-
system was
developed to
group the children. In
Welsh they were
called llysoedd (plural; llys singular). Up to 1973
there were
three Houses:
Dinefwr (dark...
- of Wales, and the
ruling House of
Aberffraw maintained courts (Welsh:
llysoedd) at
Aberffraw and Rhosyr.
After Edward I's
conquest of
Gwynedd he built...
- and
unattended until excavations in the 20th century. The
courts (Welsh:
Llysoedd) were
administrative centres in the Kingdom, the
courts were
royal residences...
-
princes had not
constructed castles,
instead using undefended palaces called llysoedd, or courts. From the late 11th
century onwards, the
Normans had advanced...
- The
Welsh Courts Act 1942 (Welsh:
Deddf Llysoedd Cymreig 1942) (5 & 6 Geo. 6. c. 40) was an Act of the
Parliament of the
United Kingdom that
allowed the...
-
princes had not
constructed castles,
instead using undefended palaces called llysoedd, or courts. From the late 11th
century onwards, the
Normans had advanced...
-
Pennal was
regarded with
honour because of its
status as one of the 21
llysoedd, the
courts of the
native Welsh Princes of Gwynedd. A copy of Glyndŵr's...
- Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com
Operations Inc, 2008. "Brwydr pel-droed
llysoedd Bl 9" (in Welsh).
Ysgol Gyfun Gwynllyw. 5
October 2015.
Retrieved 4 September...
-
Pennal was
regarded with
honour because of its
status as one of the 21
llysoedd, the
courts of the
native Welsh Princes of Gwynedd. The
church is the last...
-
Rheoliadau Taliadau Cymunedol, Y
Dreth Gyngor ac
Ardrethu Annomestig (Gorfodi) (
Llysoedd Ynadon) (Cymru) 2001 (S.I. 2001 Rhif 1076 (Cy. 52)) The
Education (Pupil...