-
Gwyddno Garanhir was the
supposed ruler of a
sunken land off the
coast of Wales,
known as Cantre'r Gwaelod. He was the
father of
Elffin ap
Gwyddno, the...
- of Carmarthen, in
which the land is
referred to as Maes
Gwyddno (Welsh for 'the
Plain of
Gwyddno'). In this version, the land was lost to
floods when a...
- Sutherland, Scotland. In
Welsh mythology,
Elffin ap
Gwyddno (Welsh, also Elphin) was a son of
Gwyddno Garanhir, 'Lord of Ceredigion'. The
earliest example...
- in the Book of Taliesin, Taliesin's
early patron was
Elffin ap
Gwyddno, son of
Gwyddno Garanhir, who was a lord of a lost land in
Cardigan Bay called...
- ap Nudd and
Gwyddno Garanhir,
found in the
Black Book of Carmarthen. In this narrative—Gwyn,
returning from battle,
chances upon
Gwyddno Garanhir, king...
-
therefore he was
called Rhydderch the Generous." The
Hamper of
Gwyddno Garanhir (Mwys
Gwyddno Garanir): food for one man
would be put in it, and when it was...
- Aureli****, Vortigern,
Constantine III,
Myrddin Wyllt,
Clovis I,
Gwyddno Garanhir,
Elffin ap
Gwyddno, Horsa, Hengest, Cerdic, Aelle, Gildas, and
Aneirin (in the...
-
Aberdyfi according to most
versions of the tale – by a
prince named Elffin ap
Gwyddno; the
reborn infant grew to
become the
legendary bard Taliesin. It has been...
-
Dialogue of Gwyn ap Nudd and
Gwyddno Garanhir is
found in the
Black Book of
Carmarthen describing how Gwyn ap Nudd
meets Gwyddno, king of Cantre'r Gwaelod...
- Wales. He is also
sometimes known by the
patronymic Idris ap
Gwyddno (Idris son of
Gwyddno).
Although now
known as
Idris Gawr, (Idris the Giant) this may...