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Gerald of
Wales (Latin:
Giraldus Cambrensis; Welsh:
Gerallt Cymro; French:
Gerald de Barri; c. 1146 – c. 1223) was a Cambro-Norman
priest and historian...
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appearance in 1999 in
private publications,
although "Zanclodon"
cambrensis or
Megalosaurus cambrensis have both been used for this taxon. "Ngexisaurus" is the...
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Archaeologia Cambrensis is a
Welsh archaeological and
historical scholarly journal published annually by the
Cambrian Archaeological ****ociation. It contains...
- The
Encyclopaedia Cambrensis or Y
Gwyddoniadur Cymreig was the most
ambitious encyclopedia in the
Welsh language. It was
published in ten
volumes between...
-
Senecio cambrensis, the
Welsh groundsel or
Welsh ragwort, is a
flowering plant of the
family Asteraceae. It is
endemic to
Great Britain and
currently known...
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Annals of Ulster, 633.1 "Bellum
Iudris regis Britonum" "Archaeologia
Cambrensis (1846–1899) | BRUT Y TYWYSOGION:
GWENTIAN CHRONICLE 1863 | 1863 | Welsh...
-
mention of
dancing in
Wales is in a 12th-century
account by
Giraldus Cambrensis, but by the 19th
century traditional dance had all but died out due to...
- leo noster) as
early as 1187 in the
Topographia Hibernica of
Giraldus Cambrensis,
while the
byname "lionheart" (le quor de lion) is
first recorded in Ambroise's...
- 1166–1185:
Mainly from the 'Expugnato Hibernica' of
Giraldus Cambrensis Part 1,
Giraldus Cambrensis,
Frederick J.
Furnivall M.A.. ed,
Published for The Early...
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Penmynydd Notes: J.
Williams (1869). "Penmynyth and the Tudors".
Archaeologia Cambrensis. 3rd. 15: 278–294, 379–402. Glyn
Roberts (1959). "EDNYFED
FYCHAN ( EDNYFED...