- Côr
Tewdws or
Bangor Tewdws (meaning "Choir" or "College" of Theodosius) is a
fictional Romano-British
ecclesiastical college that in the 18th and 19th...
-
Maredudd ap
Tewdws (English:
Meredith son of Theodosius; died c. 797) was a king of
Dyfed in
South Wales. His
father was
Tewdws son of
Rhain ap Cadwgan...
- is
unable to send any help (according to
Groans of the Britons). The Cor
Tewdws (College of Theodosius),
Llantwit Major (Wales), is
supposedly burned down...
-
According to the 18th-century
historian of ill-repute, Iolo Morganwg, the Côr
Tewdws or 'College of Theodosius' was
established in the late 4th
century at a...
- 120 BC 63 BC
Nasir al-Din
Muhammad Mihrabanid dynasty 1261 1318
Maredudd ap
Tewdws Kingdom of
Dyfed (Wales) 740 797
Sargon Akkadian Empire (Iraq) 2272 BC 2215 BC...
-
antiquity to
cultures all
around the world,
including the
Celts (Welsh: Tŵr
Tewdws, Irish: Streoillín); pre-colonial
Filipinos (who
called it Mapúlon, Mulo‑pulo...
- his
kingdoms were
divided again by his sons.
Tewdwr ap
Rhain Maredudd ap
Tewdws (c. 740–797)
Rhain ap
Maredudd (c. 797–808)
Owain ap
Maredudd (c. 808–810)...
- Brycheiniog.[citation needed] Rhain's son,
Tewdws succeeded him in Dyfed.
Following Awst's death,
Tewdws ****erted his
right to Brycheiniog, only allowing...
-
priest Maredudd ap Rhys Gryg (died 1271), a
prince of
Deheubarth Maredudd ap
Tewdws (died c. 797), king of
Dyfed Maredudd ap
Tudur (c. 1406), a
soldier and...
- the
Kingdom of
Strathclyde but
educated at the
College of
Theodosius (Cor
Tewdws) in the
Kingdom of Gwent,
lived at the same time on
nearby Steep Holm, and...