- In
Welsh mythology,
Arawn (Welsh pronunciation: [ˈarau̯n]) was the king of the
otherworld realm of
Annwn who
appears prominently in the
first branch of...
- 15810
Arawn (provisional
designation 1994 JR1) is a trans-Neptunian
object (TNO) from the
inner regions of the
Kuiper belt,
approximately 133 kilometres...
-
protect the land of
Prydain from
various threats,
chief among them the evil
Arawn,
whose forces include an
undead army
known as the Cauldron-Born. Throughout...
- Annwyfn, Annwvyn, or Annwfyn) is the
Otherworld in
Welsh mythology.
Ruled by
Arawn (or, in
Arthurian literature, by Gwyn ap Nudd), it was
essentially a world...
- main
rival of
Arawn, the
other king of Annwn. The
dominions of the two
kings sit side by side, and
Hafgan is
constantly warring against Arawn. In the story...
-
defeats Arawn's enemy Hafgan. Meanwhile,
Arawn rules Dyfed.
During this year,
Pwyll does not
sleep with
Arawn's wife,
earning himself gratitude from
Arawn. On...
- They were ****ociated with a form of the Wild Hunt,
presided over by
either Arawn, king of
Annwn in
Pwyll Pendefig Dyfed (Pwyll,
Prince of Dyfed), the First...
-
steals a dog,
lapwing and
roebuck from
Arawn, king of
Annwn (the otherworld),
leading to a
battle between Arawn and the
Children of Dôn.
Gwydion used his...
-
Gwydion and
Arawn, the Lord of Annwn. The
fight broke out
after the
divine plowman Amaethon stole a dog, a lapwing, and a
roebuck from
Arawn.
Gwydion ultimately...
- as he
joins in a
quest to
capture the
eponymous Magical Cauldron from
Arawn Death-Lord. It was a
Newbery Honor book in 1966, runner-up for the year's...