- Hound',
stemming from
Common Brittonic *Maglo-kunos,
attested in
Latin as
Maglocunus. A
number of
Welsh kings and
princes have
borne the name:
Maelgwn Gwynedd...
-
Maelgwn Gwynedd (Latin:
Maglocunus; died c. 547) was King of
Gwynedd during the
early 6th century.
Surviving records suggest he held a pre-eminent position...
-
south transept, two
inscribed stones are set into the
window sills. The
Maglocunus Stone is
inscribed in
Latin "MAGLOCUNI FILI CLUTORI" and in
Ogham "maglicunas...
- have
based his
Modredus on the
early 6th-century "high king" of Gwynedd,
Maglocunus (Maelgwn), whom the 6th-century
writer Gildas had
described as an usurper...
- leaders. Gildas,
writing in
about 540,
spoke of the
Briton chieftain Maglocunus (Maelgwn
Gwynedd in Welsh) as the "insularis draco". The
early Welsh or...
- sins by the
contemporary Christian writer Gildas (who
referred to him as
Maglocunus,
meaning 'Prince-Hound' in Brittonic),
written in the De
Excidio et Conquestu...
- of Dumnonia,
Aurelius Caninus,
Vortipor of the Demetae,
Cuneglasus and
Maglocunus (Mailcun or in
later spelling Maelgwn of Gwynedd) – for
their sins. He...
- Liège) ****met or ****metus (Muhammad)
Moses Maimonides (Moshe ben Maimon)
Maglocunus,
Mailcunus (Maelgwn Gwynedd)
Odoacer (Audawakrs)
Reginherus (Ragnarr Lothbrók)...