-
Aergol Longhand (Modern Welsh:
Aergol Lawhir; c. 437 – c. 515) was a
legendary king of
Dyfed and son and heir of King
Triffyn Farfog. His name is the Welsh...
-
Cadwallon ap
Einion (c. 460-517 or 534),
usually known as
Cadwallon Lawhir ('Long Hand') and also
called Cadwallon I by some historians, was a
Welsh ruler...
- his family's rule in the region. He was
succeeded by two sons:
Cadwallon Lawhir and
Owain Ddantgwyn.
Kings of
Wales family trees Bwletin Y
Bwrdd Gwybodau...
-
stronghold of
Cadwallon Lawhir, King of Gwynedd, who had wide-ranging
exploits as far as Northumberland. The
ruins of
Cadwallon Lawhir's residence are on a...
- Gildas, who
considered Maelgwn a
usurper and reprobate. The son of
Cadwallon Lawhir and great-grandson of Cunedda,
Maelgwn was
buried on Ynys
Seiriol (now known...
-
founder of the
Gwynedd dynasty in
North Wales. His
brother was
Cadwallon Lawhir ap Einion,
known from the
Gwynedd pedigrees.
Owain was the
father of Cynlas...
- Davids). Some
historians say that he
could have been the son of
Aergol Lawhir and
brother of
Vortiporius and may have been a
Saint and not a King. He...
- Portsmouth): King
Budic II of
Brittany s****s
refuge at the
court of
Aergol Lawhir, in
Dyfed (Wales)
after the battle. King
Theodoric the
Great raises the...
- the kingdom.[citation needed]. He was the
reputed father of King
Aergol Lawhir. His
fraternal nephew,
Cormac mac Urb, was the
grandfather of
Brychan Brycheiniog...
-
Dyfnwallon (c. 780)
Gwgon ap
Meurig (d. 872)
Triffyn Farfog (c. 430)
Aergol Lawhir (c. 460)
Vortiporius Cloten (c. 600,
Gwlyddein ap Nowy ap Arthur) Maredudd...