- The
Demetae were a
Celtic people of Iron Age and
Roman period, who
inhabited modern Pembrokeshire and
Carmarthenshire in south-west Wales. The
tribe also...
-
north by the Ordovices; to the east by the Dobunni; and to the west by the
Demetae.
According to Tacitus's
biography of Agricola, the
Silures usually had...
-
southern sites such as Carmarthen,
which was the
civitas capital of the
Demetae tribe. The only town in
Wales founded by the Romans, Caerwent, is in South...
- sub-Roman
Britain in
southwest Wales, was
based on the
former territory of the
Demetae (modern
Welsh Dyfed). The
medieval Irish narrative The
Expulsion of the...
- (Loudoun Hill or
Walls Hill) Deceanglī
Canovium or
Clwydian hillforts Demetae Moridunum Dobunnī/Bodunnī
Corinium Dobunnorum Dumnonīī Isca Dumnoniorum...
-
fathered by an
incubus demon through a nun,
daughter of the King of
Dyfed (
Demetae, today's
South West Wales). Usually, the name of Merlin's
mother is not...
- in the
third century or that it
otherwise derives from the name of the
Demetae people. "Dyfed" as a
surname and the
related forename "Dafydd"
appear from...
-
Smertae Setantii Taexali Textoverdi Vacomagi Venicones Votadini Deceangli Demetae Gangani Ordovices Silures Ancalites Attacotti Bibroci C****i
Cenimagni (may...
- south-west Wales, the
language takes its name from the Iron Age
tribe the
Demetae, who
would also give
their name to the post-Roman
Kingdom of Dyfed. Writing...
-
Cornovii (Central)
Cornovii (Northern)
Creones ****onii
Decantae Deceangli Demetae Dobunni Dumnonii Durotriges Epidii Gabrantovices Iceni Lopocares Lugi Novantae...