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Vortigern (/ˈvɔːrtɪdʒɜːrn/; Old Welsh: Guorthigirn, Guorthegern; Welsh:
Gwrtheyrn; Old English: Wyrtgeorn; Old Breton: Gurdiern, Gurthiern; Irish: Foirtchern;...
- Nant
Gwrtheyrn is a
Welsh Language and
Heritage Centre,
located near the
village of Llith**** on the
northern coast of the Llŷn Peninsula, Gwynedd, in...
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Craig Gwrtheyrn, or Caer
Gwrtheyrn, is an Iron Age
hillfort on the
south side of the
River Teifi,
about 1.2
miles (1.9 km) west of the
village of Llanfihangel-ar-Arth...
- in 854 upon the
death of
Cyngen ap
Cadell by his
nephew Rhodri Mawr.
Gwrtheyrn (High-King Vortigern),
married to Sevira,
daughter of
Magnus Maximus Cadeyern...
- male line
descendants of
Cunedda Wledig of
Gwynedd (401 – 1283), and
Gwrtheyrn of
Powys (c. 5th century – 1160), then also the
separate Welsh kingdoms...
- as a
symbol of the
people in the
Historia Brittonum.
Vortigern (Welsh:
Gwrtheyrn), King of the
Celtic Britons, is
interrupted while attempting to build...
- the
Historia Brittonum,
there is a
narrative in
which Vortigern (Welsh:
Gwrtheyrn), King of the
Celtic Britons from
Powys is
interrupted whilst attempting...
- O Oes
Gwrtheyrn Gwrtheneu (From the Age of
Vortigern the Most Slender) is a fourteenth-century
Welsh chronicle. The work
spans the age from Vortigern...
- 2019,
Hawaiian TV
company Oiwi
visited a
Welsh language centre in Nant
Gwrtheyrn,
North Wales, to help find ways of
preserving their Ōlelo Hawaiʻi language...
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Vortigern (c. 365 High-King
Gwrtheyrn),
ruled Buellt and
Gwrtheyrnion Cadeyern Fendigaid (c. 400, Cedehern/Cateyrn ap
Gwrtheyrn)
Rhuddfedel Frych Morgan...