-
Saint Twrog -
feast day 26 June - was a 6th-century
Welsh saint who
founded the
church at Maentwrog,
having come to
Wales early in the Age of the Saints...
- station's name".
Maentwrog means "
Twrog's stone" (Welsh maen = stone).
According to legend, a
giant known as
Twrog hurled a
boulder from the top of a...
-
Saint Twrog's Church is in the
village of
Maentwrog in the
Welsh county of Gwynedd,
lying in the Vale of Ffestiniog,
within the
Snowdonia National Park...
- St
Twrog's Church may
refer to: St
Twrog's Church,
Bodwrog St
Twrog's Church,
Maentwrog This
disambiguation page
lists articles ****ociated with the title...
- St
Twrog's Church is a
small rural church at
Bodwrog in Anglesey,
North Wales.
Built in the late 15th
century in a
medieval style, some
alterations have...
-
before being murdered by
raiders from the sea. A
chapel dedicated to St
Twrog,
perhaps containing a
navigation light, was
later built on the rock but...
-
Llandwrog (Welsh pronunciation;
Welsh language:
meaning 'The
church of
Saint Twrog') is a
village and
community in Gwynedd, north-west Wales, most notable...
- born in
Brittany and went to
Wales with his
brothers Saint Tegai and
Saint Twrog as a
disciple and
student of
Saint Cadfan, who
later admitted Trillo to...
-
Abbot there until 542. He was the
brother of Sts. Baglan, Trillo, Tegai,
Twrog, Tecwyn, Gredifael,
Flewyn and Llechid, and is
commemorated 10 October....
- of the
English and
Welsh were said to
resort to the
nearby chapel of St.
Twrog. The
manor of
Tidenham retained rights over the p****age, and
received rents...