within the borders of Britain.

Despite the war, and 14 battles undertaken by the allied forces of Gwynedd and Mercia against Northumbria, of which the chief one was the Battle of Cefn Digoll in 632, an alliance was concluded when Cadwallon married Alcfritha, daughter of Pybba of Mercia. However, the effect of these tumultuous events would come to be short-lived, for he died in battle in 634 close to Hadrian's Wall, at the Battle of Heavenfield.[74][72] On account of these deeds, he and his son Cadwaladr, (who fought at the Battle of the Winwaed[77]) appear to have been considered the last two High Kings of Britain. Cadwaladr presided over a period of consolidation and devoted much time to the Church, earning the title "Bendigaid" for "Blessed". As a monk in later life, he was involved with Clynnog's abbey, and St Cadwaladr's Church, Llangadwaladr on Anglesey.[78] The Tudors of Penmynydd and Henry VII of England in particular claimed descent from Cadwaladr in the "twenty second degree" and it was he (Harri Tudor) who raised his 'Red Dragon' banner at the Battle of Bosworth Field.[54][77][79][f]

Rhodri the Great and Aberffraw primacy

During the later 9th and 10th centuries, the coastal areas of Gwynedd, particularly Anglesey, were coming under increasing attack by the Vikings.[80] These raids no doubt had a seriously debilitating effect on the country but fortunately for Gwynedd, the victims of the Vikings were not confined to Wales. The House of Cunedda – as the direct descendants of Cunedda are known – eventually expired in the male line in 825 upon the death of Hywel ap Rhodri Molwynog and, as John Edward Lloyd put it, "a stranger possessed the throne of Gwynedd."[81]

 
Kingdom of Gwynedd c. 830

This "stranger" who became the next King of Gwynedd was Merfyn "Frych" (Merfyn "the Freckled").[82] When, however, Merfyn Frych's pedigree is examined – and to the Welsh pedigree meant everything – he seems not a stranger but a direct descendant of the ancient ruling line. He was the son of Gwriad, the contemporaneous king of the Isle of Man and depending on the source either son or husband of Essyllt daughter of Cynan Dindaethwy a former King of Gwynedd. The most ancient genealogical sources agree that Merfyn was the son of Essyllt,[83] heiress and cousin of the aforementioned Hywel ap Caradog, last of the ruling House of Cunedda in Gwynedd, and that Merfyn's male line went back to the Hen Ogledd to Llywarch Hen,[82] a first cousin of Urien and thus a direct descendant of Coel Hen. Thus the House of Cunedda and the new House of Aberffraw, as Merfyn's descendants came to be known, shared Coel Hen as a common ancestor, although the House of Cunedda traced their line through Gwawl his daughter and wife of Cunedda.[84]

Merfyn married Nest ferch Cadell, the sister or daughter of Cyngen ap Cadell, the King of Powys of the Gwertherion dynasty, and founded the house of Aberffraw, named after his principal court on Anglesey.[85][86] No written records are preserved from the Britons of southern Scotland and northern England and it is very likely that Merfyn Frych brought many of these legends as well as his pedigree with him when he came to north Wales. It appears most probable that it was at Merfyn's court that all the lore of the north was collected and written down during his reign and that of his son.[87]

Rhodri the Great (844–878), son of Merfyn Frych and Nest ferch Cadell,[88] was able to add Powys to his realm after its king (his maternal uncle) died on pilgrimage to Rome in 855. Later, he married Angharad ferch Meurig, the sister of King Gwgon of Seisyllwg. When Gwgon drowned without heir in 872, Rhodri became steward over the kingdom and able to install his son, Cadell ap Rhodri, as a subject king. Thus, he became the first ruler since the days of Cunedda to control the greater part of Wales.[89][90]

When Rhodri died in 878 the relative unity of Wales ended and it was once again divided into its component parts each ruled by one of his sons. Rhodri's eldest son Anarawd ap Rhodri inherited Gwynedd and would firmly establish the princely House of Aberffraw that would come to rule Gwynedd with but a few interruptions until 1283.[91]

From the successes of Rhodri and the seniority of Anarawd among his sons the Aberffraw family claimed primacy over all other Welsh lords including the powerful kings of Powys and Deheubarth.[92][93][g] In The History of Gruffudd ap Cynan, written in the late 12th century,[94][95] the family asserted its rights as the senior line of descendants from Rhodri the Great who had conquered most of Wales during his lifetime. Gruffudd ap Cynan's biography was first written in Latin and intended for a wider audience outside Wales. The significance of this claim was that the Aberffraw family owed nothing to the English king for its position in Wales, and that they held authority in Wales "by absolute right through descent," wrote historian John Davies.[92]

The House of Aberffraw was displaced in 942 by Hywel Dda, a King of Deheubarth from a junior line of descent from Rhodri Mawr.[96][97] This occurred because Idwal Foel,[98] the King of Gwynedd, was determined to cast off English overlordship and took up arms against the new English king, Edmund I. Idwal and his brother Elisedd were both killed in battle against Edmund's forces.[99] By normal custom Idwal's crown should have passed to his sons, Ieuaf and Iago ab Idwal, but Hywel Dda intervened and sent Iago and Ieuaf into exile in Ireland and established himself as ruler over Gwynedd until his death in 950 when the House of Aberffraw was restored. Nonetheless, surviving manuscripts of Cyfraith Hywel recognise the importance of the lords of Aberffraw as overlords of Wales along with the rulers of Deheubarth.[100][h]

Between 986 and 1081 the throne of Gwynedd was often in contention with the rightful kings frequently displaced by rivals within and outside the realm. One of these, Gruffydd ap Llywelyn, originally from Powys, displaced the Aberffraw line from Gwynedd making himself ruler there, and by 1055 was able to make himself king of most of Wales.[101] He became powerful enough to present a real menace to England and annexed some neighbouring parts after several victories over English armies. Eventually he was defeated by Harold Godwinson in 1063 and later killed by his own men in a deal to secure peace with England.[102] Bleddyn ap Cynfyn and his brother Rhiwallon of the Mathrafal dynasty of Powys, Gruffudd's maternal half-brothers, came to terms with Harold and took over the rule of Gwynedd and Powys.[103]

Shortly after the Norman conquest of England in 1066 the Normans began to exert pressure on the eastern border of Gwynedd. They were helped by internal strife following the killing of Bleddyn ap Cynfyn in 1075 by his second cousin Rhys ap Owain King of Deheubarth.[103] Another relative of Bleddyn's Trahaearn ap Caradog seized the throne but was soon challenged by Gruffudd ap Cynan,[104] the exiled grandson of Iago ab Idwal ap Meurig who had been living in the Norse–Gael stronghold of Dublin.[105][106] In 1081 Trahaearn was killed by Gruffudd in battle and the ancient line of Rhodri Mawr was restored.[104]

Gwynedd in the High Middle Ages

Gruffudd ap Cynan

 
Wales c. 1063 – 1081

The Aberffraw dynasty suffered various depositions by rivals in Deheubarth, Powys, and England in the 10th and 11th centuries. Gruffudd ap Cynan (c. 1055–1137),[16][107] who grew up in exile in Norse–Gael Dublin, regained his inheritance following his victory at the Battle of Mynydd Carn in 1081 over his Mathrafal rivals then in control of Gwynedd.[108][109] However, Gruffudd's victory was short-lived as the Normans launched an invasion of Wales following the Saxon revolt in northern England, known as the Harrowing of the North.[110]

Shortly after the Battle of Mynydd Carn in 1081, Gruffudd was lured into a trap with the promise of an alliance but seized by Hugh d'Avranches, Earl of Chester, in an ambush near Corwen.[109][111] Earl Hugh claimed the Perfeddwlad up to the River Clwyd (the commotes of Tegeingl and Rhufoniog; the modern counties of Denbighshire, Flintshire, and Wrexham) as part of Chester, and viewed the restoration of the Aberffraw family in Gwynedd as a threat to his own expansion into Wales. The lands west of the Clwyd were intended for his cousin Robert of Rhuddlan, and their advance extended to the Llŷn Peninsula by 1090. By 1094 almost the whole of Wales was occupied by Norman forces. However, although they erected many castles, Norman control in most regions of Wales was tenuous at best. Motivated by local anger over the "gratuitously cruel" invaders, and led by the historic ruling houses, Welsh control over the greater part of Wales was restored by 1100.[109]

In an effort to further consolidate his control over Gwynedd, Earl Hugh of Chester had Hervey le Breton elected as Bishop of Bangor in 1092, and consecrated by Thomas of Bayeux, Archbishop of York.[112][i] However, the Welsh parishioners remained hostile to Hervey's appointment, and the bishop was forced to carry a sword with him and rely on a contingent of Norman knights for his protection.[114][115] Additionally, Hervey routinely excommunicated parishioners who he perceived as challenging his spiritual and temporal authority.[114]

 
Gruffudd ap Cynan escapes from Chester. Illustration by T. Prytherch in 1900

Gruffudd escaped imprisonment in Chester, and slew Robert of Rhuddlan in a beachside battle at Deganwy on 3 July 1093.[111] Gruffudd recovered Gwynedd by 1095, and by 1098 Gruffudd allied with Cadwgan ap Bleddyn of the Mathrafal house of Powys, their traditional dynastic rivalry notwithstanding. Gruffudd and Cadwgan led the Welsh resistance to the Norman occupation in north and mid Wales. However, by 1098 Earl Hugh of Chester and Hugh of Montgomery, 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury advanced their army to the Menai Strait, with Gruffudd and Cadwgan regrouping on defensible Anglesey, where they planned to make retaliatory strikes from their island fortress. Gruffudd hired a Norse fleet from a settlement in Ireland to patrol the Menai and prevent the Norman army from crossing; however, the Normans were able to pay off the fleet to instead ferry them to Môn. Betrayed, Gruffudd and Cadwgan were forced to flee to Ireland in a skiff.[108][109]

The Normans landed on Anglesey, and their furious 'victory celebrations' which followed were exceptionally violent, with rape and carnage committed by the Norman army left unchecked. The earl of Shrewsbury had an elderly priest mutilated, and made the church of Llandyfrydog a kennel for his dogs.[108]

During the 'celebrations' a Norse fleet led by Magnus Barefoot, King of Norway,[j] appeared off the coast at Puffin Island, and in the battle that followed, known as the Battle of Anglesey Sound, Magnus shot dead the earl of Shrewsbury with an arrow to the eye. The Norse left as suddenly and as mysteriously as they had arrived, leaving the Norman army weakened and demoralised.[108]

The Norman army retired to England, leaving a Welshman, Owain ab Edwin of Tegeingl, in command of a token force to control Ynys Môn (now Anglesey) and upper Gwynedd, and ultimately abandoning any colonisation plans there.[108][117] Owain ap Edwin transferred his allegiance to Chester following the defeat of his ally Trahaearn ap Caradog in 1081, a move which earned him the epithet Bradwr "the Traitor" (Welsh: Owain Fradwr), among the Welsh.[117]

In late 1098 Gruffudd and Cadwgan landed in Wales and recovered Angelsey without much difficulty, with Hervé the Breton fleeing Bangor for safety in England. Over the course of the next three years, Gruffudd was able to recover upper Gwynedd to the Conwy, defeating Hugh, Earl of Chester. In 1101, after Earl Hugh's death, Gruffudd and Cadwgan came to terms with England's new king, Henry I, who was consolidating his own authority and also eager to come to terms. In the negotiations which followed Henry I recognised Gruffudd's ancestral claims of Angelsey, Llŷn, Dunoding (Eifionydd and Ardudwy) and Arllechwedd, being the lands of upper Gwynedd to the Conwy which were already firmly in Gruffudd's control. Cadwgan regained Ceredigion, and his share of the family inheritance in Powys, from the new earl of Shrewsbury, Robert of Bellême.[108]

With the settlement reached between Henry I and Gruffudd, and other Welsh lords, the dividing of Wales between Pura Wallia, the lands under Welsh control; and Marchia Wallie, Welsh lands under Norman control, came into existence. Author and historian John Davies notes that the border shifted on occasion, "in one direction and in the other", but remained more or less stable for almost the next two hundred years.[118]

After generations of incessant warfare, Gruffudd began the reconstruction of Gwynedd, intent on bringing stability to his country. According to Davies, Gruffudd sought to give his people the peace to "plant their crops in the full confidence that they would be able to harvest them".[109] Gruffudd consolidated royal authority in north Wales, and offered sanctuary to displaced Welsh from the Perfeddwlad, particularly from Rhos, at the time harassed by Richard, 2nd Earl of Chester.[119]

Alarmed by Gruffudd's growing influence and authority in north Wales, and on pretext that Gruffudd sheltered rebels from Rhos against Chester, Henry I launched a campaign against Gwynedd and Powys in 1116, which included a vanguard commanded by King Alexander I of Scotland.[108][109] While Owain ap Cadwgan of Ceredigion sought refuge in Gwynedd's mountains, Maredudd ap Bleddyn of Powys made peace with the English king as the Norman army advanced.[108] There were no battles or skirmishes fought in the face of the vast host brought into Wales; rather, Owain and Gruffudd entered into truce negotiations. Owain ap Cadwgan regained royal favour relatively easily. However, Gruffudd was forced to render homage and fealty and pay a heavy fine, though he lost no land or prestige.[119]

The invasion left a lasting impact on Gruffudd, who by 1116 was in his 60s and with failing eyesight. For the remainder of his life, while Gruffudd continued to rule in Gwynedd, his sons Cadwallon, Owain, and Cadwaladr, would lead Gwynedd's army after 1120.[108] Gruffudd's policy, which his sons would execute and later rulers of Gwynedd adopted, was to recover Gwynedd's primacy without blatantly antagonising the English crown.[108][119]

The Expansion of Gwynedd

In 1120 a minor border war between Llywarch ab Owain, lord of a commote in the Dyffryn Clwyd cantref, and Hywel ab Ithel, lord of Rhufoniog and Rhos, brought Powys and Chester into conflict in the Perfeddwlad. Powys brought a force of 400 warriors to the aid of its ally Rhufoniog, while Chester sent Norman knights from Rhuddlan to the aid of Dyffryn Clwyd. The bloody Battle of Maes Maen Cymro, fought 1 mile (1.5 kilometres) northwest of Ruthin, ended with Llywarch ab Owain slain and the defeat of Dyffryn Clwyd. However, it was a pyrrhic victory as the battle left Hywel ab Ithel mortally wounded. The last of his line, when Hywel ab Ithel died six weeks later, he left Rhufoniog and Rhos bereft. Powys, however, was not strong enough to garrison Rhufoniog and Rhos, nor was Chester able to exert influence inland from its coastal holdings of Rhuddlan and Degannwy. With Rhufoniog and Rhos abandoned, Gruffudd annexed the cantrefs.[119]

On the death of Einion ap Cadwgan, lord of Meirionnydd, a quarrel engulfed his kinsmen on who should succeed him. Meirionnydd was then a vassal cantref of Powys, and the family there a cadet of the Mathrafal house of Powys. Gruffudd gave licence to his sons Cadwallon and Owain to press the opportunity the dynastic strife in Meirionnydd presented. The brothers raided Meirionnydd with the Lord of Powys as important there as he was in the Perfeddwlad. However it would not be until 1136 that the cantref was firmly within Gwynedd's control. Perhaps because of their support of Earl Hugh of Chester, Gwynedd's rival, in 1124 Cadwallon slew the three rulers of Dyffryn Clwyd, his maternal uncles, bringing the cantref firmly under Gwynedd's vassalage that year.[119] And in 1125 Cadwallon slew the grandsons of Edwin ap Goronwy of Tegeingl, leaving Tegeingl bereft of lordship.[117] However, in 1132 while on campaign in the commote of Nanheudwy, near Llangollen, 'victorious' Cadwallon was defeated in battle and slain by an army from Powys. The defeat checked Gwynedd's expansion for a time, "much to the relief of the men of Powys", wrote historian Sir John Edward Lloyd (J.E Lloyd).[119]

In 1136 a campaign against the Normans was launched from Gwynedd in revenge for the execution of Gwenllian ferch Gruffudd ap Cynan, the wife of the King of Deheubarth and the daughter of Gruffudd. When word reached Gwynedd of Gwenllian's death and the revolt in Gwent, Gruffudd's sons Owain and Cadwaladr invaded Norman controlled Ceredigion, taking Llanfihangle, Aberystwyth, and Llanbadarn.[120][121] Liberating Llanbadarn, one local chronicler hailed Owain and Cadwaladr both as "bold lions, virtuous, fearless and wise, who guard the churches and their indwellers, defenders of the poor [who] overcome their enemies, affording a safest retreat to all those who seek their protection".[120] The brothers restored the Welsh monks of Llanbadarn, who had been displaced by monks from Gloucester brought there by the Normans who had controlled Ceredigion. By late September 1136 a vast Welsh host gathered in Ceredigion, which included the combined forces of Gwynedd, Deheubarth, and Powys, and met the Norman army at the Battle of Crug Mawr at Cardigan Castle. The battle turned into a rout, and then into a resounding defeat of the Normans.[120]

 
Gruffudd's remains were interred in a tomb in the presbytery of Bangor Cathedral

When their father Gruffudd died in 1137, the brothers Owain and Cadwaladr were on a second campaign in Ceredigion, and took the castles of Ystrad Meurig, Lampeter (Stephen's Castle), and Castell Hywell (Humphries Castle)[120] Gruffudd ap Cynan left a more stable realm than had hitherto existed in Gwynedd for more than 100 years. No foreign army was able to cross the Conwy into upper Gwynedd. The stability of Gruffudd's long reign allowed for Gwynedd's Welsh to plan for the future without fear that home and harvest would "go to the flames" from invaders.[122]

Settlements became more permanent, with buildings of stone replacing timber structures. Stone churches in particular were built across Gwynedd, with so many limewashed that "Gwynedd was bespangled with them as is the firmament with stars". Gruffudd had built stone churches at his royal manors, and Lloyd suggests Gruffudd's example led to the rebuilding of churches with stone in Penmon, Aberdaron, and Towyn in the Norman fashion.[122]

Gruffudd promoted the primacy of the Episcopal See of Bangor in Gwynedd, and funded the building of Bangor Cathedral during the episcopate of David the Scot, Bishop of Bangor, between 1120 and 1139. Gruffudd's remains were interred in a tomb in the presbytery of Bangor Cathedral.[122]

Owain Gwynedd

Owain ap Gruffudd (Owain Gwynedd c. 1100 – 23 or 28 November 1170[123][124][125]) succeeded his father to the greater portion of Gwynedd in accordance with Welsh law, the Cyfraith Hywel, the Laws of Hywel; and became known as Owain Gwynedd to differentiate him from another Owain ap Gruffudd, the Mathrafal ruler of Powys, known as Owain Cyfeiliog.[126] Cadwaladr, Gruffudd's youngest son, inherited the commote of Aberffraw on Ynys Môn (now Anglesey), and the recently conquered Meirionydd and northern Ceredigion--i.e., Ceredigion between the rivers Aeron and the Dyfi.[127]

By 1141 Cadwaladr and Madog ap Maredudd of Powys led a Welsh vanguard as an ally of the Earl of Chester in the Battle of Lincoln, and joined in the rout which made Stephen of England prisoner of Empress Matilda for a year Owain, however, did not participate in the battle, keeping the majority of Gwynedd's army at home.[128][k]

Owain and Cadwaladr came to blows in 1143 when Cadwaladr was implicated in the murder of King Anarawd ap Gruffudd of Deheubarth, Owain's ally and future son-in-law, on the eve of Anarawd's wedding to Owain's daughter.[129][130] Owain followed a diplomatic policy of binding other Welsh rulers to Gwynedd through dynastic marriages, and Cadwaladr's border dispute and murder of Anarawd threatened Owain's efforts and credibility.[121] As ruler of Gwynedd, Owain stripped Cadwaladr of his lands, with Owain's son Hywel dispatched to Ceredigion, where he burned Cadwaladr's castle at Aberystwyth. Cadwaladr fled to Ireland and hired a Norse fleet from Dublin, bringing the fleet to Abermenai to compel Owain to reinstate him.[129] This same fleet of ships would be considered a sizeable one to be able to face the fleet of Stephen, King of England, as well as The Irish and Scottish at Abermenai Point prior in 1142.[131] Taking advantage of the brotherly strife, and perhaps with the tacit understanding of Cadwaladr, the marcher lords mounted incursions into Wales.[130] Realizing the wider ramifications of the war before him, Owain and Cadwaladr came to terms and reconciled, with Cadwaladr restored to his lands.[129][130] Peace between the brothers held until 1147, when an unrecorded event occurred which led Owain's sons Hywel and Cynan to drive Cadwaladr out of Meirionydd and Ceredigon, with Cadwaladr retreating to Môn.[129] Again an accord was reached, with Cadwaladr retaining Aberffraw until a more serious breach occurred in 1153, when he was forced into exile in England, where his wife was the sister of Gilbert de Clare, 1st Earl of Hertford and the niece of Ranulf de Gernon, 4th Earl of Chester.[129][130]

In 1146 news reached Owain that his favoured eldest son and heir, Rhun ab Owain Gwynedd, died. Owain was overcome with grief, falling into a deep depression from which none could console him, until news reached him that Mold Castle in Tegeingl had fallen to Gwynedd, "[reminding Owain] that he had still a country for which to live," wrote historian Sir John Edward Lloyd.[132]

Between 1148 and 1151, Owain I of Gwynedd fought against Madog ap Maredudd of Powys, Owain's son-in-law, and against the Earl of Chester for control of Iâl (Yale), with Owain having secured Rhuddlan Castle and all of Tegeingl from Chester.[133][123] "By 1154 Owain had brought his men within sight of the red towers of the great city on the Dee", wrote Lloyd."[133]

Having spent three years consolidating his authority in the vast Angevin Empire, Henry II of England resolved on a strategy against Owain I of Gwynedd by 1157. By now, Owain's enemies had joined Henry II's camp, enemies such as his wayward brother Cadwaladr and in particular the support of Madog of Powys.[l] Henry II raised his feudal host and marched into Wales from Chester. Owain positioned himself and his army at Dinas Basing (Basingwerk), barring the road to Rhuddlan, setting up a trap in which Henry II would send his army along the direct road on the coast, while he crossed through the woods to out-flank Owain. The King of Gwynedd anticipated this, and dispatched his sons Dafydd ab Owain Gwynedd and Cynan into the woods with an army, catching Henry II unaware.[134][135]

In the melee which followed Henry II might have been slain had not Roger de Clare, 2nd Earl of Hertford, rescued the king. Henry II retreated and made his way back to his main army, by now slowly advancing towards Rhuddlan. Not wishing to engage the Norman army directly, Owain repositioned himself first at St. Asaph, then further west, clearing the road for Henry II to enter into Rhuddlan "ingloriously".[134] Once in Rhuddlan Henry II received word that his naval expedition had failed, as instead of meeting Henry II at Degannwy or Rhuddlan, it had gone to plunder Anglesey, this resulted in the Battle of Ewloe, and has since been commemorated with a plaque 850 years after the battle of 1157, during 2007.[136]

In a later letter to the Byzantine emperor, Henry probably recalled these experiences when he wrote, "A people called Welsh, so bold and ferocious that, when unarmed, they do not fear to encounter an armed force, being ready to shed their blood in defence of their country, and to sacrifice their lives for renown."[137]

The naval expedition was led by Henry II's maternal uncle (Empress Matilda's half-brother), Henry FitzRoy; and when they landed on Môn, Henry FitzRoy had the churches of Llanbedr Goch and Llanfair Mathafarn Eithaf torched. During the night the men of Môn gathered together, and the next morning fought and defeated the Norman army, with Henry FitzRoy falling under a shower of lances. The defeat of his navy and his own military difficulties had convinced Henry II that he had "gone as far as was practical that year" in his effort to subject Owain, and the King offered terms.[134]

Owain I of Gwynedd, "ever prudent and sagacious", recognised that he needed time to further consolidate power, and agreed to the terms. Owain was to render homage and fealty to the King, and resign Tegeingl and Rhuddlan to Chester, and restore Cadwaladr to his possessions in Gwynedd.[134]

The death of Madog ap Meredudd of Powys in 1160 opened an opportunity for Owain I of Gwynedd to further press Gwynedd's influence at the expense of Powys.[138][139][m] However, Owain continued to further Gwynedd's expansion without rousing the English crown, maintaining his 'prudent policy' of Quieta non-movere (translated from Latin - do not move settled things).[n] It was a policy of outward conciliation, while masking his own consolidation of authority. To further demonstrate his good-will, in 1160 Owain handed over to the English crown the fugitive Einion Clud. By 1162 Owain was in possession of the Powys cantref of Cyfeiliog, and its castle, Tafolwern; and ravaged another Powys cantref, Arwystli, slaying its lord, Hywel ab Ieuaf.[138] Owain's strategy was in sharp contrast to Rhys ap Gruffudd, King of Deheubarth, who in 1162 rose in open revolt against the Normans in south Wales, drawing Henry II back to England from the continent.[140]

In 1163 Henry II quarrelled with Thomas Becket, the Archbishop of Canterbury, causing growing divisions between the king's supporters and the archbishop's supporters. With discontent mounting in England, Owain of Gwynedd joined with Rhys ap Gruffudd of Deheubarth in a second grand Welsh revolt against Henry II.[138][141] England's king, who only the prior year had pardoned Rhys ap Gruffudd for his 1162 revolt, assembled a vast host against the allied Welsh, with troops drawn from all over the Angevin empire assembling in Shrewsbury, and with the Norse of Dublin paid to harass the Welsh coast.[138] While his army gathered on the Welsh frontier, Henry II left for the continent to negotiate a truce with France and Flanders to not disturb his peace while campaigning in Wales.[142]

However, when Henry II returned to England he found that the war had already begun, with Owain's son Dafydd raiding Angevin positions in Tegeingl, exposing the castles of Rhuddlan and Basingwerk to "serious dangers", wrote Lloyd. Henry II rushed to north Wales for a few days to shore up defences there, before returning to his main army now gathering in Oswestery.[142]

The vast host gathered before the allied Welsh principalities represented the largest army yet assembled for their conquest, a circumstance which further drew the Welsh allies into a closer confederacy, wrote Lloyd.[142] With Owain I of Gwynedd the overall battle commander, and with his brother Cadwaladr as his second, Owain assembled the Welsh host at Corwen in the vale of Edeyrion where he could best resist Henry II's advance.[142]

The Angevin army advanced from Oswestry into Wales crossing the mountains towards Mur Castell, and found itself in the thick forest of the Ceiriog Valley where they were forced into a narrow thin line. Owain I had positioned a band of skirmishers in the thick woods overlooking the pass, which harassed the exposed army from a secured position. Henry II ordered the clearing of the woods on either side to widen the passage through the valley, and to lessen the exposure of his army. The road his army travelled later became known as the Ffordd y Saeson, the English Road, and leads through heath and bog towards the Dee. In a dry summer the moors may have been passable, but "on this occasion the skies put on their most wintry aspect; and the rain fell in torrents [...] flooding the mountain meadows" until the great Angevin encampment became a "morass," wrote Lloyd. In the face of "hurricane" force wind and rain, diminishing provisions and an exposed supply line stretching through hostile country subject to enemy raids, and with a demoralised army, Henry II was forced into a complete retreat without even a semblance of a victory.[142]

In frustration, Henry II had twenty-two Welsh hostages mutilated; the sons of Owain's supporters and allies, including two of Owain's own sons. In addition to his failed campaign in Wales, Henry's mercenary Norse navy, which he had hired to harass the Welsh coast, turned out to be too few for use, and were disbanded without engagement.[142]

Henry II's Welsh campaign was a complete failure, with the king abandoning all plans for the conquest of Wales, returning to his court in Anjou and not returning to England for another four years.[142] Lloyd wrote:

It is true that [Henry II] did not cross swords with [Owain I], but the elements had done their work for [the Welsh]; the stars in their courses had fought against the pride of England and humbled it to the very dust. To conquer a land which was defended, not merely by the arms of its valiant and audacious sons, but also by tangled woods and impassable bogs, by piercing winds and pitiless storms of rain, seemed a hopeless task, and Henry resolved to no longer attempt it.[142]

Owain expanded his international diplomatic offensive against Henry II by sending an embassy to Louis VII of France in 1168, led by Arthur of Bardsey, Bishop of Bangor (1166–1177), who was charged with negotiating a joint alliance against Henry II. With Henry II distracted by his widening quarrel with Thomas Becket, Owain's army recovered Tegeingl for Gwynedd by 1169.[141]

Lloyd quotes:[123] "The praises so repeatedly accorded to his many personal qualities by contemporary poets, and indeed by several public figures who could not have been predisposed in his favour, have so genuine a tone about them that the progressive trends in all the arts of peace and war discerned in 12th century Wales, it must be concluded, were in large measure due to the fostering genius of ' Owain the Great.'"

In his later reign Owain I was the styled princeps Wallensium, Latin for the Prince of the Welsh, a title of substance given his leadership of the Welsh and victory against the English king, wrote historian Dr. John Davies.[143] Additionally, Owain commissioned the Life of Gruffudd ap Cynan, the biography of his father in which Owain firmly asserted his primacy over other Welsh rulers by "absolute right through descent" from Rhodri the Great, according to Davies.[92] Owain I was the eldest male descendant of Rhodri the Great through paternal descent.[citation needed]

The adoption of the title prince (Latin princeps, Welsh tywysog), rather than king (Latin rex, Welsh brenin), did not mean a diminution in status, according to Davies. The use of the title prince was a recognition of the ruler of Gwynedd in relation to the wider international feudal world. The princes of Gwynedd exercised greater status and prestige than the earls, counts, and dukes of the Angevin empire, suggesting a similar status as that of the King of Scots, himself nominally a vassal of the King of England, argued Davies. As Welsh society became further influenced by feudal Europe, the princes of Gwynedd would in turn use feudalism to strengthen their own authority over lesser Welsh lords, a "two-edged sword" for the King of England, wrote Davies.[143] Though Gwynedd's princes recognised the de jure suzerainty of the King of England, there remained well-established Welsh law separate from English law, and were independent de facto, wrote Davies.[144][o]

Civil war, usurpation 1170 – 1195, and the Prince of Wales

Welsh manuscripts and Annals state the events which unfolded during the end of the 12th century. This story of the Royal court of Gwynedd suffering an uprising, stems from the Norman invasion of Wales a century prior to the civil strife of Owain Gwynedd and his immediate family. The internal wranglings for the crown of Gwynedd begun with two sons, Rhun ab Owain Gwynedd and Hywel ab Owain Gwynedd, who were illegitimate, by Owain's Irish wife Pyfog.[124] Owain and his father, Gruffudd ap Cynan, both had a Norse-Irish connection in their immediate family, and would have used this allegiance to their advantage, especially Gruffudd who hired and army fleets of ships to invade North Wales himself.[107][124][p] In 1146, Hywel and Cadell ap Gruffydd of Deheubarth had combined their forces to battle against invading Normans who had built castles in west Wales, they took Carmarthen, Llanstephan, and Wiston castles.[96][q]

Hywel ab Owain Gwynedd duly succeeded his father for a short lived term during 1170.[96][145] Due to the Norman invasion of Wales, the realm was in civil war, [r] Princess-Dowager (wife of Owain Gwynedd) Cristin verch Goronwy who promoted her own son Dafydd ab Owain Gwynedd (Dafydd I/ David I) as Prince of Gwynedd ahead of Hywel and any other senior son of Owain Gwynedd. Dafydd I made his move, and within a few months of his succession Hywel was overthrown and killed at the Battle of Pentraeth in 1171.[96][145][146][147]

Due to splinter factions, the Kingdom's royal family begun to move away from Gwynedd, it is Maelgwn ab Owain Gwynedd (died after 1174 strife) who appeared to have gained Anglesey,[145][148] whilst the sons of Cynan held the cantrefs of Meirionnydd, Eifionydd and Ardudwy between them .[s][149] Dayfdd I was of Welsh royal stock, although his parents' union wasn't recognised by the church, and he was deemed illegitimate (his parents Owain and Cristin were first cousins), he would still marry royalty, his wife being the half sister of Henry II. As a Prince he made the most of his position as a son of Owain Gwynedd, and it was Dafydd I who waged a war on his brothers when he won the Crown at the battle of Pentraeth. Dafydd I, King of Gwynedd was his title, and his merciless rule continued when he used his powers to harass his brothers into leaving Gwyendd, at one stage in 1173 Dafydd I imprisoned all of his siblings except for Madoc and Maelgwn. It was Madoc (also known as Madog ab Owain Gwynedd) who after his father's death is claimed to have set sail across the Atlantic Ocean and discovered America.[t] After 3 years of Maelgwn possessing Anglesey he jailed him too. Eventually Dafydd I was himself imprisoned by the future Prince of Wales Llywelyn the Great, that was after losing the Battle of Aberconwy against an alliance of Rhodri ab Owain, and the sons of Cynan ab Owain Gwynedd.[u][145][151][152][153]

The following year he expelled all his remaining family rivals and made himself master of all Gwynedd and in 1175, Dafydd I imprisoned his brother Rhodri. During a revolt in 1173, Dafydd I adhered to Henry II as an ally, and it was agreed that Dafydd I would marry Emma of Anjou, who was Henry's half sister, and would receive the manor of Ellesmere as dowry.[152][145]

All this was done, as the Brut y Tywysogion explained, "because [Dafydd] thought he could hold his territory in peace thereby", but it proved insufficient. Before the end of 1175 Rhodri had escaped from captivity and gathered sufficient support to drive Dafydd I from the Royal household of Aberffraw, there appears to be no activity from Dafydd I for almost 20 years after 1175, until then the final battle at Aberconwy in 1197.[152] Dafydd I may not have inherited the leadership abilities of his father but he had sufficient diplomatic qualities remaining to ensure he could live at peace with his neighbours. This appears to be the one quality recognised by his contemporaries as he was described by Giraldus Cambrensis as a man who showed "good faith and credit by observing a strict neutrality between the Welsh and English".[citation needed]

His brother Rhodri had a more eventful time and fell out with the descendants of Cynan. They acted against Rhodri in 1190 and drove him out of Gwynedd altogether. Rhodri fled to the safety of the Isle of Man only to be briefly reinstated in 1193 with the assistance of Rǫgnvaldr Guðrøðarson, King of the Isles, and then driven out once more at the beginning of 1194, sharing the humiliation of his brother Dafydd ab Owain.[154]

Dafydd Ist had a nemesis in his nephew Llywelyn ap Iorwerth,[17][155][156] who was born most likely in the year 1173 and therefore only a child when all these events played out. Llywelyn's father Iorwerth Drwyndwn had been involved in the early stages of the dynastic struggles and most likely died sometime around 1174, during the same time as the usurpation of Dafydd I.[157] As the century drew to a close Llywelyn became a young man and decided to stake his claim to power in Gwynedd. He conspired with his cousins Gruffudd and Maredudd and his uncle Rhodri and in the year 1194 they all united against Dafydd I.[152][17] Iorwerth fought battles throughout Wales, giving him the moniker 'The great' like his ancestor Owain Gwynedd had attained.[123][17] Having made alliances in his birth county of Powys and the county of the origins of his family Gwynedd, in north Wales, the stage was set for Llywelyn to dominate in battle and make alliances with the Crown of England, similar to his predecessor Dafydd I. Llywelyn married Joan, Lady of Wales, the daughter of John, King of England.[17][155]

Prince of Wales, Welsh title (1218 – 1283)

Llywelyn the Great

See also Llywelyn ap Iorwerth

 
The coat of arms of Llywelyn were:Quarterly Or and Gules, four lions passant guardant counter charged, armed and langued Azur, later the arms of his son, Dafydd ap Llywelyn, and grandson, Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, and subsequently of the Gwynedd realm.

Llywelyn ab Iorwerth (1173 – 11 April 1240), later known as Llywelyn the Great (Llywelyn I),[17][155][156] was sole ruler of Gwynedd by 1200, and made a treaty with King John of England the same year.[158] Llywelyn's relations with John remained good for the next ten years. He married John's illegitimate daughter Joan, also known as Joanna, in 1205, and when John arrested Gwenwynwyn ab Owain of Powys in 1208 Llywelyn took the opportunity to annex southern Powys, Ceredigion and also he built Aberystwyth Castle.[159][dubious ] In 1210 relations deteriorated and John invaded Gwynedd in 1211. [160] Llywelyn was forced to seek terms and to give up all his lands east of the River Conwy,[161] but was able to recover these lands the following year in alliance with the other Welsh princes.[162] He later allied himself with the barons who forced John to sign Magna Carta in 1215. By 1216 he was the dominant power in Wales, holding a council at Aberdyfi that year to apportion lands to the other princes. Llywelyn concluded the Treaty of Worcester with the next King of England, Henry III in 1218. The treaty formally recognised Llywelyn I as Prince of Wales.[17][155][163]

During 1220 – 1230, Llywelyn bolstered his claim to the Kingship of Gwynedd by reinforcing his borders with castles being built around the Kingdom of Gwynedd, Criccieth, Deganwy, Dolbadarn, Dolwyddelan and Castell y Bere are among the best examples.[155][164] The Peace of Middle treaty in 1234 marked the beginning of the end for his military exploits and virtually established peace for the rest of Llywelyn's life.[17] Having been on terms with his neighbouring compatriots, Llywelyn had taken to his wife's style of fashioning a court similar to that of the English Crown and also the same rules of court devised in 914 at Aberffraw. The Prince convened a court with household members, and 12 Royal mounted guards. The Royal palace consisted of 35 positions similar to Royal Households of the United Kingdom used today in England.[165]

Llywelyn followed the laws of Hywel Dda, and attempted a succession process using the Welsh gavelkind custom of choosing an heir.[166] Llywelyn promoted his younger son Dafydd II,[167] and he customised the process of designating an heir to his own fruition by giving his eldest son Gruffudd lands to rule.[168] Dafydd II was named heir with the support of King Henry III of England, during 1238 a Welsh Royal council of Princes was held at Strata Florida Abbey in honour of the heir of Gwynedd.[169] Llywelyn in 1239 suffered a stroke and retired from the active work in the Welsh government, he died only a year later in 1240.[155][170]

Prince Dafydd II

Prince Dafydd II (Dafydd ap Llywelyn / David II, March 1212 – 25 February 1246),[153] the son of Llywelyn the Great was installed as heir of Gwynedd by the Prince of Wales.[155][171] While King Henry III of England had accepted Dafydd II and his Royal claims to Gwynedd and Wales, Henry invaded Gwynedd, and Dafydd II was forced to negotiate peace near St. Asaph, on 29 August 1241, under the terms of the Treaty of Gwerneigron, Dafydd II gave up all his lands outside Gwynedd.[171] Dafydd II was ruthless with his power, like his predecessors he'd imprisoned his own brother, once for 6 years, and again in Criccieth and then in the Tower of London. It was the Bishop of Bangor who negotiated letting Prince Gruffudd move to a better location in London. Gruffudd fell to his death in March 1244 while trying to escape from the Tower of London by climbing down a knotted sheet.[18][172]

With his main rival dead, Dafydd formed an alliance with other Welsh rulers and began a campaign against the English occupation of parts of Wales, all the while communicating with Pope Innocent IV in the Vatican City, Rome, talking about the powers bestowed on him by his predecessors as the ruler of Gwynedd. After savage fighting, the campaign was successful, however Llywelyn's former seneshal Sir Tudur ap Ednyfed Fychan was captured by Henry III forces in September 1245 in battle against Dafydd II, yet Tudur was released in 1247 after swearing fealty to the King of England.[47] Dafydd II died a sudden and natural death on 25 February 1246, this brought a halt to the succession crisis which was fuelling the wars, his widow Isabella de Braose returned to England, living in Haverford, she died 2 years later.[153][155][171]

Prince Llywelyn II, the Last

Prince Llywelyn II (Welsh: Llywelyn Ein Llyw Olaf, lit.'Llywelyn, Our Last Leader', Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, 1223 – 11 December 1282) was living in Gwynedd at the time of his succession to the throne and had fought alongside his uncle Dafydd II during the last campaign of his reign.[155] This gave him an advantage over his elder brother Owain who had been imprisoned in England with his father since 1242. Owain returned to Gwynedd from England, immediately after the news of the death of Prince Dafydd the IInd.[citation needed] Llywelyn and Owain were able to come to agreement during an arranged peace accord by King Henry III of England, the Treaty of Woodstock, they were to share a realm west of Conwy, the treaty only lasted 8 years.[155][173]

The younger brother of Llywelyn II was Dafydd III, who had come of age by 14 and was invited by Henry III to pay homage in 1253. But in the spirit of his ancestors he went to battle with his brother by forming an alliance with their other brother Owain, and fought at the Battle of Bryn Derwin where they met with respective armies.[174] Llywelyn II in victory imprisoned his brothers Owain (until 1277), and Dafydd III for around a years time, Dafydd III eventually gained favour by 1277 working in conjunction with the Crown of England by gaining land on the northern border of England and Wales, Dafydd III married Elizabeth Ferrers and had offspring, while Owain was given the title Lord of Llŷn. Llywelyn was seen as a figurehead for the new state of Wales, but had to coordinate with the newly formed Norman dynasty neighbouring to the east of Gwynedd, this was formalised with the Treaty of Montgomery later in 1267.[155][173][174]

With his brothers out of contention, Llyewlyn II was sole ruler and this allowed for over a decade of unbroken military success, aided by the weakness of the Crown of England and the support of his seneshal Goronwy ab Ednyfed, he triumphed in battle by reuniting north Wales. Llywelyn II made an alliance with the Montfort family, marrying Eleanor de Montfort in 1275. Eleanor was the daughter of Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, who had been integral in the English civil war by rebelling during the Second Barons' War. This time it was another Pope, Clement IV who negotiated peace with the Welsh Prince, insisting to disassociate from the Monfort's after the Battle of Evesham. Llywelyn II and Montfort married twice, once in secret in 1275, and once again after the marriage was given consent by the new brother in law of Llywelyn II, Edward I, only after Eleanor herself was placed under house arrest for 3 years for passing through Bristol with her father's banner on board a ship, their daughter Gwenllian ferch Llywelyn was orphaned before her first birthday, she was the last of her line.[47][155][175][176]

Succession would continue with a new King of England, Edward I would later acquire the title of the Prince of Wales. The Treaty of Aberconwy was signed in 1277 by Llywelyn II, it was a formal agreement to hand over the power Gwynedd he had accumulated throughout Wales, the new House of Plantagenet was of French, Norman origins. However Llywelyn's brother Dafydd III still had different ideas, it was he who provoked incident by attacking Hawarden castle on Palm Sunday in 1282. Later on during November 1282 the Archbishop of Canterbury, John Peckham, had visited North Wales to mediate any potential conflict between sovereigns. Prince Llywelyn II was offered a financial incentive, and an English estate for his family, only if he were to surrender Gwynedd's territory to Edward. Llywelyn II rejected the offer.[177][178] The next month, on 11 December 1282, after not being recognised Llywelyn was killed at in an ambush. His head sent to London, his body interred to Abbeycwmhir.[155]

Prince Dafydd III

 
The arms used by Dafydd ap Gruffudd were a variant of the Aberffraw Arms

After generations of civil strife in Gwynedd, it was Dafydd ap Gruffydd (David III, 11 July – 3 October 1283) named Dafydd III, the grandson of Llywelyn the Great who was next to gain the Prince of Wales title.[153][174][179] From the offset it was Dafydd III who was immersed in Royal life representing the Welsh royal family. During 1253, Dafydd III attended an event and paid homage to the English court with Queen Eleanor, and Richard of Cornwall, as Henry III was in Gascony.[179] That era however was the starting point for military campaigns against his brother Llywelyn II from 1255, Llywelyn II jailed him for a year after the battle of Bryn Derwin. Dafydd III in 1263 revolted against Llywelyn II once more, this time failing badly enough to flee to England, and a year later was offered the lands of the English rebel Baron Boteler after the battle of Evesham during an English civil war. Dafydd III had joined the English court life with Henry III and was in England until 1267. Again it was another Pope, Ottobuono, Adrian V who negotiated between the Royal families of England and Wales, peace ensued in Wales for another 6 years, when Dafydd III was councillor to his brother, the Prince of Wales. Peace ensues until another coup is formed involving Gruffydd ap Gwenwynwyn Prince of Powys (whose father was arrested by King John), and falls apart due to severe storms. Dafydd III was forced to flee to England once more, this time pledging allegiance to King Edward I in 1274, and is decorated a knight and considered him a friend. Years later in 1277, Dafydd III returns to haunt Wales accompanying Edward I, and on 16 August an agreement of peace is made as how to share the spoils of war, by 10 November Llywelyn I submits to the English Crown at the Treaty of Aberconwy. The lands of Snowdonia, Anglesey, and Penllyn (cantref) are shared amongst the Princes and a dowry is given to Dafydd III, along with an estate in Cheshire and a consented marriage to the daughter of a former adversary, the Earl of Derby.[179]

Later in his life, after returning to Wales, Dafydd III changes alliance once again and continues to fight against the English Crown at risk of being a traitor. The Welsh courts had kept the support of Goronowy ap Heilin, the seneshal of Gwynedd who also supported his brother Llywelyn II, Goronwy was the Lord of Rhôs. Dafydd III also had the support of Hywel ap Rhys Gryg son of Rhys Gryg, and his brother Rhys Wyndod, the disinherited princes of Deheubarth.[180][47] Dafydd III had rekindled his ancestors wish for Welsh Independence, however the involvement in rebellion had been against agreements in place the treaty of Aberconwy. The provocation on 22 March, Palm Sunday in 1282 was an attack on Hawarden castle and was the final conlflict of the Kingdom of Gwynedd.[179]

Dafydd III, like his brothers had incurred the wrath of the English forces, the Norman army encircled Snowdonia and starved the Welsh people, Dafydd III was soon moving desperately from one fort to another as effective resistance was systematically crushed. Dolwyddelan Castle, which was at risk of becoming encircled and trapped, was first castle to be abandoned on 18 January 1283. The next was Dolbadarn Castle, the castle served as a base, but by March that year, this noble site in the heartland of Snowdonia was also under threat from foreign forces and Dafydd III was forced to retreat once again. Finally, Dafydd III moved his headquarters south to Castell y Bere near Llanfihangel-y-pennant. From this point forwards the Prince, royal family, and remaining members of the Welsh government were all fugitives on the run, sleeping outdoors whilst being forced to keep moving from place to place to avoid capture. Castell Y Bere's starving garrison would eventually surrender on 25 April, and then given to William de Valence, 1st Earl of Pembroke. After the fall of Y Bere, Dafydd III's movements are speculative but he is recorded in May 1283 leading raids from the mountains, supportedby his seneshal Goronwy ap Heilyn, and Prince's of Deheubarth, Hywel ap Rhys and Rhys Wyndod.[179][181]

"The last months saw inward disintegration as well as submission to superior force. Nevertheless, Goronwy ap Heilin had committed himself to the struggle and died in rebellion, alongside the disinherited princes who stood with Dafydd ap Gruffudd in the last springtime of the principality of Wales, diehards who knew that theirs was not the heroism of a new beginning but the ultimate stand of the very last cohort clutching the figment of the political order that they had once been privileged to know."[180]

On 21 June 1283, Dafydd III was captured in the uplands above Abergwyngregyn close to Bera Mawr in a secret hiding place recorded as "Nanhysglain".[179][182] King Edward I decreed, in ad querendum filium David primogenitum, and was caught by "men of his own tongue".[citation needed] The last Royal family of Wales were imprisoned, and Dafydd III was executed by hanging in Shrewsbury for treason, his body was dismembered and he suffered same fate as his brother, Llywelyn II with his head put on a pole for display at the Tower of London, the bard Bleddyn Fardd made his elegy.[179][183] After the capture of the last true Royal family of Gwynedd, the Princes, including Llywelyn ap Dafydd were imprisoned in Bristol Castle by the English Crown, and daughters became Nuns in Sempringham and other monasteries.[179]

End of Independence

 
Wales after the Statute of Rhuddlan 1284

Following the death of Llywelyn II in 1282, and the execution of his brother Dafydd III the following year, eight centuries of independent rule by the house of Gwynedd came to an end, and the kingdom, which had long been one of the final holdouts to total English domination of Wales, was annexed to England. The remaining important members of the ruling house were all arrested and imprisoned for the remainder of their lives.[174][184] Under the terms of the Statute of Rhuddlan in 1284 Wales was broken up and re-organised into six shires. The Snowdonia district in Gwynedd was made into three settlements, creating the counties of Anglesey, Carnarvonshire, Merionethshire, and the rest of Wales split beyond the Rivers Dee and Conwy, making Denbighshire and Flintshire in North Wales, and Cardigan and Carmarthen to the south of Wales.[185]

The Pura Walia was the new defifion for the Welsh marshland. Pura Wallia was effectively the new counties which had been Gwynedd, Carmarthenshire and Cardiganshire and Marchia Wallie were defined through division of lands still held by the Welsh people, and the Norman castles built in the Marchia Wallie.[186][187] The Pura Walia continued to be within a nominal Principality of Wales ruled by the Council of Wales at Ludlow as a part of the English crown.[citation needed]

There were many Gwynedd-based rebellions after 1284 with varying degrees of success with most being led by peripheral members of the old royal house. In particular the rebellions of Prince Madoc in 1294,[188] and of Owain Lawgoch (the great-nephew of Llywelyn ap Gruffudd) between 1372 and 1378 are most notable.[189][190][191] Because of this the old royal house was purged and any surviving members went into hiding. A final rebellion in 1400 led by Owain Glyndŵr, a member of the rival royal house of Powys, also drew considerable support from within Gwynedd.[42]

The title "Prince of Wales" was recreated after Llywelyn II, Prince Edward (later Edward II) was conferred in 1301 at Caernarfon castle, beginning the Principality of Wales.[192] The Welsh Marches would be merged with the principality in 1534 under the Council of Wales and the Marches until all separate governance for Wales.[193] The penal system was eventually abolished,[194] and as an administrative entity, the administrative entity the Marches of Wales was abolished by the joint reigns of King William III of England and Mary II of England (monarchs of England and Scotland combined) in 1689.[195]

Military

According to Sir John Edward Lloyd, the challenges of campaigning in Wales were exposed during the 20-year Norman invasion. If a defender could bar any road, control any river-crossing or mountain pass, and control the coastline around Wales, then the risks of extended campaigning in Wales were too great.[108]

The Welsh method of warfare during the reign of Henry II is described by Gerald of Wales in his work Descriptio Cambriae written c. 1190:[137]

Their mode of fighting consists in chasing the enemy or in retreating. This light-armed people, relying more on their activity than on their strength, cannot struggle for the field of battle, enter into close engagement, or endure long and severe actions...though defeated and put to flight on one day, they are ready to resume the combat on the next, neither dejected by their loss, nor by their dishonour; and although, perhaps, they do not display great fortitude in open engagements and regular conflicts, yet they harass the enemy by ambuscades and nightly sallies. Hence, neither oppressed by hunger or cold, not fatigued by martial labours, nor despondent in adversity, but ready, after a defeat, to return immediately to action, and again endure the dangers of war.
--The Historical Works of Giraldus Cambrensis translated by Sir Richard Colt-Hoare (1894), p.511[137]

The Welsh were revered for the skills of their bowmen. Additionally, the Welsh learned from their Norman rivals. During the generations of warfare and close contact with the Normans, Gruffudd ap Cynan and other Welsh leaders learned the arts of knighthood and adapted them for Wales. By Gruffudd's death in 1137 Gwynedd could field hundreds of heavy well-armed cavalry as well as their traditional bowmen and infantry.[108]

They make use of light arms, which do not impede their agility, small coats of mail, bundles of arrows, and long lances, helmets and shields, and more rarely greaves plated with iron. The higher class go to battle mounted on swift and generous steeds, which their country produces; but the greater part of the people fight on foot, on account of the marshy nature and unevenness of the soil. The horsemen, as their situation or occasion requires, willingly serve as infantry, in attacking or retreating; and they either walk bare-footed, or make use of high shoes, roughly constructed with untanned leather. In time of peace, the young men, by penetrating the deep recesses of the woods, and climbing the tops of mountains, learn by practice to endure fatigue through day and night.
--The Historical Works of Giraldus Cambrensis translated by Sir Richard Colt-Hoare (1894), p.491[137]

In the end, Wales was defeated militarily by the improved ability of the English navy to blockade or seize areas essential for agricultural production such as Anglesey. With control of the Menai Strait, an invading army could regroup on Anglesey; without control of the Menai an army could be stranded there; and any occupying force on Anglesey could deny the vast harvest of the island to the Welsh.[109]

Lack of food would force the disbandment of any large Welsh force besieged within the mountains.[181] Following the occupation, Welsh soldiers were conscripted to serve in the English Army. During the revolt of Owain Glyndŵr the Welsh adapted the new skills they had learnt to guerrilla tactics and lightning raids. Owain Glyndŵr reputedly used the mountains with such advantage that many of the exasperated English soldiery suspected him of being a magician able to control the natural elements.[196]

Administration

 
Principal administrative divisions of medieval Gwynedd (traditional territorial extent)
 
The Afon Conwy is the traditional border between upper and lower Gwynedd

In early times Gwynedd (or Venedotia) may have been ruled from Chester, which is shown in the subsidiary title of the current Prince of Wales, Earl of Chester.[192] After the Battle of Chester in 613 when the city fell to the Anglo-Saxons the royal court moved west to the stronghold at Deganwy Castle near modern Conwy.[4] This site was destroyed by lightning in 812, rebuilt and destroyed again by Saxons in 822. Afterwards Aberffraw on Anglesey became the principal power base, with exceptions such as Gruffydd ap Llywelyn's court at Rhuddlan.[6][18][197] However, as the English fleet became more powerful and particularly after the Norman colonisation of Ireland began it became indefensible and from about 1200 until 1283,[citation needed] at Abergwyngregyn or simply called just "Aber" (its anglicised shortened form adopted by the Crown of England after the conquest) was the new family home of the 'Lord of Snowdown' on the banks of the menai Strait.[9][198] Joan, Lady of Wales, died there in 1237; Dafydd ap Llywelyn in 1246; Eleanor de Montfort, Lady of Wales, wife of Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, Prince of Wales ("Tywysog Cymru" in modern Welsh), on 19 June 1282, giving birth to a daughter, Gwenllian. The royal home was occupied and expropriated by the English Crown in early 1283.[199][200][201]

The traditional sphere of Aberffraw's influence in north Wales included the Isle of Anglesey (Ynys Môn) as their early seat of authority, and Gwynedd Uwch Conwy (Gwynedd above the Conwy, or upper Gwynedd), and the Perfeddwlad (the Middle Country) also known as Gwynedd Is Conwy (Gwynedd below the Conwy, or lower Gwynedd). Additional lands were acquired through vassalage or conquest, and by regaining lands lost to Marcher lords, particularly that of Ceredigion, Powys Fadog, and Powys Wenwynwyn. However these areas were always considered an addition to Gwynedd, never part of it.[22][185][139]

 
Reconstruction of Llys Llewelyn at St. Fagan's

After the Norman conquest the residents of Llanfaes were moved to make way for Beaumaris Castle on Anglesey. The newly built Llys Rhosyr replaced the now abandoned Llys Aberffraw was one of 3 main courts on Anglesey, only due to a sandstorm in 1332 the Llys also became disused and unattended until excavations in the 20th century. The courts (Welsh: Llysoedd) were administrative centres in the Kingdom, the courts were royal residences, but also were to collected taxes, and function the same as a modern government building.[202][203]

Gwynedd was traditionally divided into using nature as borders, the rivers Conwy and Dee were used to define lands in relation to the counties.[185] Gwynedd Uwch Conwy and Gwynedd Is Conwy (with the River Conwy forming the border), which included Anglesey (Môn). The kingdom of the Princes of Snowdonia was administered under Welsh custom through thirteen Cantrefi each containing, in theory, one hundred settlements or Trefi. Most cantrefs were also divided into cymydau (English commotes). A complete census was created in the Red Book of Hergest during the end of the 14th century.[22][204][205][206]

Anglesey (Welsh: Ynys Môn)

Commote of Anglesey

Commote Modern local Notes
Aberffraw Aberffraw Historic seat of rulers of Gwynedd
Cemais Cemaes
Talebolyon
Llan-faes Llan-maes
Penrhos Penrhos
Rhosyr Newborough, Niwbro in 1294, refounded to house displaced villagers from Llanfaes

Upper Gwynedd, Conwy

Gwynedd above the Conwy, or upper Gwynedd

Commote of Arllechwedd

Commote Modern local Notes
Arllechwedd Uchaf Abergwyngregyn, Conwy County Borough
Arllechwedd Isaf Trefriw, Conwy County Borough

Arfon Commote

Commote Modern local Notes
Arfon Uwch Gwyrfai Gwynedd Arfon above Gwyrfai
Arfon Is Gwyrfai Gwynedd Arfon beneath Gwyrfai

Dunoding Commote

Commote Modern local Notes
Ardudwy Meirionnydd area within Gwynedd
Eifionydd Dwyfor area within Gwynedd Named after Eifion ap Dunod ap Cunedda

Commote of Llyn

Commote Modern local Notes
Dinllaen Dwyfor council in Gwynedd county
Cymydmaen Dwyfor council in Gwynedd county
Cafflogion

Meirionnydd Commote

Commote Modern local Notes
Ystumaner Merionethshire council in Gwynedd county
Tal-y-bont

Lower Gwynedd, Conwy

Also known as Perfeddwlad, or "the Middle Country" or Gwynedd Is Conwy (Gwynedd below the Conwy, or lower Gwynedd)

Legacy

Following Edward's conquest, the lands of Gwynedd proper were divided among the English counties of Anglesey, Caernarfonshire, Merionethshire, Denbighshire, and Flintshire.[185] The Local Government Act 1972 reformed these, creating a new county (now called a "preserved county") of Gwynedd which comprised Anglesey and Llyn, Arfon, Dunoding, and Meirionydd on the mainland.[207][208] The modern principal area of Gwynedd established by the Local Government (Wales) Act 1994 no longer includes Anglesey.[209]

See also

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  116. ^ "Magnus Barefoot's Saga#Of the Fall of Earl Huge the Brave" . Heimskringla  – via Wikisource.
  117. ^ a b c Wilcott, Darrell. "The Ancestry of Edwin of Tegeingl".
  118. ^ Davies 1994, pp. 109, 127–130, 137, 141, 149, 166, 176..
  119. ^ a b c d e f Lloyd 2004, pp. 77–79
  120. ^ a b c d Lloyd 2004, pp. 80, 82–85
  121. ^ a b Warner 1997, pp. 69, 79
  122. ^ a b c Lloyd 2004, pp. 79–80
  123. ^ a b c d Pierce5 1959
  124. ^ a b c Lee5 1895
  125. ^ "Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd, King of Gwynedd". geni.com. 1100.
  126. ^ Lloyd 2004, p. 93.
  127. ^ Lloyd 2004, pp. 85, 93, 104.
  128. ^ Lloyd 2004, pp. 94–95.
  129. ^ a b c d e Lloyd 2004, p. 95
  130. ^ a b c d Warner 1997, p. 80
  131. ^ Llwyd 1832, pp. 80–81.
  132. ^ Lloyd 2004, p. 96.
  133. ^ a b Lloyd 2004, pp. 96–98
  134. ^ a b c d Lloyd 2004, p. 99
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  136. ^ "Plaque marks Welsh king's triumph". BBC. 26 January 2008.
  137. ^ a b c d Descriptio Cambriae, p. 351,491,511, at Google Books
  138. ^ a b c d Lloyd 2004, pp. 107–109
  139. ^ a b Lloyd 2004.
  140. ^ Lloyd 1896b, p. 89.
  141. ^ a b Davies 1994, pp. 125–126
  142. ^ a b c d e f g h Lloyd 2004, pp. 111–114
  143. ^ a b Davies 1994, pp. 103 128–129
  144. ^ Davies 1994, p. 148.
  145. ^ a b c d e Leslie1
  146. ^ Barbier 1908, p. 126.
  147. ^ Williams 1908, pp. 128–129.
  148. ^ Pierce6
  149. ^ Lloyd6
  150. ^ "Prince Madoc American legend set to bring surge in tourists for North Wales". walesexpress.com. 24 March 2018.
  151. ^ Llwyd 1832, pp. 81–82.
  152. ^ a b c d Lloyd5
  153. ^ a b c d Chisholm0 1911
  154. ^ Pierce8
  155. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Chisholm1
  156. ^ a b Lee6
  157. ^ Pierce10
  158. ^ Davies 1987, p. 294.
  159. ^ Davies 1987, p. 229, 241.
  160. ^ Williams 1860, p. 154.
  161. ^ Maund 2006, p. 193.
  162. ^ Williams 1860, pp. 158–159.
  163. ^ Turvery, Roger, ed. (2010). Twenty-One Welsh Princes. p. 86. ISBN 9781845272692.
  164. ^ Lynch 1995, p. 135.
  165. ^ Llwyd 1832, pp. 85–90.
  166. ^ "Iorwerth (cyfraith)" (PDF). cyfrath-hywel.org.uk.
  167. ^ Lloyd 2004, p. 297.
  168. ^ The Ancient Laws of Wales: Viewed Especially in Regard to the Light They Throw Upon the Origin of Some English Institutions at Google Books
  169. ^ Davies 1987, p. 249.
  170. ^ Williams 1860, p. 198.
  171. ^ a b c Lloyd7 1959
  172. ^ Lee7 1890
  173. ^ a b Pierce13 1959
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  175. ^ "ELEANOR DE MONTFORT (c. 1258–1282), princess and diplomat". Dictionary of Welsh Biography. National Library of Wales.
  176. ^ J. Beverley Smith (15 January 2014). Llywelyn ap Gruffudd: Prince of Wales. University of Wales Press. pp. 438–448. ISBN 978-1-78316-007-5.
  177. ^ Pierre Chaplais; Michael Jones; Malcolm Vale (1 January 1989). England and Her Neighbours, 1066–1453: Essays in Honour of Pierre Chaplais. A&C Black. p. 136. ISBN 978-1-85285-014-2.
  178. ^ Prestwich, Michael (2008). "Edward I (1239–1307)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/8517. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  179. ^ a b c d e f g h Leslie2 1888
  180. ^ a b Smith 2001, p. 577
  181. ^ a b Smith 2001, p. 576.
  182. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 24 January 2009.
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  185. ^ a b c d Edwards, Sir Owen Morgan (1906). "Chapter 12" . A Short History of Wales . Vol. 12. p. 58-59 – via Wikisource.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  186. ^ "The Welsh March". BBC. 26 August 2008.
  187. ^ Kathryn Hurlock (12 September 2012). Power, Preaching and the Crusades in Pura Wallia c.1180–c.1280. cambridge.org. Boydell & Brewer. pp. 94–108. ISBN 9781846155994.
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  192. ^ a b "Titles and Heraldry". princeofwales.gov.uk. Retrieved 14 December 2021.
  193. ^ Williams, Glamor. Recovery, reorientation and reformation. pp. 217–226. Wales, C. 1415–1642
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  201. ^ Catrin Beynon. "Gwenllian, Lost Princess of Wales". historic-uk.com.
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  203. ^ "Aberffraw". red-dragon-wales.com.
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Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Old Welsh (until 12th century)
    Middle Welsh (12th–14th century)
  2. ^ British Latin in use until 8th century. Medieval Latin used thereafter for legal and liturgical purposes.
  3. ^ History of Gwynedd during the High Middle Ages
  4. ^ Assessment from Davies novel 1994.
  5. ^ It took until 1282, when Edward I conquered Gwynedd, for the last part of Roman Britain to fall. Indeed a strong case can be made for Gwynedd as the very last part of the entire Roman Empire, east and west, to fall to the barbarians. (If we take into account of the temporary capture of Constantinople by 'Franks' in 1204, and of various Persian, Slav, Avar, and Seljuk invasions of Byzantine territory.)" Ward-Perkins was elaborating on an observation by J. Campbell,[56]
  6. ^ Cadwallon ap Cadfan (CÆDWALLA) was considered one of the legendary kings of Britain, like his father and his son being the final ruler from a line dating back to 1100 BC beginning with Brutus of Troy, according to Geoffrey of Monmouth and the Historia Regum Britanniae.[54]
  7. ^ Recovers Gwynedd, Norman invasion, Battle of Anglesey Sound, pgs 21–22, 36, 39, 40, later years 76–77
  8. ^ Of the three surviving groups of manuscripts of the Cyfraith Hywel (all dating from the 12th century or later), one group recognises Gwynedd exclusively, another Deheubarth exclusively, and the last both together. See: Wade-Evans, A.W. Welsh Medieval Law. "Introduction". Oxford Univ., 1909. Retrieved 30 January 2013.
  9. ^ It was hoped that placing a prelate loyal to the Normans over the traditionally independent Welsh church in Gwynedd would help to pacify the local inhabitants, and Hervé [113]recognised the primacy of the Archbishop of Canterbury over the episcopal see of Bangor, a recognition hitherto rejected by the Welsh church.
  10. ^ Mentioned in the Magnus Barefoot saga.[116]
  11. ^ Speculation about Owain might have shown him of restrained and prudent temperament, may have judged that aiding in Stephen's capture would lead to the restoration of Matilda and a strong royal government in England, a government which would support Marcher lords—support hitherto lacking since Stephen's usurpation.
  12. ^ Lloyd 2004 book, Owain and Henry II page, 99. 1070.
  13. ^ Owain 1160–1170, Lloyd 2004 Book
  14. ^ Quoting what Lloyd wrote, 2004.
  15. ^ emerging de facto statehood pg 148
  16. ^ It is therefore possible that Owain hoped to maintain this Irish connection by ensuring the succession of one of his sons born of this Irish woman, Pyfog. Furthermore, it seems illogical – given the fact Owain was so set on their succession and the respect he no doubt commanded in Ireland – that the mother of Rhun and Hywel was a mere commoner and that both those children were born out of wedlock.
  17. ^ What the annals record, is that in 1146 the eldest son and designated heir, Rhun – a man who was acclaimed as a great warrior and the "flower of Celtic chivalry", according to J.E. Lloyd,- "died" mysteriously, and that Hywel, his natural brother, was proclaimed the new edling, or heir.
  18. ^ and the internal strife appears to have been conflict between two rival factions: a pro-Irish 'legitimists' faction seeking to ensure the succession of Hywel and protect the legacy of Owain Gwynedd and his father, and a second distinctly anti-Irish coalition headed by Owain's widow.
  19. ^ However little information is available on these occurrences, and the divisions are vaguely unclear
  20. ^ The myth of transatlantic travel, pre Columbus era has been questioned yet rebuffed for centuries.[150]
  21. ^ Dafydd appears to have been recognised as pre-eminent amongst them and was regarded in some way as the overall leader.

General sources

Books

Primary sources

  • Barlow, Frank (2000). William Rufus. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-08291-6.
  • Bartlett, Robert (2000). England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings: 1075–1225. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-822741-8.
  • Davies, John (1994). A History of Wales. Penguin Group. ISBN 0140284753.
  • Lloyd, J. E. (2004). A History of Wales; From the Norman Invasion to the Edwardian Conquest. New York: Barnes & Noble Publishing, Inc. ISBN 0-7607-5241-9.
  • Llwyd, Angharad (1832). A history of the island of Anglesey.
  • Lowe, Walter Bezant (1912). The Heart of Northern Wales. Vol. 1.The Heart of Northern Wales at Google Books
  • Lynch, Frances M. B. (1995). Gwynedd (A Guide to Ancient and Historic Wales). The Stationery Office. ISBN 978-0-11-701574-6.
  • Maund, Kari L. (2006). The Welsh Kings: Warriors, Warlords, and Princes. searchworks.stanford.edu (3rd ed.). Tempus Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7524-2973-1.
  • Moore, David (2005). The Welsh Wars of Independence. Tempus Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7524-3321-9.
  • Parry, Thomas; Bell, H. Idris (1955). "A History of Welsh Literature". archive.org. Oxford University Press.
  • Walker, David (1990). Medieval Wales. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521311533.
  • Warner, Philip (1997). Famous Welsh Battles. New York: Barnes & Noble Publishing, Inc. ISBN 0-7607-0466-X.
  • Williams, W. Llewelyn (1908). Giraldus Cambrensis, The Itinerary Through Wales and the Description of Wales.

Secondary sources

Dictionary of Welsh biography sources

Wiki source – Dictionary of National Biography and Encyclopædia

External links

  • "The Kingdom of Gwynedd". ardal-wales.co.uk.
  • "Kingdom of Gwynedd". welshicons.org.
  • "The Middle Ages". library.wales.
  • "The Peniarth Manuscripts". library.wales.
  • Williams Ab Ithel, John, ed. (2012). Brut Y Tywysogion. cambridge.org. Cambridge Library Collection - Rolls. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9781139163484. ISBN 9781108043021.
  • Nancy Edwards. "Early Medieval Wales: material evidence and identity" (PDF). research.bangor.ac.uk.

kingdom, gwynedd, medieval, latin, venedotia, norwallia, middle, welsh, guynet, welsh, kingdom, roman, empire, successor, state, that, emerged, roman, britain, century, during, anglo, saxon, settlement, britain, teyrnas, gwynedd, welsh, 1216cadwaladr, circa, c. The Kingdom of Gwynedd Medieval Latin Venedotia Norwallia Middle Welsh Guynet 1 13 was a Welsh kingdom and a Roman Empire successor state that emerged in sub Roman Britain in the 5th century during the Anglo Saxon settlement of Britain 14 Kingdom of GwyneddTeyrnas Gwynedd Welsh 401 1216Cadwaladr circa 7th century flag of Gwynedd and Wales Llywelyn banner of the House of AberffrawAnthem Unbennaeth Prydain The Monarchy of Britain 1 2 3 Medieval kingdoms of Wales CapitalChester Deganwy 6th century 4 Llanfaes 9th century 5 Aberffraw 9 13th century 6 7 Rhuddlan 11th century 8 Abergwyngregyn 12 13th century 9 Common languagesWelsh Latin 10 a b ReligionCeltic Christianity 11 GovernmentMonarchy 12 401 440Cunedda 520 547Maelgwn Gwynedd 625 634Cadwallon ap Cadfan 1081 1137Gruffudd ap Cynan 1137 1170Owain Gwynedd 1195 1240Llywelyn the Great 1253 1282Llywelyn ap Gruffudd 1282 1283Dafydd ap GruffyddHistorical eraMiddle Ages Established401 Declaration of the Principality of Wales1216Currencyceiniog cyfreith ceiniog cwta 1 failed verification Preceded by Succeeded bySub Roman Britain Principality of WalesToday part ofUnited Kingdom Wales In Latin Gwynedd was often referred to in official medieval charters and acts of the 13th century as Principatus Norwallia Principality of North Wales Based in northwest Wales the rulers of Gwynedd repeatedly rose to dominance and were acclaimed as King of the Britons before losing their power in civil wars or invasions 15 The kingdom of Gruffydd ap Llywelyn the King of Wales from 1055 to 1063 was shattered by a Saxon invasion in 1063 just prior to the Norman invasion of Wales but the House of Aberffraw restored by Gruffudd ap Cynan slowly recovered and Llywelyn the Great of Gwynedd was able to proclaim the Principality of Wales at the Aberdyfi gathering of Welsh princes in 1216 16 17 18 In 1277 the Treaty of Aberconwy between Edward I of England and Llewelyn s grandson Llywelyn ap Gruffudd granted peace between the two but would also guarantee that Welsh self rule would end upon Llewelyn s death and so it represented the completion of the first stage of the conquest of Wales by Edward I 19 c Welsh tradition credited the founding of Gwynedd to the Brittonic polity of Gododdin Old Welsh Guotodin earlier Brittonic form Votadini from Lothian invading the lands of the Brittonic polities of the Deceangli Ordovices and Gangani in the 5th century 20 The sons of their leader Cunedda were said to have possessed the land between the rivers Dee and Teifi 21 The true borders of the realm varied over time but Gwynedd proper was generally thought to comprise the cantrefs of Aberffraw Cemais and Cantref Rhosyr on Anglesey and Arllechwedd Arfon Dunoding Dyffryn Clwyd Llŷn Rhos Rhufoniog and Tegeingl at the mountainous mainland region of Snowdonia opposite 22 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History background and familial descent 3 Gwynedd in the Early Middle Ages 3 1 Cunedda and his sons 3 2 Cadwallon ap Cadfan 3 3 Rhodri the Great and Aberffraw primacy 4 Gwynedd in the High Middle Ages 4 1 Gruffudd ap Cynan 4 1 1 The Expansion of Gwynedd 4 2 Owain Gwynedd 4 2 1 Civil war usurpation 1170 1195 and the Prince of Wales 5 Prince of Wales Welsh title 1218 1283 5 1 Llywelyn the Great 5 2 Prince Dafydd II 5 3 Prince Llywelyn II the Last 5 4 Prince Dafydd III 6 End of Independence 7 Military 8 Administration 8 1 Anglesey Welsh Ynys Mon 8 2 Upper Gwynedd Conwy 8 3 Lower Gwynedd Conwy 9 Legacy 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Explanatory notes 12 General sources 12 1 Books 12 1 1 Primary sources 12 1 2 Secondary sources 12 2 Dictionary of Welsh biography sources 12 3 Wiki source Dictionary of National Biography and Encyclopaedia 13 External linksEtymology EditThe name Gwynedd is believed to be a borrowing from early Irish reflective of Irish settlement in the area in antiquity either cognate with the Old Irish ethnic name Feni Irish People from Primitive Irish weidh n Forest People Wild People from Proto Indo European weydh wood wilderness or alternatively Old Irish fian war band from Proto Irish wena from Proto Indo European weyH1 chase pursue suppress 23 24 25 26 Ptolemy in the 1st century marks the Llŷn Peninsula as the Promontory of the Gangani 27 which is also a name he recorded in Ireland it s theorised in the 1st century BC some of the Gangani tribe may have landed in what is now the Llŷn Peninsula and drove out the Deceangli or the Ordovices tribe from that area either peacefully or by force The late and post Roman eras Irish from Leinster 20 may have arrived in Anglesey and elsewhere in northwest Wales with the name Llŷn derived from Laigin an Old Irish form that means Leinstermen or simply Leinster 28 The 5th century Cantiorix Inscription now in Penmachno church seems to be the earliest record of the name 20 It is in memory of a man named Cantiorix and the Latin inscription is Cantiorix hic iacit Venedotis cives fuit consobrinos Magli magistrati Cantiorix lies here He was a citizen of Gwynedd and a cousin of Maglos the magistrate 20 The use of terms such as citizen and magistrate may be cited as evidence that Romano British culture and institutions continued in Gwynedd long after the legions had withdrawn 20 History background and familial descent EditSee also History of Wales and list of rulers of Gwynedd The background involving the Kingdom of Gwynedd starts with the history of Wales After the last ice age Wales was settled during the prehistoric times 29 Stone Age sites have been discovered with tools made from flint such as near Llanfaethlu a site was rediscovered from 6000 years ago which was originally used for cooking 30 Further examples of human activity in Gwynedd and Anglesey are involved in places such as Bryn Celli Ddu on Anglesey 31 which was built in phases starting 5000 years ago 32 Archeological findings from the Bronze Age millenniums ago include findings such as the Arthog cauldron a bronze cauldron from 1100 BC found near the Merioneth border also named The Nannau Bucket similar to the Dowris bucket And the Moel Hebog shield which is also 3 000 years old similar to the Rhyd y gors example and more recently the Trawsfynydd tankard which was used to drink mead and beer between 100 BC and 75 AD 33 34 Bryn Eryr recreation of pre Roman roundhouse it s a 2 000 year old Celtic Iron Age home 35 Examples of early settlement in Gwynedd are Bryn Eryr near Llansadwrn Anglesey now found at the St Fagans National Museum of History and Garn Boduan a Celtic hillfort on the Llŷn Peninsula 36 Iron Age forts were being adapted until after the Roman conquest of Britain Castle of Buan Garn Boduan in Llŷn was recorded as being fortified until the 7th century 37 38 During the Roman period new roads and forts were constructed throughout the Roman empire and for centuries in Wales and England Welsh examples include Caer Gybi fort on Anglesey and Segontium in Caernarfon Gwynedd 32 39 The establishment of Christianity in Wales also gave rise to a new era the Romans founded towns with churches and installed governors During the centuries of sub Roman Britain new political structures were established 40 The Brythonic Kingdom of Gwynedd was established in the 5th century and it proved to be the most durable of these Brythonic states surviving until the late 13th century 14 Boundaries and names emerging from the 1st millennium AD onwards are still being used today to define towns and counties of the region 41 Noteworthy descendants from the Kingdom of Gwynedd include royalty such as Owain Glyndŵr 42 43 and the titular Prince of Wales 44 45 also the Salusbury family via Katheryn of Berain 46 The people mentioned can be associated with the Anglesey based Tudors of Penmynydd family The Tudors were ancestors and namesake to the former English Royal House of Tudor they were descended from the Welshman Maredudd ap Tudur 45 Ednyfed Fychan being his famous ancestor his family were seneschals to the Kings of Gwynedd 47 The Tudor dynasty became ancestors to the House of Stuart and the Stuarts formed the European Jacobite family they include direct descendants in United Kingdom Ireland France Germany Italy and other countries on the continent of Europe and all around the world 48 49 Gwynedd in the Early Middle Ages EditCunedda and his sons Edit See also List of rulers of Gwynedd House of CuneddaThe region became known as Venedotia in Latin The name was initially attributed to a specific Irish colony on Anglesey but broadened to refer to Irish settlers as a whole in North Wales by the 5th century 50 51 According to 9th century monk and chronicler Nennius North Wales was left defenseless by the Roman withdrawal and subject to increasing raids by marauders from the Isle of Man and Ireland a situation which led Cunedda 52 his sons and their entourage to migrate in the mid 5th century from Manaw Gododdin now Clackmannanshire to settle and defend North Wales against the raiders and bring the region within Romano British control Whether they were invited to keep out the invaders or were raiders themselves however is unknown 20 53 According to traditional pedigrees Cunedda s grandfather was Padarn Beisrudd Paternus of the red cloak an epithet which suggests that he wore the cloak of a Roman officer 20 and perhaps it was evidence of a high ranking officer 53 Nennius translated by John Allen Giles who wrote that Cunedda arrived in Gwynedd 146 years before the reign of his great grandson Maelgwn backdated in the usual Welsh Calendrical calculations from his death date in 547 which makes 401 the year of his arrival 54 recounts how Cunedda flourished in the 5th century brought order to North Wales and after his death Gwynedd was divided among his sons Dynod was awarded Dunoding another son Ceredig received Ceredigion Afloeg by Aflogion in Lleyn Dogfael by Dogfeiling in Dyffryn Clwyd and Edern by Edeirnion Osfeilion of Osfael has not yet been located Tybion the eldest son is said to have died in Manaw Gododdin but his son Meirion Marianus comes into the picture as lord of Meirionydd Einion Yrth completes the number Cadwallon Lawhir ap Einion one of his grandsons was the final leader to defeat of the Irish on Anglesey 53 However this overly neat origin myth has been met with scepticism d Early Welsh literature contains a wealth of stories seeking to explain place names and doubtless the story is propaganda aimed at justifying the right of Cunedda and his descendants to territories beyond the borders of the original Kingdom of Gwynedd That kingdom probably consisted of the two banks of the Menai Straits and the coast over towards the estuary of the River Conwy the foundations upon which Cunedda s descendants created a more extensive realm 20 The inhabitants of Gwynedd remained conscious of their Romano British heritage and an affinity with Rome survived long after the Empire retreated from Britain particularly with the use of Latin in writing and sustaining the Christian religion The ruling classes continued to emphasise Roman ancestors within their pedigrees as a way to link their rule with the old imperial Roman order suggesting stability and continuity with that old order 20 55 According to Professor John Davies T here is a determinedly Brythonic and indeed Roman air to early Gwynedd 20 So palpable was the Roman heritage felt that Professor Bryan Ward Perkins of Trinity College Oxford wrote It took until 1282 when Edward I conquered Gwynedd for the last part of Roman Britain to fall and a strong case can be made for Gwynedd as the very last part of the entire Roman Empire east and west to fall to the barbarians 55 e Nevertheless there was generally quick abandonment of Roman political social and ecclesiastical practices and institutions within Gwynedd and elsewhere in Wales Roman knowledge was lost as the Romano Britons shifted towards a streamlined militaristic near tribal society that no longer included the use of coinage and other complex industries dependent on a money economy architectural techniques using brick and mortar and even more basic knowledge such as the use of the wheel in pottery production 55 Ward Perkins suggests the Welsh had to abandon those Roman ways that proved insufficient or indeed superfluous to meet the challenge of survival they faced Militarized tribal societies despite their political fragmentation and internecine strife seem to have offered better protection against Germanic invasion than exclusive dependence on a professional Roman army that in the troubled years of the fifth century was all too prone to melt away or mutiny 55 Reverting to a more militaristic tribal society allowed the Welsh of Gwynedd to concentrate on those martial skills necessary for their very survival and the Romano Britons of western Britain did offer stiffer and an ultimately successful resistance 55 The region of Venedotia however had been under Roman military administration and included established Gaelic settlements and the civilian element there was less extensive perhaps facilitating technological loss citation needed Kingdom of Gwynedd c 620In the post Roman period the earliest rulers of Wales and Gwynedd may have exerted authority over regions no larger than the cantrefi hundreds described in Welsh law codified centuries later with their size somewhat comparable in size to the Irish tuath These early petty kings or princelings Lloyd uses the term chieftain adopted the title rhi in Welsh akin to the Irish Gaelic ri later replaced by brenin a title used to denote a less archaic form of kingship according to Professor John Davies Genealogical lists compiled around 960 bear out that a number of these early rulers claimed degrees of association with the old Roman order but do not appear in the official royal lineages It may be assumed that the stronger kings annexed the territories of their weaker neighbours and that the lineages of the victors are the only lineages to have survived according to Davies Smaller and weaker chieftains coalesced around more powerful princelings sometimes through voluntary vassalage or inheritance though at other times through conquest and the lesser princelings coalesced around still greater princelings until a regional prince could claim authority over the whole of north Wales from the River Dyfi in the south to the Dee in the east and incorporating Anglesey 20 page needed Other evidence supports Nennius s claim that a leader came to north Wales and brought the region a measure of stability 57 although an Irish Gaelic element remained until the mid 5th century Cunedda s heir Einion Yrth ap Cunedda defeated the remaining Gaelic Irish on Anglesey by 470 while his son Cadwallon Lawhir ap Einion appears to have consolidated the realm during the time of relative peace following the Battle of Badon where the Anglo Saxons were defeated During that peace he established a mighty kingdom After Cadwallon Gwynedd appears to have held a pre eminent position among the petty Cambrian states in the post Roman period citation needed The great grandson of Cunedda Maelgwn Hir Maelgwn the Tall 53 58 59 was regarded as an able military leader impetuous and generous 60 There are several legends about his life concerning either his own trickery and craftiness 61 or on the other hand miracles performed against him by Christian saints 62 He is attributed in some old stories as hosting the first Eisteddfod 63 and he is also one of five Celtic British kings castigated for their sins by the contemporary Christian writer Gildas who referred to him as Maglocunus meaning Prince Hound in Brittonic 64 written in the De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae Maelgwn was curiously described as the dragon of the island by Gildas which was possibly a title but explicitly as the most powerful of the five named British kings Y ou the last I write of but the first and greatest in evil more than many in ability but also in malice more generous in giving but also more liberal in sin strong in war but stronger to destroy your soul 65 Maelgwn eventually died from the plague in 547 60 leaving a succession crisis in his wake His son in law Elidyr Mwynfawr of the Kingdom of Strathclyde claimed the throne and invaded Gwynedd to displace Maelgwn s son Rhun Hir ap Maelgwn Elidyr was killed in the attempt 66 but his death was then avenged by his relatives who ravaged the coast of Arfon Rhun counter attacked and exacted the same penalty on the lands of his foes in what is now South and Central Scotland 67 The long distances these armies travelled suggests they were moving across the Irish Sea but because almost all of what is now northern England was at this point c 550 under Brittonic rule it is possible that his army marched to Strathclyde overland Rhun returned to Gwynedd and the rest of his reign was for the majority uneventful until the relatives of Elidir renewed their aggressions against Rhun who was killed in the conflict citation needed He was succeeded by his son or in some accounts nephew Beli in c 586 68 On the accession of Beli s son Iago ap Beli in c 599 the situation in Britain had deteriorated significantly Most of northern England had been overrun by the invading Angles of Deira and Bernicia who were in the process of forming the Kingdom of Northumbria In a rare show of common interest it appears that Gwynedd and the neighbouring Kingdom of Powys acted in concert to rebuff the Anglian advance but were defeated at the Battle of Chester in 613 Following this catastrophe the approximate borders of northern Wales were set with the city of Caerlleon now called Chester and the surrounding Cheshire Plain falling under the control of the Anglo Saxons citation needed Beli s grandson was Cadfan ap Iago from the line of Maelgwn his tombstone in Gwynedd wrote in Latin Catamanus rex sapientisimus opinatisimus most renowned he was an ancestor of the future Kings of Gwynedd 69 70 Cadwallon ap Cadfan Edit Gravestone of Cadfan ap Iago father of Cadwallon ap CadfanThe Battle of Chester did not end the ability of the Welsh to seriously threaten the Anglo Saxon polities 71 Among the most powerful of the early kings was Cadwallon ap Cadfan c 624 634 72 73 grandson of Iago ap Beli He became engaged in an initially disastrous campaign against Northumbria where following a series of epic defeats he was confined first to Anglesey 74 and then just to Puffin Island citation needed before being forced into exile across the Irish Sea to Dublin a place which would come to host many royal refugees from Gwynedd All must have seemed lost but Cadwallon Welsh Meigen raised an enormous army and after a brief time in Guernsey he invaded Dumnonia relieved the West Welsh who were suffering a Mercian invasion and forced the pagan Penda of Mercia into an alliance against Northumbria citation needed With new vigour Cadwallon returned to his Northumbrian foes defeated their armies and slew a series of their kings In this furious campaign his armies devastated Northumbria captured and sacked York in 633 and briefly controlled the kingdom 74 At this time according to Bede many Northumbrians were slaughtered with savage cruelty by Cadwallon 75 H e neither spared the female sex nor the innocent age of children but with savage cruelty put them to tormenting deaths ravaging all their country for a long time and resolving to cut off all the race of the English within the borders of Britain Bede Ecclesiastical History of the English People 76 Despite the war and 14 battles undertaken by the allied forces of Gwynedd and Mercia against Northumbria of which the chief one was the Battle of Cefn Digoll in 632 an alliance was concluded when Cadwallon married Alcfritha daughter of Pybba of Mercia However the effect of these tumultuous events would come to be short lived for he died in battle in 634 close to Hadrian s Wall at the Battle of Heavenfield 74 72 On account of these deeds he and his son Cadwaladr who fought at the Battle of the Winwaed 77 appear to have been considered the last two High Kings of Britain Cadwaladr presided over a period of consolidation and devoted much time to the Church earning the title Bendigaid for Blessed As a monk in later life he was involved with Clynnog s abbey and St Cadwaladr s Church Llangadwaladr on Anglesey 78 The Tudors of Penmynydd and Henry VII of England in particular claimed descent from Cadwaladr in the twenty second degree and it was he Harri Tudor who raised his Red Dragon banner at the Battle of Bosworth Field 54 77 79 f Rhodri the Great and Aberffraw primacy Edit During the later 9th and 10th centuries the coastal areas of Gwynedd particularly Anglesey were coming under increasing attack by the Vikings 80 These raids no doubt had a seriously debilitating effect on the country but fortunately for Gwynedd the victims of the Vikings were not confined to Wales The House of Cunedda as the direct descendants of Cunedda are known eventually expired in the male line in 825 upon the death of Hywel ap Rhodri Molwynog and as John Edward Lloyd put it a stranger possessed the throne of Gwynedd 81 Kingdom of Gwynedd c 830This stranger who became the next King of Gwynedd was Merfyn Frych Merfyn the Freckled 82 When however Merfyn Frych s pedigree is examined and to the Welsh pedigree meant everything he seems not a stranger but a direct descendant of the ancient ruling line He was the son of Gwriad the contemporaneous king of the Isle of Man and depending on the source either son or husband of Essyllt daughter of Cynan Dindaethwy a former King of Gwynedd The most ancient genealogical sources agree that Merfyn was the son of Essyllt 83 heiress and cousin of the aforementioned Hywel ap Caradog last of the ruling House of Cunedda in Gwynedd and that Merfyn s male line went back to the Hen Ogledd to Llywarch Hen 82 a first cousin of Urien and thus a direct descendant of Coel Hen Thus the House of Cunedda and the new House of Aberffraw as Merfyn s descendants came to be known shared Coel Hen as a common ancestor although the House of Cunedda traced their line through Gwawl his daughter and wife of Cunedda 84 Merfyn married Nest ferch Cadell the sister or daughter of Cyngen ap Cadell the King of Powys of the Gwertherion dynasty and founded the house of Aberffraw named after his principal court on Anglesey 85 86 No written records are preserved from the Britons of southern Scotland and northern England and it is very likely that Merfyn Frych brought many of these legends as well as his pedigree with him when he came to north Wales It appears most probable that it was at Merfyn s court that all the lore of the north was collected and written down during his reign and that of his son 87 Rhodri the Great 844 878 son of Merfyn Frych and Nest ferch Cadell 88 was able to add Powys to his realm after its king his maternal uncle died on pilgrimage to Rome in 855 Later he married Angharad ferch Meurig the sister of King Gwgon of Seisyllwg When Gwgon drowned without heir in 872 Rhodri became steward over the kingdom and able to install his son Cadell ap Rhodri as a subject king Thus he became the first ruler since the days of Cunedda to control the greater part of Wales 89 90 When Rhodri died in 878 the relative unity of Wales ended and it was once again divided into its component parts each ruled by one of his sons Rhodri s eldest son Anarawd ap Rhodri inherited Gwynedd and would firmly establish the princely House of Aberffraw that would come to rule Gwynedd with but a few interruptions until 1283 91 From the successes of Rhodri and the seniority of Anarawd among his sons the Aberffraw family claimed primacy over all other Welsh lords including the powerful kings of Powys and Deheubarth 92 93 g In The History of Gruffudd ap Cynan written in the late 12th century 94 95 the family asserted its rights as the senior line of descendants from Rhodri the Great who had conquered most of Wales during his lifetime Gruffudd ap Cynan s biography was first written in Latin and intended for a wider audience outside Wales The significance of this claim was that the Aberffraw family owed nothing to the English king for its position in Wales and that they held authority in Wales by absolute right through descent wrote historian John Davies 92 The House of Aberffraw was displaced in 942 by Hywel Dda a King of Deheubarth from a junior line of descent from Rhodri Mawr 96 97 This occurred because Idwal Foel 98 the King of Gwynedd was determined to cast off English overlordship and took up arms against the new English king Edmund I Idwal and his brother Elisedd were both killed in battle against Edmund s forces 99 By normal custom Idwal s crown should have passed to his sons Ieuaf and Iago ab Idwal but Hywel Dda intervened and sent Iago and Ieuaf into exile in Ireland and established himself as ruler over Gwynedd until his death in 950 when the House of Aberffraw was restored Nonetheless surviving manuscripts of Cyfraith Hywel recognise the importance of the lords of Aberffraw as overlords of Wales along with the rulers of Deheubarth 100 h Between 986 and 1081 the throne of Gwynedd was often in contention with the rightful kings frequently displaced by rivals within and outside the realm One of these Gruffydd ap Llywelyn originally from Powys displaced the Aberffraw line from Gwynedd making himself ruler there and by 1055 was able to make himself king of most of Wales 101 He became powerful enough to present a real menace to England and annexed some neighbouring parts after several victories over English armies Eventually he was defeated by Harold Godwinson in 1063 and later killed by his own men in a deal to secure peace with England 102 Bleddyn ap Cynfyn and his brother Rhiwallon of the Mathrafal dynasty of Powys Gruffudd s maternal half brothers came to terms with Harold and took over the rule of Gwynedd and Powys 103 Shortly after the Norman conquest of England in 1066 the Normans began to exert pressure on the eastern border of Gwynedd They were helped by internal strife following the killing of Bleddyn ap Cynfyn in 1075 by his second cousin Rhys ap Owain King of Deheubarth 103 Another relative of Bleddyn s Trahaearn ap Caradog seized the throne but was soon challenged by Gruffudd ap Cynan 104 the exiled grandson of Iago ab Idwal ap Meurig who had been living in the Norse Gael stronghold of Dublin 105 106 In 1081 Trahaearn was killed by Gruffudd in battle and the ancient line of Rhodri Mawr was restored 104 Gwynedd in the High Middle Ages EditSee also Culture of Gwynedd during the High Middle Ages and History of Gwynedd during the High Middle Ages Gruffudd ap Cynan Edit Wales c 1063 1081The Aberffraw dynasty suffered various depositions by rivals in Deheubarth Powys and England in the 10th and 11th centuries Gruffudd ap Cynan c 1055 1137 16 107 who grew up in exile in Norse Gael Dublin regained his inheritance following his victory at the Battle of Mynydd Carn in 1081 over his Mathrafal rivals then in control of Gwynedd 108 109 However Gruffudd s victory was short lived as the Normans launched an invasion of Wales following the Saxon revolt in northern England known as the Harrowing of the North 110 Shortly after the Battle of Mynydd Carn in 1081 Gruffudd was lured into a trap with the promise of an alliance but seized by Hugh d Avranches Earl of Chester in an ambush near Corwen 109 111 Earl Hugh claimed the Perfeddwlad up to the River Clwyd the commotes of Tegeingl and Rhufoniog the modern counties of Denbighshire Flintshire and Wrexham as part of Chester and viewed the restoration of the Aberffraw family in Gwynedd as a threat to his own expansion into Wales The lands west of the Clwyd were intended for his cousin Robert of Rhuddlan and their advance extended to the Llŷn Peninsula by 1090 By 1094 almost the whole of Wales was occupied by Norman forces However although they erected many castles Norman control in most regions of Wales was tenuous at best Motivated by local anger over the gratuitously cruel invaders and led by the historic ruling houses Welsh control over the greater part of Wales was restored by 1100 109 In an effort to further consolidate his control over Gwynedd Earl Hugh of Chester had Hervey le Breton elected as Bishop of Bangor in 1092 and consecrated by Thomas of Bayeux Archbishop of York 112 i However the Welsh parishioners remained hostile to Hervey s appointment and the bishop was forced to carry a sword with him and rely on a contingent of Norman knights for his protection 114 115 Additionally Hervey routinely excommunicated parishioners who he perceived as challenging his spiritual and temporal authority 114 Gruffudd ap Cynan escapes from Chester Illustration by T Prytherch in 1900Gruffudd escaped imprisonment in Chester and slew Robert of Rhuddlan in a beachside battle at Deganwy on 3 July 1093 111 Gruffudd recovered Gwynedd by 1095 and by 1098 Gruffudd allied with Cadwgan ap Bleddyn of the Mathrafal house of Powys their traditional dynastic rivalry notwithstanding Gruffudd and Cadwgan led the Welsh resistance to the Norman occupation in north and mid Wales However by 1098 Earl Hugh of Chester and Hugh of Montgomery 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury advanced their army to the Menai Strait with Gruffudd and Cadwgan regrouping on defensible Anglesey where they planned to make retaliatory strikes from their island fortress Gruffudd hired a Norse fleet from a settlement in Ireland to patrol the Menai and prevent the Norman army from crossing however the Normans were able to pay off the fleet to instead ferry them to Mon Betrayed Gruffudd and Cadwgan were forced to flee to Ireland in a skiff 108 109 The Normans landed on Anglesey and their furious victory celebrations which followed were exceptionally violent with rape and carnage committed by the Norman army left unchecked The earl of Shrewsbury had an elderly priest mutilated and made the church of Llandyfrydog a kennel for his dogs 108 During the celebrations a Norse fleet led by Magnus Barefoot King of Norway j appeared off the coast at Puffin Island and in the battle that followed known as the Battle of Anglesey Sound Magnus shot dead the earl of Shrewsbury with an arrow to the eye The Norse left as suddenly and as mysteriously as they had arrived leaving the Norman army weakened and demoralised 108 The Norman army retired to England leaving a Welshman Owain ab Edwin of Tegeingl in command of a token force to control Ynys Mon now Anglesey and upper Gwynedd and ultimately abandoning any colonisation plans there 108 117 Owain ap Edwin transferred his allegiance to Chester following the defeat of his ally Trahaearn ap Caradog in 1081 a move which earned him the epithet Bradwr the Traitor Welsh Owain Fradwr among the Welsh 117 In late 1098 Gruffudd and Cadwgan landed in Wales and recovered Angelsey without much difficulty with Herve the Breton fleeing Bangor for safety in England Over the course of the next three years Gruffudd was able to recover upper Gwynedd to the Conwy defeating Hugh Earl of Chester In 1101 after Earl Hugh s death Gruffudd and Cadwgan came to terms with England s new king Henry I who was consolidating his own authority and also eager to come to terms In the negotiations which followed Henry I recognised Gruffudd s ancestral claims of Angelsey Llŷn Dunoding Eifionydd and Ardudwy and Arllechwedd being the lands of upper Gwynedd to the Conwy which were already firmly in Gruffudd s control Cadwgan regained Ceredigion and his share of the family inheritance in Powys from the new earl of Shrewsbury Robert of Belleme 108 With the settlement reached between Henry I and Gruffudd and other Welsh lords the dividing of Wales between Pura Wallia the lands under Welsh control and Marchia Wallie Welsh lands under Norman control came into existence Author and historian John Davies notes that the border shifted on occasion in one direction and in the other but remained more or less stable for almost the next two hundred years 118 After generations of incessant warfare Gruffudd began the reconstruction of Gwynedd intent on bringing stability to his country According to Davies Gruffudd sought to give his people the peace to plant their crops in the full confidence that they would be able to harvest them 109 Gruffudd consolidated royal authority in north Wales and offered sanctuary to displaced Welsh from the Perfeddwlad particularly from Rhos at the time harassed by Richard 2nd Earl of Chester 119 Alarmed by Gruffudd s growing influence and authority in north Wales and on pretext that Gruffudd sheltered rebels from Rhos against Chester Henry I launched a campaign against Gwynedd and Powys in 1116 which included a vanguard commanded by King Alexander I of Scotland 108 109 While Owain ap Cadwgan of Ceredigion sought refuge in Gwynedd s mountains Maredudd ap Bleddyn of Powys made peace with the English king as the Norman army advanced 108 There were no battles or skirmishes fought in the face of the vast host brought into Wales rather Owain and Gruffudd entered into truce negotiations Owain ap Cadwgan regained royal favour relatively easily However Gruffudd was forced to render homage and fealty and pay a heavy fine though he lost no land or prestige 119 The invasion left a lasting impact on Gruffudd who by 1116 was in his 60s and with failing eyesight For the remainder of his life while Gruffudd continued to rule in Gwynedd his sons Cadwallon Owain and Cadwaladr would lead Gwynedd s army after 1120 108 Gruffudd s policy which his sons would execute and later rulers of Gwynedd adopted was to recover Gwynedd s primacy without blatantly antagonising the English crown 108 119 The Expansion of Gwynedd Edit In 1120 a minor border war between Llywarch ab Owain lord of a commote in the Dyffryn Clwyd cantref and Hywel ab Ithel lord of Rhufoniog and Rhos brought Powys and Chester into conflict in the Perfeddwlad Powys brought a force of 400 warriors to the aid of its ally Rhufoniog while Chester sent Norman knights from Rhuddlan to the aid of Dyffryn Clwyd The bloody Battle of Maes Maen Cymro fought 1 mile 1 5 kilometres northwest of Ruthin ended with Llywarch ab Owain slain and the defeat of Dyffryn Clwyd However it was a pyrrhic victory as the battle left Hywel ab Ithel mortally wounded The last of his line when Hywel ab Ithel died six weeks later he left Rhufoniog and Rhos bereft Powys however was not strong enough to garrison Rhufoniog and Rhos nor was Chester able to exert influence inland from its coastal holdings of Rhuddlan and Degannwy With Rhufoniog and Rhos abandoned Gruffudd annexed the cantrefs 119 On the death of Einion ap Cadwgan lord of Meirionnydd a quarrel engulfed his kinsmen on who should succeed him Meirionnydd was then a vassal cantref of Powys and the family there a cadet of the Mathrafal house of Powys Gruffudd gave licence to his sons Cadwallon and Owain to press the opportunity the dynastic strife in Meirionnydd presented The brothers raided Meirionnydd with the Lord of Powys as important there as he was in the Perfeddwlad However it would not be until 1136 that the cantref was firmly within Gwynedd s control Perhaps because of their support of Earl Hugh of Chester Gwynedd s rival in 1124 Cadwallon slew the three rulers of Dyffryn Clwyd his maternal uncles bringing the cantref firmly under Gwynedd s vassalage that year 119 And in 1125 Cadwallon slew the grandsons of Edwin ap Goronwy of Tegeingl leaving Tegeingl bereft of lordship 117 However in 1132 while on campaign in the commote of Nanheudwy near Llangollen victorious Cadwallon was defeated in battle and slain by an army from Powys The defeat checked Gwynedd s expansion for a time much to the relief of the men of Powys wrote historian Sir John Edward Lloyd J E Lloyd 119 In 1136 a campaign against the Normans was launched from Gwynedd in revenge for the execution of Gwenllian ferch Gruffudd ap Cynan the wife of the King of Deheubarth and the daughter of Gruffudd When word reached Gwynedd of Gwenllian s death and the revolt in Gwent Gruffudd s sons Owain and Cadwaladr invaded Norman controlled Ceredigion taking Llanfihangle Aberystwyth and Llanbadarn 120 121 Liberating Llanbadarn one local chronicler hailed Owain and Cadwaladr both as bold lions virtuous fearless and wise who guard the churches and their indwellers defenders of the poor who overcome their enemies affording a safest retreat to all those who seek their protection 120 The brothers restored the Welsh monks of Llanbadarn who had been displaced by monks from Gloucester brought there by the Normans who had controlled Ceredigion By late September 1136 a vast Welsh host gathered in Ceredigion which included the combined forces of Gwynedd Deheubarth and Powys and met the Norman army at the Battle of Crug Mawr at Cardigan Castle The battle turned into a rout and then into a resounding defeat of the Normans 120 Gruffudd s remains were interred in a tomb in the presbytery of Bangor CathedralWhen their father Gruffudd died in 1137 the brothers Owain and Cadwaladr were on a second campaign in Ceredigion and took the castles of Ystrad Meurig Lampeter Stephen s Castle and Castell Hywell Humphries Castle 120 Gruffudd ap Cynan left a more stable realm than had hitherto existed in Gwynedd for more than 100 years No foreign army was able to cross the Conwy into upper Gwynedd The stability of Gruffudd s long reign allowed for Gwynedd s Welsh to plan for the future without fear that home and harvest would go to the flames from invaders 122 Settlements became more permanent with buildings of stone replacing timber structures Stone churches in particular were built across Gwynedd with so many limewashed that Gwynedd was bespangled with them as is the firmament with stars Gruffudd had built stone churches at his royal manors and Lloyd suggests Gruffudd s example led to the rebuilding of churches with stone in Penmon Aberdaron and Towyn in the Norman fashion 122 Gruffudd promoted the primacy of the Episcopal See of Bangor in Gwynedd and funded the building of Bangor Cathedral during the episcopate of David the Scot Bishop of Bangor between 1120 and 1139 Gruffudd s remains were interred in a tomb in the presbytery of Bangor Cathedral 122 Owain Gwynedd Edit Owain ap Gruffudd Owain Gwynedd c 1100 23 or 28 November 1170 123 124 125 succeeded his father to the greater portion of Gwynedd in accordance with Welsh law the Cyfraith Hywel the Laws of Hywel and became known as Owain Gwynedd to differentiate him from another Owain ap Gruffudd the Mathrafal ruler of Powys known as Owain Cyfeiliog 126 Cadwaladr Gruffudd s youngest son inherited the commote of Aberffraw on Ynys Mon now Anglesey and the recently conquered Meirionydd and northern Ceredigion i e Ceredigion between the rivers Aeron and the Dyfi 127 By 1141 Cadwaladr and Madog ap Maredudd of Powys led a Welsh vanguard as an ally of the Earl of Chester in the Battle of Lincoln and joined in the rout which made Stephen of England prisoner of Empress Matilda for a year Owain however did not participate in the battle keeping the majority of Gwynedd s army at home 128 k Owain and Cadwaladr came to blows in 1143 when Cadwaladr was implicated in the murder of King Anarawd ap Gruffudd of Deheubarth Owain s ally and future son in law on the eve of Anarawd s wedding to Owain s daughter 129 130 Owain followed a diplomatic policy of binding other Welsh rulers to Gwynedd through dynastic marriages and Cadwaladr s border dispute and murder of Anarawd threatened Owain s efforts and credibility 121 As ruler of Gwynedd Owain stripped Cadwaladr of his lands with Owain s son Hywel dispatched to Ceredigion where he burned Cadwaladr s castle at Aberystwyth Cadwaladr fled to Ireland and hired a Norse fleet from Dublin bringing the fleet to Abermenai to compel Owain to reinstate him 129 This same fleet of ships would be considered a sizeable one to be able to face the fleet of Stephen King of England as well as The Irish and Scottish at Abermenai Point prior in 1142 131 Taking advantage of the brotherly strife and perhaps with the tacit understanding of Cadwaladr the marcher lords mounted incursions into Wales 130 Realizing the wider ramifications of the war before him Owain and Cadwaladr came to terms and reconciled with Cadwaladr restored to his lands 129 130 Peace between the brothers held until 1147 when an unrecorded event occurred which led Owain s sons Hywel and Cynan to drive Cadwaladr out of Meirionydd and Ceredigon with Cadwaladr retreating to Mon 129 Again an accord was reached with Cadwaladr retaining Aberffraw until a more serious breach occurred in 1153 when he was forced into exile in England where his wife was the sister of Gilbert de Clare 1st Earl of Hertford and the niece of Ranulf de Gernon 4th Earl of Chester 129 130 In 1146 news reached Owain that his favoured eldest son and heir Rhun ab Owain Gwynedd died Owain was overcome with grief falling into a deep depression from which none could console him until news reached him that Mold Castle in Tegeingl had fallen to Gwynedd reminding Owain that he had still a country for which to live wrote historian Sir John Edward Lloyd 132 Between 1148 and 1151 Owain I of Gwynedd fought against Madog ap Maredudd of Powys Owain s son in law and against the Earl of Chester for control of Ial Yale with Owain having secured Rhuddlan Castle and all of Tegeingl from Chester 133 123 By 1154 Owain had brought his men within sight of the red towers of the great city on the Dee wrote Lloyd 133 Having spent three years consolidating his authority in the vast Angevin Empire Henry II of England resolved on a strategy against Owain I of Gwynedd by 1157 By now Owain s enemies had joined Henry II s camp enemies such as his wayward brother Cadwaladr and in particular the support of Madog of Powys l Henry II raised his feudal host and marched into Wales from Chester Owain positioned himself and his army at Dinas Basing Basingwerk barring the road to Rhuddlan setting up a trap in which Henry II would send his army along the direct road on the coast while he crossed through the woods to out flank Owain The King of Gwynedd anticipated this and dispatched his sons Dafydd ab Owain Gwynedd and Cynan into the woods with an army catching Henry II unaware 134 135 In the melee which followed Henry II might have been slain had not Roger de Clare 2nd Earl of Hertford rescued the king Henry II retreated and made his way back to his main army by now slowly advancing towards Rhuddlan Not wishing to engage the Norman army directly Owain repositioned himself first at St Asaph then further west clearing the road for Henry II to enter into Rhuddlan ingloriously 134 Once in Rhuddlan Henry II received word that his naval expedition had failed as instead of meeting Henry II at Degannwy or Rhuddlan it had gone to plunder Anglesey this resulted in the Battle of Ewloe and has since been commemorated with a plaque 850 years after the battle of 1157 during 2007 136 In a later letter to the Byzantine emperor Henry probably recalled these experiences when he wrote A people called Welsh so bold and ferocious that when unarmed they do not fear to encounter an armed force being ready to shed their blood in defence of their country and to sacrifice their lives for renown 137 The naval expedition was led by Henry II s maternal uncle Empress Matilda s half brother Henry FitzRoy and when they landed on Mon Henry FitzRoy had the churches of Llanbedr Goch and Llanfair Mathafarn Eithaf torched During the night the men of Mon gathered together and the next morning fought and defeated the Norman army with Henry FitzRoy falling under a shower of lances The defeat of his navy and his own military difficulties had convinced Henry II that he had gone as far as was practical that year in his effort to subject Owain and the King offered terms 134 Owain I of Gwynedd ever prudent and sagacious recognised that he needed time to further consolidate power and agreed to the terms Owain was to render homage and fealty to the King and resign Tegeingl and Rhuddlan to Chester and restore Cadwaladr to his possessions in Gwynedd 134 The death of Madog ap Meredudd of Powys in 1160 opened an opportunity for Owain I of Gwynedd to further press Gwynedd s influence at the expense of Powys 138 139 m However Owain continued to further Gwynedd s expansion without rousing the English crown maintaining his prudent policy of Quieta non movere translated from Latin do not move settled things n It was a policy of outward conciliation while masking his own consolidation of authority To further demonstrate his good will in 1160 Owain handed over to the English crown the fugitive Einion Clud By 1162 Owain was in possession of the Powys cantref of Cyfeiliog and its castle Tafolwern and ravaged another Powys cantref Arwystli slaying its lord Hywel ab Ieuaf 138 Owain s strategy was in sharp contrast to Rhys ap Gruffudd King of Deheubarth who in 1162 rose in open revolt against the Normans in south Wales drawing Henry II back to England from the continent 140 In 1163 Henry II quarrelled with Thomas Becket the Archbishop of Canterbury causing growing divisions between the king s supporters and the archbishop s supporters With discontent mounting in England Owain of Gwynedd joined with Rhys ap Gruffudd of Deheubarth in a second grand Welsh revolt against Henry II 138 141 England s king who only the prior year had pardoned Rhys ap Gruffudd for his 1162 revolt assembled a vast host against the allied Welsh with troops drawn from all over the Angevin empire assembling in Shrewsbury and with the Norse of Dublin paid to harass the Welsh coast 138 While his army gathered on the Welsh frontier Henry II left for the continent to negotiate a truce with France and Flanders to not disturb his peace while campaigning in Wales 142 However when Henry II returned to England he found that the war had already begun with Owain s son Dafydd raiding Angevin positions in Tegeingl exposing the castles of Rhuddlan and Basingwerk to serious dangers wrote Lloyd Henry II rushed to north Wales for a few days to shore up defences there before returning to his main army now gathering in Oswestery 142 The vast host gathered before the allied Welsh principalities represented the largest army yet assembled for their conquest a circumstance which further drew the Welsh allies into a closer confederacy wrote Lloyd 142 With Owain I of Gwynedd the overall battle commander and with his brother Cadwaladr as his second Owain assembled the Welsh host at Corwen in the vale of Edeyrion where he could best resist Henry II s advance 142 The Angevin army advanced from Oswestry into Wales crossing the mountains towards Mur Castell and found itself in the thick forest of the Ceiriog Valley where they were forced into a narrow thin line Owain I had positioned a band of skirmishers in the thick woods overlooking the pass which harassed the exposed army from a secured position Henry II ordered the clearing of the woods on either side to widen the passage through the valley and to lessen the exposure of his army The road his army travelled later became known as the Ffordd y Saeson the English Road and leads through heath and bog towards the Dee In a dry summer the moors may have been passable but on this occasion the skies put on their most wintry aspect and the rain fell in torrents flooding the mountain meadows until the great Angevin encampment became a morass wrote Lloyd In the face of hurricane force wind and rain diminishing provisions and an exposed supply line stretching through hostile country subject to enemy raids and with a demoralised army Henry II was forced into a complete retreat without even a semblance of a victory 142 In frustration Henry II had twenty two Welsh hostages mutilated the sons of Owain s supporters and allies including two of Owain s own sons In addition to his failed campaign in Wales Henry s mercenary Norse navy which he had hired to harass the Welsh coast turned out to be too few for use and were disbanded without engagement 142 Henry II s Welsh campaign was a complete failure with the king abandoning all plans for the conquest of Wales returning to his court in Anjou and not returning to England for another four years 142 Lloyd wrote It is true that Henry II did not cross swords with Owain I but the elements had done their work for the Welsh the stars in their courses had fought against the pride of England and humbled it to the very dust To conquer a land which was defended not merely by the arms of its valiant and audacious sons but also by tangled woods and impassable bogs by piercing winds and pitiless storms of rain seemed a hopeless task and Henry resolved to no longer attempt it 142 Owain expanded his international diplomatic offensive against Henry II by sending an embassy to Louis VII of France in 1168 led by Arthur of Bardsey Bishop of Bangor 1166 1177 who was charged with negotiating a joint alliance against Henry II With Henry II distracted by his widening quarrel with Thomas Becket Owain s army recovered Tegeingl for Gwynedd by 1169 141 Lloyd quotes 123 The praises so repeatedly accorded to his many personal qualities by contemporary poets and indeed by several public figures who could not have been predisposed in his favour have so genuine a tone about them that the progressive trends in all the arts of peace and war discerned in 12th century Wales it must be concluded were in large measure due to the fostering genius of Owain the Great In his later reign Owain I was the styled princeps Wallensium Latin for the Prince of the Welsh a title of substance given his leadership of the Welsh and victory against the English king wrote historian Dr John Davies 143 Additionally Owain commissioned the Life of Gruffudd ap Cynan the biography of his father in which Owain firmly asserted his primacy over other Welsh rulers by absolute right through descent from Rhodri the Great according to Davies 92 Owain I was the eldest male descendant of Rhodri the Great through paternal descent citation needed The adoption of the title prince Latin princeps Welsh tywysog rather than king Latin rex Welsh brenin did not mean a diminution in status according to Davies The use of the title prince was a recognition of the ruler of Gwynedd in relation to the wider international feudal world The princes of Gwynedd exercised greater status and prestige than the earls counts and dukes of the Angevin empire suggesting a similar status as that of the King of Scots himself nominally a vassal of the King of England argued Davies As Welsh society became further influenced by feudal Europe the princes of Gwynedd would in turn use feudalism to strengthen their own authority over lesser Welsh lords a two edged sword for the King of England wrote Davies 143 Though Gwynedd s princes recognised the de jure suzerainty of the King of England there remained well established Welsh law separate from English law and were independent de facto wrote Davies 144 o Civil war usurpation 1170 1195 and the Prince of Wales Edit Welsh manuscripts and Annals state the events which unfolded during the end of the 12th century This story of the Royal court of Gwynedd suffering an uprising stems from the Norman invasion of Wales a century prior to the civil strife of Owain Gwynedd and his immediate family The internal wranglings for the crown of Gwynedd begun with two sons Rhun ab Owain Gwynedd and Hywel ab Owain Gwynedd who were illegitimate by Owain s Irish wife Pyfog 124 Owain and his father Gruffudd ap Cynan both had a Norse Irish connection in their immediate family and would have used this allegiance to their advantage especially Gruffudd who hired and army fleets of ships to invade North Wales himself 107 124 p In 1146 Hywel and Cadell ap Gruffydd of Deheubarth had combined their forces to battle against invading Normans who had built castles in west Wales they took Carmarthen Llanstephan and Wiston castles 96 q Hywel ab Owain Gwynedd duly succeeded his father for a short lived term during 1170 96 145 Due to the Norman invasion of Wales the realm was in civil war r Princess Dowager wife of Owain Gwynedd Cristin verch Goronwy who promoted her own son Dafydd ab Owain Gwynedd Dafydd I David I as Prince of Gwynedd ahead of Hywel and any other senior son of Owain Gwynedd Dafydd I made his move and within a few months of his succession Hywel was overthrown and killed at the Battle of Pentraeth in 1171 96 145 146 147 Due to splinter factions the Kingdom s royal family begun to move away from Gwynedd it is Maelgwn ab Owain Gwynedd died after 1174 strife who appeared to have gained Anglesey 145 148 whilst the sons of Cynan held the cantrefs of Meirionnydd Eifionydd and Ardudwy between them s 149 Dayfdd I was of Welsh royal stock although his parents union wasn t recognised by the church and he was deemed illegitimate his parents Owain and Cristin were first cousins he would still marry royalty his wife being the half sister of Henry II As a Prince he made the most of his position as a son of Owain Gwynedd and it was Dafydd I who waged a war on his brothers when he won the Crown at the battle of Pentraeth Dafydd I King of Gwynedd was his title and his merciless rule continued when he used his powers to harass his brothers into leaving Gwyendd at one stage in 1173 Dafydd I imprisoned all of his siblings except for Madoc and Maelgwn It was Madoc also known as Madog ab Owain Gwynedd who after his father s death is claimed to have set sail across the Atlantic Ocean and discovered America t After 3 years of Maelgwn possessing Anglesey he jailed him too Eventually Dafydd I was himself imprisoned by the future Prince of Wales Llywelyn the Great that was after losing the Battle of Aberconwy against an alliance of Rhodri ab Owain and the sons of Cynan ab Owain Gwynedd u 145 151 152 153 The following year he expelled all his remaining family rivals and made himself master of all Gwynedd and in 1175 Dafydd I imprisoned his brother Rhodri During a revolt in 1173 Dafydd I adhered to Henry II as an ally and it was agreed that Dafydd I would marry Emma of Anjou who was Henry s half sister and would receive the manor of Ellesmere as dowry 152 145 All this was done as the Brut y Tywysogion explained because Dafydd thought he could hold his territory in peace thereby but it proved insufficient Before the end of 1175 Rhodri had escaped from captivity and gathered sufficient support to drive Dafydd I from the Royal household of Aberffraw there appears to be no activity from Dafydd I for almost 20 years after 1175 until then the final battle at Aberconwy in 1197 152 Dafydd I may not have inherited the leadership abilities of his father but he had sufficient diplomatic qualities remaining to ensure he could live at peace with his neighbours This appears to be the one quality recognised by his contemporaries as he was described by Giraldus Cambrensis as a man who showed good faith and credit by observing a strict neutrality between the Welsh and English citation needed His brother Rhodri had a more eventful time and fell out with the descendants of Cynan They acted against Rhodri in 1190 and drove him out of Gwynedd altogether Rhodri fled to the safety of the Isle of Man only to be briefly reinstated in 1193 with the assistance of Rǫgnvaldr Gudrodarson King of the Isles and then driven out once more at the beginning of 1194 sharing the humiliation of his brother Dafydd ab Owain 154 Dafydd Ist had a nemesis in his nephew Llywelyn ap Iorwerth 17 155 156 who was born most likely in the year 1173 and therefore only a child when all these events played out Llywelyn s father Iorwerth Drwyndwn had been involved in the early stages of the dynastic struggles and most likely died sometime around 1174 during the same time as the usurpation of Dafydd I 157 As the century drew to a close Llywelyn became a young man and decided to stake his claim to power in Gwynedd He conspired with his cousins Gruffudd and Maredudd and his uncle Rhodri and in the year 1194 they all united against Dafydd I 152 17 Iorwerth fought battles throughout Wales giving him the moniker The great like his ancestor Owain Gwynedd had attained 123 17 Having made alliances in his birth county of Powys and the county of the origins of his family Gwynedd in north Wales the stage was set for Llywelyn to dominate in battle and make alliances with the Crown of England similar to his predecessor Dafydd I Llywelyn married Joan Lady of Wales the daughter of John King of England 17 155 Prince of Wales Welsh title 1218 1283 EditLlywelyn the Great Edit See also Llywelyn ap Iorwerth The coat of arms of Llywelyn were Quarterly Or and Gules four lions passant guardant counter charged armed and langued Azur later the arms of his son Dafydd ap Llywelyn and grandson Llywelyn ap Gruffudd and subsequently of the Gwynedd realm Llywelyn ab Iorwerth 1173 11 April 1240 later known as Llywelyn the Great Llywelyn I 17 155 156 was sole ruler of Gwynedd by 1200 and made a treaty with King John of England the same year 158 Llywelyn s relations with John remained good for the next ten years He married John s illegitimate daughter Joan also known as Joanna in 1205 and when John arrested Gwenwynwyn ab Owain of Powys in 1208 Llywelyn took the opportunity to annex southern Powys Ceredigion and also he built Aberystwyth Castle 159 dubious discuss In 1210 relations deteriorated and John invaded Gwynedd in 1211 160 Llywelyn was forced to seek terms and to give up all his lands east of the River Conwy 161 but was able to recover these lands the following year in alliance with the other Welsh princes 162 He later allied himself with the barons who forced John to sign Magna Carta in 1215 By 1216 he was the dominant power in Wales holding a council at Aberdyfi that year to apportion lands to the other princes Llywelyn concluded the Treaty of Worcester with the next King of England Henry III in 1218 The treaty formally recognised Llywelyn I as Prince of Wales 17 155 163 During 1220 1230 Llywelyn bolstered his claim to the Kingship of Gwynedd by reinforcing his borders with castles being built around the Kingdom of Gwynedd Criccieth Deganwy Dolbadarn Dolwyddelan and Castell y Bere are among the best examples 155 164 The Peace of Middle treaty in 1234 marked the beginning of the end for his military exploits and virtually established peace for the rest of Llywelyn s life 17 Having been on terms with his neighbouring compatriots Llywelyn had taken to his wife s style of fashioning a court similar to that of the English Crown and also the same rules of court devised in 914 at Aberffraw The Prince convened a court with household members and 12 Royal mounted guards The Royal palace consisted of 35 positions similar to Royal Households of the United Kingdom used today in England 165 Llywelyn followed the laws of Hywel Dda and attempted a succession process using the Welsh gavelkind custom of choosing an heir 166 Llywelyn promoted his younger son Dafydd II 167 and he customised the process of designating an heir to his own fruition by giving his eldest son Gruffudd lands to rule 168 Dafydd II was named heir with the support of King Henry III of England during 1238 a Welsh Royal council of Princes was held at Strata Florida Abbey in honour of the heir of Gwynedd 169 Llywelyn in 1239 suffered a stroke and retired from the active work in the Welsh government he died only a year later in 1240 155 170 Prince Dafydd II Edit Prince Dafydd II Dafydd ap Llywelyn David II March 1212 25 February 1246 153 the son of Llywelyn the Great was installed as heir of Gwynedd by the Prince of Wales 155 171 While King Henry III of England had accepted Dafydd II and his Royal claims to Gwynedd and Wales Henry invaded Gwynedd and Dafydd II was forced to negotiate peace near St Asaph on 29 August 1241 under the terms of the Treaty of Gwerneigron Dafydd II gave up all his lands outside Gwynedd 171 Dafydd II was ruthless with his power like his predecessors he d imprisoned his own brother once for 6 years and again in Criccieth and then in the Tower of London It was the Bishop of Bangor who negotiated letting Prince Gruffudd move to a better location in London Gruffudd fell to his death in March 1244 while trying to escape from the Tower of London by climbing down a knotted sheet 18 172 With his main rival dead Dafydd formed an alliance with other Welsh rulers and began a campaign against the English occupation of parts of Wales all the while communicating with Pope Innocent IV in the Vatican City Rome talking about the powers bestowed on him by his predecessors as the ruler of Gwynedd After savage fighting the campaign was successful however Llywelyn s former seneshal Sir Tudur ap Ednyfed Fychan was captured by Henry III forces in September 1245 in battle against Dafydd II yet Tudur was released in 1247 after swearing fealty to the King of England 47 Dafydd II died a sudden and natural death on 25 February 1246 this brought a halt to the succession crisis which was fuelling the wars his widow Isabella de Braose returned to England living in Haverford she died 2 years later 153 155 171 Prince Llywelyn II the Last Edit Prince Llywelyn II Welsh Llywelyn Ein Llyw Olaf lit Llywelyn Our Last Leader Llywelyn ap Gruffudd 1223 11 December 1282 was living in Gwynedd at the time of his succession to the throne and had fought alongside his uncle Dafydd II during the last campaign of his reign 155 This gave him an advantage over his elder brother Owain who had been imprisoned in England with his father since 1242 Owain returned to Gwynedd from England immediately after the news of the death of Prince Dafydd the IInd citation needed Llywelyn and Owain were able to come to agreement during an arranged peace accord by King Henry III of England the Treaty of Woodstock they were to share a realm west of Conwy the treaty only lasted 8 years 155 173 The younger brother of Llywelyn II was Dafydd III who had come of age by 14 and was invited by Henry III to pay homage in 1253 But in the spirit of his ancestors he went to battle with his brother by forming an alliance with their other brother Owain and fought at the Battle of Bryn Derwin where they met with respective armies 174 Llywelyn II in victory imprisoned his brothers Owain until 1277 and Dafydd III for around a years time Dafydd III eventually gained favour by 1277 working in conjunction with the Crown of England by gaining land on the northern border of England and Wales Dafydd III married Elizabeth Ferrers and had offspring while Owain was given the title Lord of Llŷn Llywelyn was seen as a figurehead for the new state of Wales but had to coordinate with the newly formed Norman dynasty neighbouring to the east of Gwynedd this was formalised with the Treaty of Montgomery later in 1267 155 173 174 With his brothers out of contention Llyewlyn II was sole ruler and this allowed for over a decade of unbroken military success aided by the weakness of the Crown of England and the support of his seneshal Goronwy ab Ednyfed he triumphed in battle by reuniting north Wales Llywelyn II made an alliance with the Montfort family marrying Eleanor de Montfort in 1275 Eleanor was the daughter of Simon de Montfort 6th Earl of Leicester who had been integral in the English civil war by rebelling during the Second Barons War This time it was another Pope Clement IV who negotiated peace with the Welsh Prince insisting to disassociate from the Monfort s after the Battle of Evesham Llywelyn II and Montfort married twice once in secret in 1275 and once again after the marriage was given consent by the new brother in law of Llywelyn II Edward I only after Eleanor herself was placed under house arrest for 3 years for passing through Bristol with her father s banner on board a ship their daughter Gwenllian ferch Llywelyn was orphaned before her first birthday she was the last of her line 47 155 175 176 Succession would continue with a new King of England Edward I would later acquire the title of the Prince of Wales The Treaty of Aberconwy was signed in 1277 by Llywelyn II it was a formal agreement to hand over the power Gwynedd he had accumulated throughout Wales the new House of Plantagenet was of French Norman origins However Llywelyn s brother Dafydd III still had different ideas it was he who provoked incident by attacking Hawarden castle on Palm Sunday in 1282 Later on during November 1282 the Archbishop of Canterbury John Peckham had visited North Wales to mediate any potential conflict between sovereigns Prince Llywelyn II was offered a financial incentive and an English estate for his family only if he were to surrender Gwynedd s territory to Edward Llywelyn II rejected the offer 177 178 The next month on 11 December 1282 after not being recognised Llywelyn was killed at in an ambush His head sent to London his body interred to Abbeycwmhir 155 Prince Dafydd III Edit The arms used by Dafydd ap Gruffudd were a variant of the Aberffraw ArmsAfter generations of civil strife in Gwynedd it was Dafydd ap Gruffydd David III 11 July 3 October 1283 named Dafydd III the grandson of Llywelyn the Great who was next to gain the Prince of Wales title 153 174 179 From the offset it was Dafydd III who was immersed in Royal life representing the Welsh royal family During 1253 Dafydd III attended an event and paid homage to the English court with Queen Eleanor and Richard of Cornwall as Henry III was in Gascony 179 That era however was the starting point for military campaigns against his brother Llywelyn II from 1255 Llywelyn II jailed him for a year after the battle of Bryn Derwin Dafydd III in 1263 revolted against Llywelyn II once more this time failing badly enough to flee to England and a year later was offered the lands of the English rebel Baron Boteler after the battle of Evesham during an English civil war Dafydd III had joined the English court life with Henry III and was in England until 1267 Again it was another Pope Ottobuono Adrian V who negotiated between the Royal families of England and Wales peace ensued in Wales for another 6 years when Dafydd III was councillor to his brother the Prince of Wales Peace ensues until another coup is formed involving Gruffydd ap Gwenwynwyn Prince of Powys whose father was arrested by King John and falls apart due to severe storms Dafydd III was forced to flee to England once more this time pledging allegiance to King Edward I in 1274 and is decorated a knight and considered him a friend Years later in 1277 Dafydd III returns to haunt Wales accompanying Edward I and on 16 August an agreement of peace is made as how to share the spoils of war by 10 November Llywelyn I submits to the English Crown at the Treaty of Aberconwy The lands of Snowdonia Anglesey and Penllyn cantref are shared amongst the Princes and a dowry is given to Dafydd III along with an estate in Cheshire and a consented marriage to the daughter of a former adversary the Earl of Derby 179 Later in his life after returning to Wales Dafydd III changes alliance once again and continues to fight against the English Crown at risk of being a traitor The Welsh courts had kept the support of Goronowy ap Heilin the seneshal of Gwynedd who also supported his brother Llywelyn II Goronwy was the Lord of Rhos Dafydd III also had the support of Hywel ap Rhys Gryg son of Rhys Gryg and his brother Rhys Wyndod the disinherited princes of Deheubarth 180 47 Dafydd III had rekindled his ancestors wish for Welsh Independence however the involvement in rebellion had been against agreements in place the treaty of Aberconwy The provocation on 22 March Palm Sunday in 1282 was an attack on Hawarden castle and was the final conlflict of the Kingdom of Gwynedd 179 Dafydd III like his brothers had incurred the wrath of the English forces the Norman army encircled Snowdonia and starved the Welsh people Dafydd III was soon moving desperately from one fort to another as effective resistance was systematically crushed Dolwyddelan Castle which was at risk of becoming encircled and trapped was first castle to be abandoned on 18 January 1283 The next was Dolbadarn Castle the castle served as a base but by March that year this noble site in the heartland of Snowdonia was also under threat from foreign forces and Dafydd III was forced to retreat once again Finally Dafydd III moved his headquarters south to Castell y Bere near Llanfihangel y pennant From this point forwards the Prince royal family and remaining members of the Welsh government were all fugitives on the run sleeping outdoors whilst being forced to keep moving from place to place to avoid capture Castell Y Bere s starving garrison would eventually surrender on 25 April and then given to William de Valence 1st Earl of Pembroke After the fall of Y Bere Dafydd III s movements are speculative but he is recorded in May 1283 leading raids from the mountains supportedby his seneshal Goronwy ap Heilyn and Prince s of Deheubarth Hywel ap Rhys and Rhys Wyndod 179 181 The last months saw inward disintegration as well as submission to superior force Nevertheless Goronwy ap Heilin had committed himself to the struggle and died in rebellion alongside the disinherited princes who stood with Dafydd ap Gruffudd in the last springtime of the principality of Wales diehards who knew that theirs was not the heroism of a new beginning but the ultimate stand of the very last cohort clutching the figment of the political order that they had once been privileged to know 180 On 21 June 1283 Dafydd III was captured in the uplands above Abergwyngregyn close to Bera Mawr in a secret hiding place recorded as Nanhysglain 179 182 King Edward I decreed in ad querendum filium David primogenitum and was caught by men of his own tongue citation needed The last Royal family of Wales were imprisoned and Dafydd III was executed by hanging in Shrewsbury for treason his body was dismembered and he suffered same fate as his brother Llywelyn II with his head put on a pole for display at the Tower of London the bard Bleddyn Fardd made his elegy 179 183 After the capture of the last true Royal family of Gwynedd the Princes including Llywelyn ap Dafydd were imprisoned in Bristol Castle by the English Crown and daughters became Nuns in Sempringham and other monasteries 179 End of Independence EditSee also Conquest of Wales by Edward I and Wales in the Late Middle Ages Wales after the Statute of Rhuddlan 1284Following the death of Llywelyn II in 1282 and the execution of his brother Dafydd III the following year eight centuries of independent rule by the house of Gwynedd came to an end and the kingdom which had long been one of the final holdouts to total English domination of Wales was annexed to England The remaining important members of the ruling house were all arrested and imprisoned for the remainder of their lives 174 184 Under the terms of the Statute of Rhuddlan in 1284 Wales was broken up and re organised into six shires The Snowdonia district in Gwynedd was made into three settlements creating the counties of Anglesey Carnarvonshire Merionethshire and the rest of Wales split beyond the Rivers Dee and Conwy making Denbighshire and Flintshire in North Wales and Cardigan and Carmarthen to the south of Wales 185 The Pura Walia was the new defifion for the Welsh marshland Pura Wallia was effectively the new counties which had been Gwynedd Carmarthenshire and Cardiganshire and Marchia Wallie were defined through division of lands still held by the Welsh people and the Norman castles built in the Marchia Wallie 186 187 The Pura Walia continued to be within a nominal Principality of Wales ruled by the Council of Wales at Ludlow as a part of the English crown citation needed There were many Gwynedd based rebellions after 1284 with varying degrees of success with most being led by peripheral members of the old royal house In particular the rebellions of Prince Madoc in 1294 188 and of Owain Lawgoch the great nephew of Llywelyn ap Gruffudd between 1372 and 1378 are most notable 189 190 191 Because of this the old royal house was purged and any surviving members went into hiding A final rebellion in 1400 led by Owain Glyndŵr a member of the rival royal house of Powys also drew considerable support from within Gwynedd 42 The title Prince of Wales was recreated after Llywelyn II Prince Edward later Edward II was conferred in 1301 at Caernarfon castle beginning the Principality of Wales 192 The Welsh Marches would be merged with the principality in 1534 under the Council of Wales and the Marches until all separate governance for Wales 193 The penal system was eventually abolished 194 and as an administrative entity the administrative entity the Marches of Wales was abolished by the joint reigns of King William III of England and Mary II of England monarchs of England and Scotland combined in 1689 195 Military EditAccording to Sir John Edward Lloyd the challenges of campaigning in Wales were exposed during the 20 year Norman invasion If a defender could bar any road control any river crossing or mountain pass and control the coastline around Wales then the risks of extended campaigning in Wales were too great 108 The Welsh method of warfare during the reign of Henry II is described by Gerald of Wales in his work Descriptio Cambriae written c 1190 137 Their mode of fighting consists in chasing the enemy or in retreating This light armed people relying more on their activity than on their strength cannot struggle for the field of battle enter into close engagement or endure long and severe actions though defeated and put to flight on one day they are ready to resume the combat on the next neither dejected by their loss nor by their dishonour and although perhaps they do not display great fortitude in open engagements and regular conflicts yet they harass the enemy by ambuscades and nightly sallies Hence neither oppressed by hunger or cold not fatigued by martial labours nor despondent in adversity but ready after a defeat to return immediately to action and again endure the dangers of war The Historical Works of Giraldus Cambrensis translated by Sir Richard Colt Hoare 1894 p 511 137 The Welsh were revered for the skills of their bowmen Additionally the Welsh learned from their Norman rivals During the generations of warfare and close contact with the Normans Gruffudd ap Cynan and other Welsh leaders learned the arts of knighthood and adapted them for Wales By Gruffudd s death in 1137 Gwynedd could field hundreds of heavy well armed cavalry as well as their traditional bowmen and infantry 108 They make use of light arms which do not impede their agility small coats of mail bundles of arrows and long lances helmets and shields and more rarely greaves plated with iron The higher class go to battle mounted on swift and generous steeds which their country produces but the greater part of the people fight on foot on account of the marshy nature and unevenness of the soil The horsemen as their situation or occasion requires willingly serve as infantry in attacking or retreating and they either walk bare footed or make use of high shoes roughly constructed with untanned leather In time of peace the young men by penetrating the deep recesses of the woods and climbing the tops of mountains learn by practice to endure fatigue through day and night The Historical Works of Giraldus Cambrensis translated by Sir Richard Colt Hoare 1894 p 491 137 In the end Wales was defeated militarily by the improved ability of the English navy to blockade or seize areas essential for agricultural production such as Anglesey With control of the Menai Strait an invading army could regroup on Anglesey without control of the Menai an army could be stranded there and any occupying force on Anglesey could deny the vast harvest of the island to the Welsh 109 Lack of food would force the disbandment of any large Welsh force besieged within the mountains 181 Following the occupation Welsh soldiers were conscripted to serve in the English Army During the revolt of Owain Glyndŵr the Welsh adapted the new skills they had learnt to guerrilla tactics and lightning raids Owain Glyndŵr reputedly used the mountains with such advantage that many of the exasperated English soldiery suspected him of being a magician able to control the natural elements 196 Administration Edit Principal administrative divisions of medieval Gwynedd traditional territorial extent The Afon Conwy is the traditional border between upper and lower GwyneddIn early times Gwynedd or Venedotia may have been ruled from Chester which is shown in the subsidiary title of the current Prince of Wales Earl of Chester 192 After the Battle of Chester in 613 when the city fell to the Anglo Saxons the royal court moved west to the stronghold at Deganwy Castle near modern Conwy 4 This site was destroyed by lightning in 812 rebuilt and destroyed again by Saxons in 822 Afterwards Aberffraw on Anglesey became the principal power base with exceptions such as Gruffydd ap Llywelyn s court at Rhuddlan 6 18 197 However as the English fleet became more powerful and particularly after the Norman colonisation of Ireland began it became indefensible and from about 1200 until 1283 citation needed at Abergwyngregyn or simply called just Aber its anglicised shortened form adopted by the Crown of England after the conquest was the new family home of the Lord of Snowdown on the banks of the menai Strait 9 198 Joan Lady of Wales died there in 1237 Dafydd ap Llywelyn in 1246 Eleanor de Montfort Lady of Wales wife of Llywelyn ap Gruffudd Prince of Wales Tywysog Cymru in modern Welsh on 19 June 1282 giving birth to a daughter Gwenllian The royal home was occupied and expropriated by the English Crown in early 1283 199 200 201 The traditional sphere of Aberffraw s influence in north Wales included the Isle of Anglesey Ynys Mon as their early seat of authority and Gwynedd Uwch Conwy Gwynedd above the Conwy or upper Gwynedd and the Perfeddwlad the Middle Country also known as Gwynedd Is Conwy Gwynedd below the Conwy or lower Gwynedd Additional lands were acquired through vassalage or conquest and by regaining lands lost to Marcher lords particularly that of Ceredigion Powys Fadog and Powys Wenwynwyn However these areas were always considered an addition to Gwynedd never part of it 22 185 139 Reconstruction of Llys Llewelyn at St Fagan sAfter the Norman conquest the residents of Llanfaes were moved to make way for Beaumaris Castle on Anglesey The newly built Llys Rhosyr replaced the now abandoned Llys Aberffraw was one of 3 main courts on Anglesey only due to a sandstorm in 1332 the Llys also became disused and unattended until excavations in the 20th century The courts Welsh Llysoedd were administrative centres in the Kingdom the courts were royal residences but also were to collected taxes and function the same as a modern government building 202 203 Gwynedd was traditionally divided into using nature as borders the rivers Conwy and Dee were used to define lands in relation to the counties 185 Gwynedd Uwch Conwy and Gwynedd Is Conwy with the River Conwy forming the border which included Anglesey Mon The kingdom of the Princes of Snowdonia was administered under Welsh custom through thirteen Cantrefi each containing in theory one hundred settlements or Trefi Most cantrefs were also divided into cymydau English commotes A complete census was created in the Red Book of Hergest during the end of the 14th century 22 204 205 206 Anglesey Welsh Ynys Mon Edit Commote of Anglesey Commote Modern local NotesAberffraw Aberffraw Historic seat of rulers of GwyneddCemais CemaesTalebolyonLlan faes Llan maesPenrhos PenrhosRhosyr Newborough Niwbro in 1294 refounded to house displaced villagers from LlanfaesUpper Gwynedd Conwy Edit Gwynedd above the Conwy or upper GwyneddCommote of Arllechwedd Commote Modern local NotesArllechwedd Uchaf Abergwyngregyn Conwy County BoroughArllechwedd Isaf Trefriw Conwy County BoroughArfon Commote Commote Modern local NotesArfon Uwch Gwyrfai Gwynedd Arfon above GwyrfaiArfon Is Gwyrfai Gwynedd Arfon beneath GwyrfaiDunoding Commote Commote Modern local NotesArdudwy Meirionnydd area within GwyneddEifionydd Dwyfor area within Gwynedd Named after Eifion ap Dunod ap CuneddaCommote of Llyn Commote Modern local NotesDinllaen Dwyfor council in Gwynedd countyCymydmaen Dwyfor council in Gwynedd countyCafflogionMeirionnydd Commote Commote Modern local NotesYstumaner Merionethshire council in Gwynedd countyTal y bontLower Gwynedd Conwy Edit Also known as Perfeddwlad or the Middle Country or Gwynedd Is Conwy Gwynedd below the Conwy or lower Gwynedd Cantref Tegeingl Cwnsyllt Prestatyn Rhuddlan Dyffryn Clwyd Colion Llannerch Dogfeiling Rhufoniog Ceinmeirch Uwch Aled Is Aled Cantref Rhos Uwch Dulas Is Dulas Y CreuddynLegacy EditFollowing Edward s conquest the lands of Gwynedd proper were divided among the English counties of Anglesey Caernarfonshire Merionethshire Denbighshire and Flintshire 185 The Local Government Act 1972 reformed these creating a new county now called a preserved county of Gwynedd which comprised Anglesey and Llyn Arfon Dunoding and Meirionydd on the mainland 207 208 The modern principal area of Gwynedd established by the Local Government Wales Act 1994 no longer includes Anglesey 209 See also EditList of rulers of Gwynedd House of Aberffraw King of Wales Family tree of Welsh monarchs King of the Britons List of legendary kings of BritainReferences Edit a b Wade Evans Arthur Welsh Medieval Law Oxford Univ 1909 Retrieved 1 February 2013 Bradley A G 1 February 2013 1901 Owen Glyndwr and the Last Struggle for Welsh Independence New York city G P Putnam s Sons Jenkins John 1 February 2013 1873 Poetry of Wales archive org London Houlston amp Sons a b Deganwy castle castlesfortsbattles co uk Lloyd 1911 p 232 a b Davies 1994 Llwyd 1832 pp 112 113 Lloyd 1911 a b Aber Castle Garth Celyn sarahwoodbury co uk 26 July 2017 Bell 1955 Archpriest Vladislav Tsypin THE CHURCH IN SEVENTH CENTURY CELTIC BRITAIN orthochristian com THE KINGDOM OF GWYNEDD ardal wales co uk Lewis Timothy 1913 A glossary of mediaeval Welsh law based upon the Black book of Chirk Manchester University Press a b The lost kingdoms of Wales walesonline co uk 5 October 2017 Maund 2006 a b Parry 1959 a b c d e f g h Pierce9 a b c Pierce11 1959 Pierre Chaplais Michael Jones Malcolm Vale 1 January 1989 England and Her Neighbours 1066 1453 Essays in Honour of Pierre Chaplais A amp C Black p 136 ISBN 978 1 85285 014 2 a b c d e f g h i j k Davies 1994 Fitzpatrick Matthews K 29 January 2013 Harley MS 3859 kmatthews org uk Harleian genealogies a b c Cantrefs and Commotes of Wales maryjones us Hamp Eric P 1995 Goidil Feni Gwynedd Proc Harvard Celtic Colloquium 12 pp 43 50 Koch John T 2006 Celtic Culture ABC Clio p 867 Koch John T 1997 The Gododdin of Aneirin University of Wales p xcviii Matasovic Ranko 2009 Etymological Dictionary of Proto Celtic pp 414 418 ISBN 9789004173361 The Geography of Claudius Penelope penelope uchicago edu Ptolemy Rhys John 1891 The Early Irish Conquests of Wales and Dumnonia The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 1 8 644 JSTOR 25507836 After the Ice Age museum wales 11 May 2007 Ancient Stone Age artefacts discovered at Anglesey water treatment works site 11 June 2017 Bryn Celli Ddu cadw gov wales a b LXVII RCAHMW An Inventory of the Ancient Monuments in Anglesey p XXXIX XLIX LXVII at Google Books Eryri Snowdonia snowdonia gov wales Trawsfynydd Tankard Bryn Eryr Iron Age Roundhouses museum wales Garn Boduan rhiw com Retrieved 11 December 2021 Lowe 1912 pp 12 123 65 North west Wales hill forts PDF BBC Caer Gybi cadw gov wales The Roman Conquest of Wales heritagedaily com 15 January 2021 Why do Welsh place names appear around the world BBC 11 August 2019 a b Pierce17 1959 Family tree owain glyndwr wales DIRECT DESCENT OF QUEEN ELIZABETH II FROM HENRY VII AND ELIZABETH OF YORK tudorhistory org a b A royal dynasty BBC 5 August 2008 KATHERYN of BERAIN Catrin o r Berain 1534 5 1591 Mam Cymru The mother of Wales Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales a b c d EDNYFED FYCHAN EDNYFED ap CYNWRIG and his descendants noble family of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Direct succession royalstuartsociety com Jacobite Studies Trust jacobitestudiestrust org Retrieved 11 February 2022 Christopher A Snyder 2003 The Britons Blackwell Publishing Koch 2005 p 738 Cunedda Wledig Imperator ab Edern Brenin Lothian a Gwenydd geni com 385 a b c d Lloyd1 1959 a b c Giles 1841 a b c d e Ward Perkins Bryan 1 June 2000 Why Did the Anglo Saxons Not Become More British The English Historical Review 115 462 513 533 doi 10 1093 ehr 115 462 513 Issue 462 Campbell James Wormald Patrick John Eric 6 August 1991 The Anglo Saxons Oxford p 19 ISBN 0140143955 Kingsford 1894 pp 217 221 Maelgwn Gwynedd King of Gwynedd earlybritishmingdoms com Maelgwyn ap Cadwallon Brenin Gwynedd geni com 480 a b Davies1 1959 Lloyd 1893a p 306 Hughes David 2007 The British Chronicles Heritage p 1 206 ISBN 9780788444906 Retrieved 19 February 2022 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Eisteddfod Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 9 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 136 137 The Works of Gildas Six Old English Chronicles pp 318 320 via Wikisource Maelgwn Gwynedd and the Yellow Eye grahamwatkins info 24 August 2019 Prince Elidyr Mwynfawr of Strathclyde earlybritishkingdoms com Rhun Hir King of Gwynedd earlybritishkingdoms com Davies2 1959 Lloyd2 1959 Tout 1901 Dating the Battle of Chester carlyanayland org a b Lloyd3 1959 Geoffrey s British History Book 12 Six Old English Chronicles pp 288 292 via Wikisource a b c Cadwallon King of Gwynedd earlybritishkingdoms com Bertram Colgrave R A B Mynors eds 1969 Bede s ecclesiastical history of the English people Medieval Sourcebook Bede 673735 Clarendon Press volume Book II Retrieved 14 May 2014 Bede Book 2 In Jane Lionel C ed Ecclesiastical History of the English Nation Jane Translated by Stevens John p 102 via Wikisource a b Lloyd4 1959 St Cadwaladr Fendigai King of Gwynedd earlybritishkingdoms com Leslie0 1886 When the Vikings invaded North Wales museum wales 2 April 2007 Lloyd 2004 p 323 a b Pierce1 1959 Lee0 1894 LLYWARCH HEN a 6th century British prince and a hero of a cycle of Welsh tales dating from the mid 9th century Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Davies John 1990 A History of Wales First ed London Penguin Group published 1993 ISBN 0 7139 9098 8 Lloyd John Edward 1911 A History of Wales from the Earliest Times to the Edwardian Conquest vol I 2nd ed London Longmans Green and Co published 1912 p 323 324 Chadwick Nora 1 January 1998 1971 The Celts Development of the Celtic Kingdoms p 86 ISBN 9780140250749 Rhodri The Great bbc o uk Lee1 1896 Pierce2 1959 About ABERFFRAW and its History aberffraw wales a b c Davies 1994 pp 116 117 128 135 Lloyd 2004 pp 220 Arthur Jones 1910 The history of Gruffydd ap Cynan archive org Manchester University Press History of Gruffydd Ap Cynan mary jones us a b c d Williams 1959 Lee2 1891 Pierce3 1959 Lee3 1891 Roderick Hudson 1959 Tout 1890a pp 305 307 a b Lloyd J E 1959 BLEDDYN ap CYNFYN died 1075 prince Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Retrieved 23 August 2020 a b Pierce7 1959 Pierce4 1959 Lee4 1891 a b Leslie 1890 a b c d e f g h i j k l Lloyd 2004 pp 21 22 36 39 40 76 77 a b c d e f g Davies 1994 pp 104 108 116 Conquest Anarchy and Lordship Yorkshire 1066 1154 at Google Books a b Warner 1997 pp 61 63 Barlow 2000 pp 320 324 Barlow 2000 a b Bartlett 2000 Owen Dorothy M 23 September 2004 Hervey d 1131 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 13107 Subscription or UK public library membership required Magnus Barefoot s Saga Of the Fall of Earl Huge the Brave Heimskringla via Wikisource a b c Wilcott Darrell The Ancestry of Edwin of Tegeingl Davies 1994 pp 109 127 130 137 141 149 166 176 a b c d e f Lloyd 2004 pp 77 79 a b c d Lloyd 2004 pp 80 82 85 a b Warner 1997 pp 69 79 a b c Lloyd 2004 pp 79 80 a b c d Pierce5 1959 a b c Lee5 1895 Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd King of Gwynedd geni com 1100 Lloyd 2004 p 93 Lloyd 2004 pp 85 93 104 Lloyd 2004 pp 94 95 a b c d e Lloyd 2004 p 95 a b c d Warner 1997 p 80 Llwyd 1832 pp 80 81 Lloyd 2004 p 96 a b Lloyd 2004 pp 96 98 a b c d Lloyd 2004 p 99 The Princes and the Marcher Lords old wrexham gov uk Plaque marks Welsh king s triumph BBC 26 January 2008 a b c d Descriptio Cambriae p 351 491 511 at Google Books a b c d Lloyd 2004 pp 107 109 a b Lloyd 2004 Lloyd 1896b p 89 a b Davies 1994 pp 125 126 a b c d e f g h Lloyd 2004 pp 111 114 a b Davies 1994 pp 103 128 129 Davies 1994 p 148 a b c d e Leslie1 Barbier 1908 p 126 Williams 1908 pp 128 129 Pierce6 Lloyd6 Prince Madoc American legend set to bring surge in tourists for North Wales walesexpress com 24 March 2018 Llwyd 1832 pp 81 82 a b c d Lloyd5 a b c d Chisholm0 1911 Pierce8 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Chisholm1 a b Lee6 Pierce10 Davies 1987 p 294 Davies 1987 p 229 241 Williams 1860 p 154 Maund 2006 p 193 Williams 1860 pp 158 159 Turvery Roger ed 2010 Twenty One Welsh Princes p 86 ISBN 9781845272692 Lynch 1995 p 135 Llwyd 1832 pp 85 90 Iorwerth cyfraith PDF cyfrath hywel org uk Lloyd 2004 p 297 The Ancient Laws of Wales Viewed Especially in Regard to the Light They Throw Upon the Origin of Some English Institutions at Google Books Davies 1987 p 249 Williams 1860 p 198 a b c Lloyd7 1959 Lee7 1890 a b Pierce13 1959 a b c d Pierce14 1959 ELEANOR DE MONTFORT c 1258 1282 princess and diplomat Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales J Beverley Smith 15 January 2014 Llywelyn ap Gruffudd Prince of Wales University of Wales Press pp 438 448 ISBN 978 1 78316 007 5 Pierre Chaplais Michael Jones Malcolm Vale 1 January 1989 England and Her Neighbours 1066 1453 Essays in Honour of Pierre Chaplais A amp C Black p 136 ISBN 978 1 85285 014 2 Prestwich Michael 2008 Edward I 1239 1307 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8517 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c d e f g h Leslie2 1888 a b Smith 2001 p 577 a b Smith 2001 p 576 Hafod Garth Celyn Archived from the original on 24 July 2011 Retrieved 24 January 2009 Bellamy J G October 2009 1970 The Law of Treason in England in the Later Middle Ages cambridge org Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9780511522369 ISBN 9780511522369 Pierce12 1959 a b c d Edwards Sir Owen Morgan 1906 Chapter 12 A Short History of Wales Vol 12 p 58 59 via Wikisource a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint date and year link The Welsh March BBC 26 August 2008 Kathryn Hurlock 12 September 2012 Power Preaching and the Crusades in Pura Wallia c 1180 c 1280 cambridge org Boydell amp Brewer pp 94 108 ISBN 9781846155994 Pierce15 1959 Pierce16 1959 Moore 2005 pp 164 166 Walker 1990 pp 165 167 a b Titles and Heraldry princeofwales gov uk Retrieved 14 December 2021 Williams Glamor Recovery reorientation and reformation pp 217 226 Wales C 1415 1642 Davies 1994 p 233 The Statutes of Wales The Statutes of Wales 1908 1908 p 191 via Wikisource Alan Klehr 7 October 2021 Owain Glyndwr s legendary fight for Wales britishheritage com Alcock Leslie 1968 Excavations at Degannwy Castle Caernarfonshire 1961 6 The Archaeological Journal 124 190 201 doi 10 1080 00665983 1967 11078309 Castles of Llywelyn Fawr walesdirectory co uk Llywelyn ap Gruffydd sarahwoodbury com 17 December 2019 Joan Lady of Wales historytheinterestingbits com 2 May 2020 Catrin Beynon Gwenllian Lost Princess of Wales historic uk com Penmon Area 1 Llanfaes PRN 33471 heneb co uk Aberffraw red dragon wales com Llywelyn ap Gruffudd Llywelyn Ein Llyw Olaf The Last d 1282 snowdonia gov wales The Princes of Snowdonia snowdonia gov wales Welsh Counties thewalesmap com Review of Preserved County boundaries PDF ldbc gov wales Local Government Act 1972 legislation gov uk Local Government Wales Act 1994 legislation gov uk Explanatory notes Edit Old Welsh until 12th century Middle Welsh 12th 14th century British Latin in use until 8th century Medieval Latin used thereafter for legal and liturgical purposes History of Gwynedd during the High Middle Ages Assessment from Davies novel 1994 It took until 1282 when Edward I conquered Gwynedd for the last part of Roman Britain to fall Indeed a strong case can be made for Gwynedd as the very last part of the entire Roman Empire east and west to fall to the barbarians If we take into account of the temporary capture of Constantinople by Franks in 1204 and of various Persian Slav Avar and Seljuk invasions of Byzantine territory Ward Perkins was elaborating on an observation by J Campbell 56 Cadwallon ap Cadfan CAEDWALLA was considered one of the legendary kings of Britain like his father and his son being the final ruler from a line dating back to 1100 BC beginning with Brutus of Troy according to Geoffrey of Monmouth and the Historia Regum Britanniae 54 Recovers Gwynedd Norman invasion Battle of Anglesey Sound pgs 21 22 36 39 40 later years 76 77 Of the three surviving groups of manuscripts of the Cyfraith Hywel all dating from the 12th century or later one group recognises Gwynedd exclusively another Deheubarth exclusively and the last both together See Wade Evans A W Welsh Medieval Law Introduction Oxford Univ 1909 Retrieved 30 January 2013 It was hoped that placing a prelate loyal to the Normans over the traditionally independent Welsh church in Gwynedd would help to pacify the local inhabitants and Herve 113 recognised the primacy of the Archbishop of Canterbury over the episcopal see of Bangor a recognition hitherto rejected by the Welsh church Mentioned in the Magnus Barefoot saga 116 Speculation about Owain might have shown him of restrained and prudent temperament may have judged that aiding in Stephen s capture would lead to the restoration of Matilda and a strong royal government in England a government which would support Marcher lords support hitherto lacking since Stephen s usurpation Lloyd 2004 book Owain and Henry II page 99 1070 Owain 1160 1170 Lloyd 2004 Book Quoting what Lloyd wrote 2004 emerging de facto statehood pg 148 It is therefore possible that Owain hoped to maintain this Irish connection by ensuring the succession of one of his sons born of this Irish woman Pyfog Furthermore it seems illogical given the fact Owain was so set on their succession and the respect he no doubt commanded in Ireland that the mother of Rhun and Hywel was a mere commoner and that both those children were born out of wedlock What the annals record is that in 1146 the eldest son and designated heir Rhun a man who was acclaimed as a great warrior and the flower of Celtic chivalry according to J E Lloyd died mysteriously and that Hywel his natural brother was proclaimed the new edling or heir and the internal strife appears to have been conflict between two rival factions a pro Irish legitimists faction seeking to ensure the succession of Hywel and protect the legacy of Owain Gwynedd and his father and a second distinctly anti Irish coalition headed by Owain s widow However little information is available on these occurrences and the divisions are vaguely unclear The myth of transatlantic travel pre Columbus era has been questioned yet rebuffed for centuries 150 Dafydd appears to have been recognised as pre eminent amongst them and was regarded in some way as the overall leader General sources EditBooks Edit Primary sources Edit Barlow Frank 2000 William Rufus Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 08291 6 Bartlett Robert 2000 England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings 1075 1225 Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 822741 8 Davies John 1994 A History of Wales Penguin Group ISBN 0140284753 Lloyd J E 2004 A History of Wales From the Norman Invasion to the Edwardian Conquest New York Barnes amp Noble Publishing Inc ISBN 0 7607 5241 9 Llwyd Angharad 1832 A history of the island of Anglesey Lowe Walter Bezant 1912 The Heart of Northern Wales Vol 1 The Heart of Northern Wales at Google Books Lynch Frances M B 1995 Gwynedd A Guide to Ancient and Historic Wales The Stationery Office ISBN 978 0 11 701574 6 Maund Kari L 2006 The Welsh Kings Warriors Warlords and Princes searchworks stanford edu 3rd ed Tempus Publishing ISBN 978 0 7524 2973 1 Moore David 2005 The Welsh Wars of Independence Tempus Publishing ISBN 978 0 7524 3321 9 Parry Thomas Bell H Idris 1955 A History of Welsh Literature archive org Oxford University Press Walker David 1990 Medieval Wales Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521311533 Warner Philip 1997 Famous Welsh Battles New York Barnes amp Noble Publishing Inc ISBN 0 7607 0466 X Williams W Llewelyn 1908 Giraldus Cambrensis The Itinerary Through Wales and the Description of Wales Secondary sources Edit Barbier Paul 1908 The age of Owain Gwynedd archive org Newport Wales Bown Ivor 1908 Statutes of Wales archive org Adelphi Terrace London T Fisher Unwin Davies John 2002 The Celts New York Cassell Illustrated ISBN 1 84188 188 0 Davies Rees R 1987 Conquest Coexistence and Change Wales 1063 1415 Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 821732 9 Evans Gwynfor 2004 Cymru O Hud Welsh are still here Abergwyngregyn Y Lolfa ISBN 0 86243 545 5 Evans Simon 1990 A Mediaeval Prince of Wales the Life of Gruffudd Ap Cynan Llanerch Enterprises ISBN 0 947992 58 8 Giles John Allen 1841 The works of Gildas and Nennius London James Bohn Hudson Benjamin T 2005 Viking Pirates and Christian Princes Dynasty Religion and Empire in the North Atlantic Illustrated ed United States Oxford University Press ISBN 0195162374 Jones Owen Williams Edward Pughe William Owen 1801 The Myvyrian Archaiology of Wales collected out of ancient manuscripts archive org Denbigh Thomas Gee The Myvyrian Archaiology Koch John 2005 Celtic Culture a historical encyclopedia Santa Barbara ABC Clio Lloyd John Edward 1911 A History of Wales from the Earliest Times to the Edwardian Conquest archive org Vol II Reprint Vol 2 of 2 ed Longmans Green amp Co ISBN 978 1 334 06136 3 Llwyd Humphrey 2002 Cronica Walliae University of Wales Press ISBN 978 0 7083 1638 2 Maund K L 1996 Gruffudd ap Cynan a collaborative biography searchworks stanford edu Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 0 85115 389 5 Morris John E 1996 The Welsh Wars of Edward I Conshohocken PA Combined Books ISBN 0 938289 67 5 Pargeter Edith 1989 The Brothers of Gwynedd Headline Publishing Group ISBN 9780747232674 Penman Sharon Kay The Welsh Trilogy sharonkaypenman com Ballantine Books Pennant Thomas A Tour of Wales library wales Vol 1 8 Pryce Huw Insley Charles 2005 The Acts of Welsh Rulers 1120 1283 University of Wales Press ISBN 0708318975 Smith Beverley J 2001 Llywelyn ap Gruffudd Prince of Wales University of Wales Press ISBN 978 0 7083 1474 6 Stephenson David 1984 The Governance of Gwynedd University of Wales Press ISBN 978 0 7083 0850 9 OL 22379507M Roger Turvey 2002 Conflict or Coexistence Marchia Wallie and Pura Wallia The Welsh Princes Routledge pp 39 64 doi 10 4324 9781315840802 3 ISBN 9781315840802 Williams John 1860 Brut y Tywysogion or The Chronicle of the Princes Reprint ed London Longman Green Longman and Roberts Caradoc of LlancarfanDictionary of Welsh biography sources Edit Lloyd John Edward 1959 Cunedda Wledig flourished 450 British prince Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Davies William Hopkin 1959 Maelgwn Gwynedd died c 547 king of Gwynedd and monk Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Davies William Hopkin 1959 Rhun Ap Maelgwn Gwynedd fl 550 ruler of north west Wales Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Lloyd John Edward 1959 Cadfan fl 620 prince Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Lloyd John Edward 1959 Cadwallon died 633 prince Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Lloyd John Edward 1959 Cadwaladr died 664 prince Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Merfyn Frych died 844 king of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Rhodri Mawr the Great died 877 king of Gwynedd Powys and Deheubarth Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Lloyd John Edward 1959 Anarawd ap Rhodri died 916 prince Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Idwal Foel the Bald died 942 king of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Iago Ab Idwal Foel fl 942 979 king of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Williams Stephan Joseph 1959 Hywel Dda Hywel the Good died 950 king and legislator Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Hywel ap Ieuaf died 985 king of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Ieuaf or Idwal ab Idwal Foel died 985 joint king of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Meurif Ab Idwal Foel died 986 nobleman of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Idwal Ap Meurig died 996 prince of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Llywelyn Ap Seisyll died 1023 king of Deheubarth and Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Iago ab Idwal Foel died 1039 king of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Parry Thomas 1959 Gruffudd ap Cynan c 1055 1137 king of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Hudson Benjamin 1959 Gruffudd ap Llywelyn died 1064 king of Gwynedd 1039 1064 and overlord of all the Welsh 1055 1064 Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Trahaern Ap Caradog died 1081 king of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Iorwerth Drwyndwn The Flat nosed died probably c 1174 prince of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Owain Gwynedd c 1100 1170 king of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Roderick Arthur James 1959 Hywel ab Owain Gwynedd died 1170 soldier and poet Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Lloyd John Edward 1959 Cadwaladr died 1172 prince Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Maelgwn ab Owain Gwynedd died after 1173 prince of Anglesey Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Lloyd John Edward 1959 Cynan ab Owain died 1174 prince Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Rhodri ab Owain died 1195 a prince of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Lloyd John Edward 1959 Dafydd ab Owain Gwynedd David I died 1203 king of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Llywelyn ap Iorwerth Llywelyn the Great often styled Llywelyn I prince of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Gruffudd ap Llywelyn died 1064 king of Gwynedd 1039 1064 and overlord of all the Welsh 1055 1064 Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Gruffydd ap Llywelyn died 1244 prince Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Thomas Jones Pierce 1959 Maredudd ap Cynan ab Owain Gwynedd died 1212 lord of Eifionydd part of Ardudwy and Merioneth and co founder of the Cistercian house of Cymmer Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Llywelyn Fawr and Llywelyn Fychan fl early 13th century lords of Merioneth Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Lloyd John Edward 1959 Dafydd ap Llywelyn David II died 1246 Prince Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Owain ap Gruffydd or Owain Goch fl 1260 a prince of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Llywelyn ap Gruffydd Llywelyn the Last or Llywelyn II Prince of Wales died 1282 Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Dafydd ap Gruffydd David III died 1283 prince of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Rhodri ap Gruffydd died c 1315 prince of Gwynedd Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Madog ap Llywelyn rebel of 1294 Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Owain ap Thomas ap Rhodri Owain Lawgoch died 1378 a soldier of fortune and pretender to the principality of Wales Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Pierce Thomas Jones 1959 Owain Glyndŵr c 1354 1416 Prince of Wales Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Wiki source Dictionary of National Biography and Encyclopaedia Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Six Old English Chronicles Wikisource has original text related to this article The Mabinogion Wikisource has original text related to this article The Laws of Howel the Good Wikisource has original text related to this article The Annals of Wales Wikisource has original text related to this article A Short History of Wales Kingsford Charles Lethbridge 1894 Nennius In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 40 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 217 221 Lloyd John Edward 1896 Rhys ap Gruffydd In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 48 London Smith Elder amp Co p 89 Tout Thomas Frederick 1890 Gruffydd ab Llewelyn d 1063 In Stephen Leslie Lee Sidney eds Dictionary of National Biography Vol 23 London Smith Elder amp Co p 305 307 Tout Thomas Frederick 1890 Gruffydd ab Cynan In Stephen Leslie Lee Sidney eds Dictionary of National Biography Vol 23 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 301 304 Tout Thomas Frederick 1890 Gruffydd ab Llywelyn d 1244 In Stephen Leslie Lee Sidney eds Dictionary of National Biography Vol 23 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 307 308 Tout Thomas Frederick 1890 Glendower Owen In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 21 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 427 434 Tout Thomas Frederick 1891 Howel Vychan In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 28 London Smith Elder amp Co p 105 Tout Thomas Frederick 1891 Howel Dda In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 28 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 105 107 Tout Thomas Frederick 1891 Idwal Voel In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 28 London Smith Elder amp Co p 412 Thomas Daniel Lleufer 1891 Iago ab Idwal Voel In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 28 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 407 408 Tout Thomas Frederick 1891 Howel ab Ieuav In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 28 London Smith Elder amp Co p 107 Thomas Daniel Lleufer 1891 Idwal ab Meirig In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 28 London Smith Elder amp Co p 412 Thomas Daniel Lleufer 1891 Iago ab Idwal ab Meirig In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 28 London Smith Elder amp Co p 408 Lloyd John Edward 1893 Maelgwn Gwynedd In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 35 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 305 306 Lloyd John Edward 1893 Maredudd ab Owain In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 36 London Smith Elder amp Co p 130 Tout Thomas Frederick 1893 Llywelyn ab Gruffydd In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 34 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 13 21 Lloyd John Edward 1894 Merfyn Frych In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 37 London Smith Elder amp Co p 277 Miller Arthur 1885 Anarawd In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 1 London Smith Elder amp Co p 370 Stephens William Richard Wood 1886 Caedwalla d 634 In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 8 London Smith Elder amp Co p 201 Tout Thomas Frederick 1886 Cadvan d 617 or 634 In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 8 London Smith Elder amp Co p 190 Tout Thomas Frederick 1886 Cadwaladr d 1172 In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 8 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 190 191 Tout Thomas Frederick 1888 Davydd I In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 14 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 199 200 Tout Thomas Frederick 1888 Davydd III In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 14 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 202 205 Tout Thomas Frederick 1893 Llywelyn ab Iorwerth In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 34 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 7 13 Tout Thomas Frederick 1893 Llywelyn ab Seisyll In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 34 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 6 7 Tout Thomas Frederick 1895 Owain Gwynedd In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 41 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 391 395 Lloyd John Edward 1896 Rhun ap Maelgwn In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 48 London Smith Elder amp Co p 86 Lloyd John Edward 1896 Rhodri Mawr In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 48 London Smith Elder amp Co p 85 Lloyd John Edward 1896 Rhodri ab Owain In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 48 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 85 86 Lloyd John Edward 1899 Trahaearn ap Caradog In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 57 London Smith Elder amp Co p 147 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 David Welsh princes Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 7 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 860 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Llewelyn Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 831 External links Edit The Kingdom of Gwynedd ardal wales co uk Kingdom of Gwynedd welshicons org The Middle Ages library wales The Peniarth Manuscripts library wales Williams Ab Ithel John ed 2012 Brut Y Tywysogion cambridge org Cambridge Library Collection Rolls Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9781139163484 ISBN 9781108043021 Nancy Edwards Early Medieval Wales material evidence and identity PDF research bangor ac uk Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kingdom of Gwynedd amp oldid 1166053352, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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