to Dee a little above Chester And this ââall suffice for the perfect Description of that which ãâã old time was called Gwynedh and Powys and at âhese days the six Shires of North-Wales Now remaineth the last Kingdom of Wales Dynefawr called Dynefawr which although it was the greatest yet was ãâã not the best as Giraldus witnesseth chiefly beâause it was much molested with Flemings and Normans and also that in divers parts thereof the Lords would not obey their Prince as in Gwent and in Morganwe which was their own confusion as shall âereafter appear This was divided into six Parts of the which Caredigion was the first Caredigion and contained âour Cantreds and ten Comots as Cantref Penwedic had ân it these Comots Geneurglyn Perfedh and Creuthyn Cantref Canawl had these Mefenyth Anhunoc and Pennarth Cantref Castelh had these Comots Mabwynion and Caerwedros Cantref Syrwen had these Gwenionyth and Iscoed and this part is at this day called in English Cardigan-shi e and in Welch Swydh-Aberteifi This is a Champion Country without much Wood and hath been divers times overcome with Flemings and Normans which builded many Castles in it and at the last were beaten out of them all It hath on the East North-Wales with the River Dyfi and part of Powys upon the South Caermardhyn shire upon the West Pembroke shire with the River Teifi and upon the North the Irish Sea In this part is the Town of Cardigan upon Teifi noâ far from the Sea The Town of Aberystwyth upoâ the River Ystwyth by the Sea and Lhanbadarn Faââ which was a great Sanctuary and a place of Religious and Learned Men in times past And in thâ Shire were a great number of Castles as the Castlâ of Ystratmeyric of Walter of Lhanrysted of Dynertâ of the Sons of Wyneaon of Aber-Reidol and a greââ number more with the Town of Tregaron and Lhââdhewibrefi Dyfet The second part was called Dyfed and at this daâ Pembroke-shire and had in it eight Cantreds anâ twenty three Comots which were these Cantreâ Emlyn had these Comots Vwchcuch Iscuch anâ Lefethyr Cantref Arberth had these Penrhyn ar Elays Esterâlef and Talacharn Cantref Daugledheu had these Amgoed Pennaâ and Efelfre Cantref Y Coed had these Lhanhayaden and Casteâ Gwys Cantref Penfro hath these Coed yr haf Maenor byâ and Penfro Cantref Rhos hath these Hulfforth Castelh Gwalch mai and Ygarn Cantref Pubidioc hath these Mynyw Pencaer anâ Pebidioc Cantref Cemais hath these Vwchnefer Isnefer anâ Trefdraeth In this part are divers Towns and Havens at thiâ day as Pembroke Tenby in Welch Dynbegh-y-pyscââ Hereford-West in Welch Hulfforth with the fair Haven of Milford called in Welch Aberdaugledheâ St. Davids or Menevia called in Welch Mynyw the chiefest See in all Wales Then Fiscard called Abergwayn and Newport named Trefdraeth these be along the Sea-coast or not very far off Besides these ââere be divers Castles as Cilgerran Arberth Gwys ââanhayaden Walwyn and divers others This part was âon first by the Montgomery's Earls of Shrewsbury and ââter given to the Marshalls and so to Valence and from âence were the Princes of Wales most troubled with ââe Normans and Flemings who do remain and inââbit about Tenby Pembroke and Rhos to this day âhich can neither Welch nor good English as yet ââfed for so will I call it hereafter hath on the ââe West and North the Irish Sea upon the South the âanish Sea and upon the East Caermardhyn-shire ââd on the North-East Cardigan-shire The third âârt was Caermardhyn-shire having four Cantreds Caermardhyn ââd fifteen Comots as Cantref Finâoc with the Coâots of Harfâyn Derfedh and Isgeneny Cantref Eginoc with these Gwyr now in Glamorganâââre Cydweli and Carnwilheon Cantref Bachan with these Malhaen Caeo and ââaenor Deilo Cantref Mawr with these Cethineoc Comot mabElfyw âomot mabVchdryd and Wydigada In this Shire are the âowns and Castles of Caermardhyn Dynefowr which was ââe Prince's Seat of the Country Newtown Lhandeilo ââanymdhyfri Emlyn Swansey now in Glamorganâââre called in Welch Abertawy upon the Sea the ââstle of the Sons of Vchtryd of Lhanstephan and âââers It hath upon the West Dyfed or Pembroke-shire ãâã the North Cardigan-shire upon the South-West ãâã Sea and upon the South-East Glamorgan and on the East Brecknock-shire This is counted the âââongest part of all South-Wales as that which is ââl of high Mountains great Woods and fair Rivers ââecially Tywy In this and in the other two parts ãâã South-Wales were the notablest Acts that this Hiâââry treateth of atchieved and done The fourth called Morganwe now Glamorgan-shire Morganwc âântaining four Cantreds with fifteen Comots As âântref Croneth with these Comots Rwngneth ac Afan ãâã yr Hwndrwd and Maenor Glynogwr Cantref Pennythen with these Meyscyn Glynrhodny âaenor Talafan and Maenor Ruthyn Cantref Brenhinol with these Cibowr Senghennyth Vwchcaeth and Iscaeth Cantref Gwentlhwg which is now in Monmouthshire with these Comots y Rhardh Ganol and Eithafdylygion In this part are these Towns and Castles Lhandaf the Bishop's See Caerdyffe called Caerdhyf Cowbridge called in Welch Y bont faen which is as much as to say Stone-bridge Lantwyd Caerffyli and others and hath divers Rivers which run to the South-Sea as Lay Taf Tawy Neth Afan Ogwr and Lhychwr it hath on the South the Sea of Severn which divideth it from Devon-shire and Cornwall upon the West and North-West Caermardhyn-shire upon the North East Brecknock-shire and upon the East Monmouth-shire Of this you shall read very little for one Iestyn being Chief of the Country and having War with his Neighbours called one Robert Fitzhamââ with a great number of Strangers to his succours which after they had atchieved the Enterprise liked so well the Country that they found occasion to falâ out with Iestyn and inhabited the Country themselves and their Heirs to this day The fifth part was called Gwent and now in Monmouth shire which had three Cantreds and ten Comots as Cantref Gwent which hath these Comots Y mynyth Iscoed Lhefnydh and Tref y grug Cantref Iscoed these Brynbuga Vwchcoed y Teirtref and Erging ac ewyas now in Hereford-shire Cantref Côch was the seventh Cantred of Morganwc which is now in Glocester-shire and is called the Forest of Dean In this part was the antient City of Caerlheon upoâ Vsk where was the Archbishop's See of Wales here are also divers Towns and Castles as Chepstow Glyâ Strigul Rhos Tyntern upon the River Wy there is also Newport called y Castelh Newydh Vysc called Brynbuga Grosmont Raglan White-Castle Abergefenny and many others This is a fair and a fertile Country oâ which likewise the Gentlemen were never obedient to their Prince which was the cause of their own destruction It hath on the West Glamorgan and Brecknock-shires upon the North Hereford-shire upon ââe East Glocester-shire with the River Wy and upon ââe South and South-East Severn Last of all cometh Brecheinoc now Brecknock-shire Brecheinoc âhich hath three Cantreds and eight Comots As
where every Man either âacked Knowledge or Spirit to set forth the History of their own Country took this Enterprise in hand to âheir great shame and no less dispraise because he a blind Leader shall draw a great Number of undiscreet and rash Followers as well Geographers and Cosmographers as Chroniclers and Historiographers to the Hark Pit of Ignorance where I leave them at this time remitting the Reader to the Apology of Sir John Price Knight and his British History written by him of purpose against the envious Reports and slanderous Taints of the said Polydore where he shall see a great number of his Errors confuted at large And to return to my former matter of the Name of Wales Wales which Name to be given of late by a strange Nation may be otherwise proved for the Welch-men themselves do not understand what these words Wales and Welch do signify nor know any other Name of thee Country or themselves but Cambry nor of their Language but Cambraec which is as much to say as Camber's Language or Speech So likewise they know not what England or English meaneth but commonly they call the Country Lhoyger the English Men Saison A Loârino A Saxon. and the English Tongue Saisonace Which is an evident token that this is the same Language which the Britains spake at the beginning for the Works of Merdhyn and of Taliessin who wrote above 1000 years past are almost the same words which they use at this day or at the least easy to be understood oâ every one which knoweth perfectly the Welch Tongue especially in North Wales Beside this where at this day there do remain three remnants of the Britains divided every one from other with the Seas which are in Wales Cornwall called in British Cerniw and little Britain yet almost all the particular words of these three People are all one although in pronunciation and Writing of the Sentences they differ somewhat which is no marvel seeing that the pronunciation in one Realm is often so diverse that the one can scarce understand the other But it is rather a wonder thaâ the Welch-men being separated from the Cornish wel nigh these 900 years and the Britains from either of them 290 years before that and having smal Traffick or Concourse together since that time have still kept their own British Tongue They are not therefore to be credited which deny the Welch to be the old British Tongue And here I cannot pass over what one of these fine Chroniclers wrote of late of the Name of Britain affirming that it should be so called of Britanie in France as the Elder of that Name But surely he had either never seen Ptolomy nor Caesar nor any other antient Writer or read them with small Judgment and Memory For there he might have learned that when this Land was called Britain the other was called Armorica Rob. Caenal lib. 2. Per. 2. and how in Maximus's time Conan Meriadoc was the first that gave it that Name and inhabited it with Britains out of this Isle Other derivations of these words Britannia and Albion out of Greek and Latin I am ashamed to rehearse for unto such Errors do they commonly fall that either puffed up with vain-glory of their own Wits or pinched with despite and envy at other Men's Works or blinded with Igorance do go about to write and set forth any History or Chronicle But passing over this matter until another time I will return to the Description of Wales The mears bounds of Wales which as I said was of old time compassed almost about with the Irish Seas and the Rivers Dee and Severn although afterwards the Saxons wan by force from the Britains all the plain and champion Country over the Rivers and specially Offa King of Mercia who made a Ditch of great breadth and depth to be ãâã Mear betwixt his Kingdom and Wales which Ditch began at the River Dee by Bassingwerk between Chester and Ruthlan and ran along the Hills sides to the South Sea a little below Bristol reaching above a hundred Miles in length and is in many places to be seen at this day bearing the Name of Clawdh Offa that is to say Offa's Ditch and the Country between it and England is commonly called in Welch Y Mars although the great part of it be now inhabited by Welch-men namely in North-Wales which yet keepeth the antient limits to the River Dee and in some places over it Other as Sylvester Giraldus make the River Wy called in Welch Gwy to be the Mear between England and Wales on the South part called South-Wales who measureth the breadth of Wales from Salow or Willoweford called Rhyd yr helig upon Wy to St. Davids in Menevia 100 Miles and the length from Caerlheon upon Ysc in Gwentland to Holybead called Caergybi in Anglesey in Welch called Môn above 100. Miles and these be the common Mears at this day altho' the Welch Tongue is commonly used and spoken in England beyond these old Mears a great way as in Hereford-shire Glocester-shire and a part of Shropshire And thus for the general Description of Wales which afterward about the Year of Christ 870. Rodericus Magnus King of Wales divided into three Territories which they called Kingdoms which remained until of late days These three were Gwynedh in English North-Wales Deheubarth in English South-Wales and Powys-Land in every of the which he ordained a Princely Seat or Court for the Prince to remain at most commonly as in Gwynedh which some old Writers call Venedoâââ for Gwynethia Aberffraw in the Islle of Môn or Anglesey Aberffraw In Deheubarth called in Latin Demetia Caâmardyn from whence it was afterward removed to Dynefowr Dynefowr Mathrafal eight Miles thence In Powys Pengwern call'd Y Mwythic and in English Shrewsbury from whence it was removed to Mathrafal in Powys-Land And because this History doth as well intreat of Wars betwixt these three Provinces as betwixt them and the Saxons Normans and Flemings I think it good to set forth the particular Description of every part by it self And first of North-Wales as the chiefest part which he gave his Eldest Son ordaining that either of the other two should pay him yearly 200 l. of Tribute North-Wales as it appeareth in the Laws of Howel Dha which are to be had in Welch and also in Latin Therefore Gwynedh called North-Wales had upon the North-side the Sea from the River Dee at Basing-werke to Aberdyfi and upon the West and South-West the River Dyfi which divideth it from South-Wales and in some places from Powys-Land And on the South and East it is divided from Powys sometimes with Mountains and sometimes with Rivers till is come to the River Dee again This Land was of old time divided to four parts of which the chiefest was Môn Môn in English called Anglesey where the Prince's chief House was at Aberffraw which is an Island separated from
and hath these Comots Coleigion Lhannerch and Dogueilyn The fifth Cantref is Tegengl and now is a part of Flint-shire having these Comots Cânâsyshe Prestatyn and Ruthlan And in this part is one of the fairest Vallies within this Isle containing 18 miles in length and 4 5 6 or 7 in breadth as the Hills either draw inward together or backward asunder which high Hills do inclose it on the East West and South parts and Northward the Sea It is plentiful of Cattel Fish and Fowl Corn Hey Grass and Wood and divided along in the midst with the River Clwyd to whom runneth Clywedoe Ystrat Whilar Elwy and a great number of other Rivers from the Hills In this Valley two miles from the Sea is the Town and Castle of Ruthlan Ann. 12. Edw. 1. where sometimes a Parliament hath been kept And two miles above it is the Seâ of Sr. Asaph between the Rivers Clwyd and Elwy called in the old time the Bishop's See of Dhan-Elwy Four miles thence and two miles from the River is situate upon a Rock the Town and Castle of Denbigh where is one of the greatest Markets in the Marches of Wales and one of the fairest and strongest Castles within this Realm which being the House of David Brother to Lhewelyn the last Prince of the Welch-Blood was enlarged and strengthned by Henry Lacy Earl of Lincoln to whom King Edward gave the same Lordship it is also the Shire-Town of that Shire Five miles above this is the Town of Ruthyn with a fair Castle which sometimes belonged to the Lords Gray Earls of Kent This part of North-Wales hath upon the North the River Dee and the Sea Upon the West Arfon and the River Conwey South and East Merionyth and the Country then called Powys And these be the Mears and Bounds of Gwynedh or Venedotia for the Name of North Wales containeth besides this all Powys at these days So there was und r the Territory of Aberffraw fifteen Cantreds and in them thirty eight Comots The second Kingdom was Mathrafal Mathrafal or Powys which in right order was the third as that which came to the third Brother yet for the better understanding of the History following I have placed it here To this Kingdom belonged the Country of Powys and the Land betwixt Wy and Severn Which part had upon the South and West South-Wales with the Rivers Wy and Tywy and other Mears Upon the North Gwynedh and upon the East the Marches of England from Chester to Wy a little above Hereford and therefore it was most troubled with Wars as well of the Saxons as afterwards of the Normans Lords Marchers who daily wan some part thereof and by âhat means it was the first part that served the Kings of England and therefore less esteemed of all the âest This part called Powys was divided again into Powys Fadoc and Powys Wenwynwyn Powys Fadoc âontained in it self five Cantreds and fifteen Coâots Cantref Y Barwn which had three Comots Dynâael Edeyrneon and Glyndourdwy which are now in Merionyth shire saving Dinmael which is in Denbigh-âire Cantref Y Rhiw whose Comots were these Yal âow in Denbigh-shire Ystratalyn and Hop now in Flint-ââire Cantref Vwchnant hath these Comots Merfforth in Flint-shire Maelor Gymraeg in English Bromfield now in Denbigh-shire and Maelor Saesneg in Flint-shire Cantref Trefred containeth these Comots Croesfain Tref y Wayn in English Chirke and in Denbigh-shire Croesoswallt in English Oswestrey and in Shrop-shire Cantref Rhaiyder with his Comots Mochnant Israiyder Cynlhaeth and Nanheudwy all in Chirke-Land and in Denbigh-shire Also the Lordship of Whytington now in Shrop-shire was in this part of Powys which part at this day hath lost the Name of Powys and is situated in divers Shires as it appeareth by the Discourse before passed In this part is the Castle of Holt in Bromfield and the Castle of Chirke in Chirke-Land Likewise the Lordship and Castle of Whytington which came by marriage to Foulk Fitzwarren There is beside these the Lordship of Oswestry of the which the Fitzalans have been Lords these 300 and odd years and of divers other Lordships in those Marches as Shrarden the eleven Towns Clun and many others which are all now in Shrop-shire The second part called Powys Wenwynwyn had likewise five Cantreds and twelve Comots Cantref Y Fyrnwy had these Comots Mochnant âwch Rayader Mechain Iscoed and Lbannerch Hudol Cantref Ystlyc had these Deuthwr Gorthwr Isaf and Ystrat Marchelh Cantref Lhyswynaf had these Caerneon and Mechain Vwchcoed Cantref Cydewen had Comot Conan and Comot Hauren Cantref Conan had Cyfeilioc and Mouthwy which is now in Merionyth-shire Of all these the three first Cantreds do only at this day bear the Name of Powys which are upon the North-side of Severn and are all five saving the Comot of Mowthwy in Mongomery-shire This is a Country full of Woods Hills and Rivers and hath in it these Towns the Poole New-Town and Machynlhaeth Arustly was in old time in this part but afterwards it came to the Princes of Gwynedh These Lordships came by just descent from the Princes thereof to a Woman named Hawys the Daughter of Owen ap Gruffydh Arustly and Cyfeilioc came to the Baron of Dudley and afterwards it was sold to the King The third part belonging to Mathrafal was the Land between Wy and Severn containing four Cantreds and thirteen Comots Cantref Melienyth hath these Comots Ceri Swydhygre Rhiwalalht and Glyn Ieithon Cantref Elfel hath these Vwchmynydh Ismynydh and Lhechdhyfnog Cantref y Clawdh these Dyffryn Teyfediat Swydhynogen and Pennwelht Cantref Buelht hath these Swydh y Fam Dreulys and Isyrwon Of this part there is at this day some in Montgomery-shire some in Radnor-shire and some in Brecknock-shire In this part and in the Lordships marching to it which altho' at the time of this division which was in the time of the last Prince were not in his subjection yet to this day speak Welch and are called Wales and in these Comots are these Towns and Castles Montgomery called in Welch Trefaldwyn a pretty Town and a fair Castle The Castle of Clun called Colunwy which is the Earls of Arundel The Town of Knighton in Welch Trefyclawd The Castle of Cymaron Presteyn in Welch Lhanandras The Town and Castle of Radnor in Welch Maesyfed at this day the Shire Town The Town of Kington and the Castle of Huntingdon called in Welch Y Castelh Mayn which were the Bohuns Earls of Hereford and after the Dukes of Buckingham Castle Payne Haye Lhanfair in Buelht These Lordships with Brecknock and Abergefenny were belonging to the Bruces Lords of Brecknock and after came divers times and by sundry means to the Bohuns Nevils and Mortimers And so as I have rehearsed in this Territory or Kingdom were found fourteen Cantreds and forty Comots Two of these parts which are Powys and Gwynedh are at this day called North-Wales and divided into six Shiâes Mòn called Anglesey Caernarvon Merionyth Denbigh Flint and
he was ââle to draw together not doubting the Conquest of ââme part of Britain in case the whole should prove âecoverable He was the more encouraged to this âxpedition by reason that the Advantage was like to ãâã his own and no one could challenge the Governâent of Britain in case Fortune should deliver it to ââs Hands Cadwalader was gone to Rome and in all ââobability never to return his Son Edwal Ywrch or ââe Roe was young and under the Tuition of Alan ãâã that the event of this Expedition must of necessity âll to himself or by his Concession to his Son Ivor âho was to be chief in the Undertaking Having âised a considerable Army consisting chiefly of his âwn Subjects with what remain'd of the Britains ââat came over with King Cadwaladar he dispatch'd ãâã for Britain under the Command of his Son Ivor ââd his Nephew Ynyr They safely landed in the Western Parts of Britain which put the Saxons inââ so great a Fright that immediately they drew up ââl their Power to oppose them and to hinder their ârogress into the Country The Britains tho someâhat fatigued with their Voyage however gave âhem Battel and after a very great slaughter of the âaxons possessed themselves of the Countries of âornwal Devon and Somersetshires This proved a âortunate beginning for the Britains and gave them âreat hopes of farther Success in the recovery of their Country but that could not be expected withoââ great Opposition and several hot Engagements wâââ the Saxons This they were immediately made seâsible of for they had scarce time to breath and to ââcover their Spirits after the last Battel but Kentwiââ King of the West-Saxons marched against them wiââ a powerful Army consisting of Saxons and Anglââ The Britains resolved to fight them but whilst boââ Armies were in view of each other they thoughâ more adviseable to cease from any Hostility and ãâã enter into Articles of Composition Ivor seem already satisfied with his Conquest and willinâââ agreed to marry Ethelberga Kentwyn's Cousin aââ peaceably to enjoy for his life so much as he was aâready in possession of This he faithfully observed ââring the Reign of Kentwyn and his Nephew Cadââ who after two Years resign'd the Kingdom of ãâã West-Saxons to his Cousin Ivor And now Ivor wâââ become unexpectedly powerful being King as wâââ of the Saxons as Britains that inhabited the Wâstern parts of the Island He was now able to ââdertake somewhat considerable and therefore begââ to fall foul upon his Neighbours the Kings of Kâââ the West-Saxons and Mercia whom he vanquishââ in several Battels But being at length tir'd with tââ Weight of Government he went to Rome after tââ Example of Cadwalader and resign'd the Rule of ãâã Saxons to his Cosin Adelred leaving the Britains ãâã the care of Roderick Molwynoc the Son of Edwal Ywââ This Ivor founded the Abby of Glastenbury callââ in the British Tongue Ynys Avalon where there ãâã been a Christian Church for several Years before aââ the first that was ever erected in Britain For Josâââ of Arimathea being sent by Philip the Apostle in tââ days of Arviragus An. Chr. 53. to preach the Gosâââ in Britain seated himself here and built a Chuâââ for the British Christians This Church afterwaâââ Ivor converted into an Abby which he endowââ with very large Possessions being famous for tââ Burying-place of Joseph of Arimathea and Kiââ Arthur He bestowed also some Lands upon tââ Church of Winchester But there happen'd several Casualties in his time Brythâ a Subject to Egfride King of Northumberland âassed over to Ireland and wasted and destroyed a great part of that Kingdom In the Fourth Year of âis Reign their happen'd a remarkable Earthquake ân the Isle of Man which much disturbed and anâoyed the Inhabitants and the year following it rain'd Blood both in Britain and in Ireland This occasion'd the Butter and Milk to resemble the colour of Blood ând two Years after the Moon also appear'd all bloody These Accidents of Nature might probably presage âome Tumults and Disturbances in the Kingdom which were very great in his time For he was almost in perpetual Hostility with the Kings of Kent West-Sex and Mercia which occasion'd great Blood-âhed and Slaughter in Britain His Journey to Rome âut an end to all these Commotions from whence he âever did return but ended his Days there in the practice of Piety and Religion Roderick Molwynoc THE Government of the Britains Ivor resign'd A.D. 720 to Roderick Molwinoc the Son of Edwal Ywrch who began his Reign An. 720. But Adelred King of the West-Saxons was displeased that Ivor had not bestowed upon him his whole Kingdom and upon that account he is resolved to trouble and plague Roderick and his Britains He rais'd immediately a powerfull Army and with all his Forces marched to Devonshire which he destroyed with Fire and Sword From whence he proceeds to Cornwal intending to make that Country sensible of the same Misery but he came far short of his Expectation for upon his entrance into the Country the Britains opposed him and gave him Battel where he was vanquished and forced to retire with all speed to his own Dominions This Victory the Britains called Gwaeth Heilyn from thâ A.D. 721 place where this Battel was fought The Year following the Britains again obtained two notable Victories over the Saxons the one at a place called Gaââ Maclawch in North-Wales the other at Pencoct in South-Wales But the Joy and Satisfaction which the Brâtains entertained of these Successes was somewhââ abated by the Death of Belin the Son of Elphin ãâã Man of noble Birth and great Worth among theâ About the same time Celredus King of Mercia dieâ and was succeeded by Ethelbaldus who being veââdesirous to annex that fertile and pleasant Countrâ lying between the Rivers Severn and Wye to hââ Kingdom of Mercia entred Wales with a puissaââ Army He destroyed and ravaged the Country bâfore him to Carno a Mountain lying not far froâ Abergavenny where he was met with by the Britainâ between whom a bloody and sore Battel was fougââ in the Year 728. but the Victory proved very dubâtable A.D. 733 Not long after dyed Venerable Bede who was âducated and brought up in the Abby of Wyrnetham ãâã Iarewe a Man of great Learning and extensiââ Knowledg who wrote several Books one of whicâ entitled The Ecclesiastical History of the English Nâtion he dedicated to Cleolwolfe King of Northumbeâland The same time Adeired King of the West-Sâxons and Ethelbald King of Mercia united their Foâces and joyntly marched to fight against the Britaâââ The Welch were now put to very hard Streights anâ forced to oppose the numerous Armies of two poweâful Kings However fight they must or suffer thââ Country to be miserably over-run by their inveterââ Enemies Both Armies being engaged a very diâmal Battel ensued thereupon and a very great slaughter happen'd on both sides but the Saxons prevailing by the number of their
Chad stands He was a great Friend and a Favourer to the Monks of Bangor whose part he took against the Saxons that were set on by Augustine the Monk to prosecute them with Fire and Sword because they would not forsake the Customs of their own Church and conform to those of Rome Merfyn Frych and Esylht COnan being dead Merfyn Frych and his Wife Esylht who was sole Heir to Conan took upon them the Government or Principality of Wales This Merfyn was King of Man and Son to Gwyriat and Nest the Daughter of Cadelh ap Brochwel ap Elis King of Powys Howel being forcibly ejected out of Anglesey by his Brother Conan Tindaethwy and escaping to the Island of Man was honourably and kindly received by Merfyn in return of whose Civilities Howel used such means afterwards that Merfyn married Esylht the Daughter and Heir of his Brother Conan tho others say that he died presently after his Escape to Merfyn Howel after that he had for about five years enjoyed the Isle of Man and other Lands in the North given him by Merfyn to hold under him dyed about the year 825 after whose Death they again returned to Merfyn whose Ancestors had always held the same under the Kings of the Britains and so upon his Marriage with Esylht the Isle of Man was annexed to the Crown of Wales In the first year of their Reign Egbert the powerful King of the West Saxons entred with a mighty Army into Wales destroyed and wasted the Countrey as far as Snowden Hills and seized upon the Lordship of Rhyvoniec in Denbighland About the same time a very sore Battel was fought in Anglesey between the Saxons and the Welch called from the place where this Fight happened the Battel of Lhanvaes A.D. 819 Fortune seemed all this while to frown upon the Welch and their Affairs succeeded very ill for shortly after that Egbert had advanced his Colours as far as Snowden Kenulph King of Mercia wasted the Country of West Wales over-ran and destroyed âowis-land and greatly disturbed and incommoded âhe Welch Nation Soon after this Kenulph died ând was succeeded by Kenelm and he in a short ââme by Ceolwulph who after two years Reign left âhe Kingdom of Mercia to Bernulph Egbert King of the West Saxons was grown very âtrong and powerful able to reduce all the petty Kingâoms in Britain under one single Monarchy upon âhe thoughts of which he set upon Bernulph King of Mercia and vanquished him at Elledowne and afterwards brought under Subjection the Countries of Kent and of the West Angles But the Britains could âot be so easily subdued for after a long and a cruel âight at Gavelford between them and the West Saxons of Devonshire in which several thousands were ââain on both sides the Victory remained uncertain He had better Success against Wyhtlafe King of Mercia A.D. 829 whose Dominions he easily added to his now inâreasing Monarchy and passing Humber he quickly âeduced that Country to his Subjection The Saxon Heptarchy was now become one Kingdom and Egâert sole Monarch of all the Countries that the Saxons âossessed in Britain which Name he ordered should âe changed to England his People to be called Enâlishmen and the Language English They who came over out of Germany into this âsland to aid the Britains against their Enemies the Picts and Scots were partly Saxons Angles and âuthes from the first of which came the People of Essex Suffex Middlesex and the West-Saxons from âhe Angles the East Angles the Mercians and they âhat inhabited the North side of Humber from the Juthes the Kentishmen and they that settled in the Isle of Wight These Germans after that they had drove âhe Britains beyond Severn and Dee erected seven Kingdoms called the Heptarchy in the other part of âhe Island whereof 1. Kent 2. Of the South-Saxons containing Sussex and Surrey 3. The East-Angles in Norfolk Suffolk and Cambridgshire 4. The Kingdom of the West-Saxons comprehending Berkshire Devonshire Somersetshire and Cornwal 5. Mercia containing Glocester Hereford Worcester Shropshire Stafford Cheshire Warwick Leicester Darby Nottingham Lincoln Northampton Oxford Buckingham Bedford and half Hartfordshire 6 The East-Saxons containing Essex Middlesex and the other part of Hartford 7. Of the Northumbrians taking in all the Country beyond Hamber which was divided into two parts Deyra and Bernicia the first from Humber to Tyne the other from Tyne to the Scottish Sea Egbert King of the West-Saxons having severally conquer'd these Kingdoms annexed them together and comprehended them under one Monarchy which was called the Kingdom of England 96â years after the coming of Brute to this Island 383 Years after the landing of Hengist and 149 after the Departure of Cadwalader to Rome Egbert having thus united under one Governmeââ these several Kingdoms which used continually molest and to incroach upon each others Territories might reasonably have expected to enjoy his neââ A.D. 883 Kingdom quietly and not fear any disturbance oâ trouble in his Dominions But no sooner was hâ established King of England but the Danes began ãâã threaten new Commotions and landed in great numbers and in divers places of the Kingdom Egberâ fought several Battels with them and with varioââ Success at length the Danes landed in West-Wales marched forward for England being joined by a greaâ number of Welch and met Egbert upon Hengist doââ where a severe Battel was fought and the Danes pââ to a total Rout The Welch suffered severely fââ this Egbert being highly incens'd that the Danââ were supported by them laid siege to Caer Lheon ãâã Dhyfrdwy or Chester the chief City of Venedotiââ which hitherto had remained in the hands of the Welch took the Town and among other Tokeâ of his Indignation he caused the Brazen Effigies oâ Cadwalhon King of Britain to be pulled down and defaced and upon pain of Death forbad the erecting ãâã such again He issued out also a Proclamation by thâ ânstigation of his Wife Redburga who always bore an ââveterate Malice to the Welch commanding all that âere any ways extracted from British Blood to deâart with all their Effects out of his Kingdom within ââx Months upon pain of death These were very ââvere and insupportable Terms but he did not live âong to see them put in execution for dying shortly âfter the Battel of Hengestdown he was succeeded by âon Ethelwulph This King Ethelwulph married his Daughter to Berthred who was his tributary King of Mercia by whose help he successfully opposed the âruel Incursions of the Danes who miserably destroyed the Sea-coasts of England with Fire and ãâã These Danish Commotions being indiffeâently well appeased Berthred King of Mercia set âpon the Welch between whom a remarkable Battel âas sought at a place called Kettell where Merfyn ârych King of the Britains was killed leaving to ââcceed him in the Government of Wales his Son Roâeric Mawr or the Great Roderic the Great MErfyn Frych having lost his Life and with it his A.D. 843 Kingdom in
Haviââ destroyed St Davids Lhanbadarn Lhanrhystyd Lhaâdydoch and several other Religious places the Couâtry was so cruelly harassed and weakened that Princâ Meredith was forced to compound with them and ãâã A.D. 988 pay a Tribute of one Peny for every Person withââ his Dominions which in Welch was called Glwmaâ otherwise the Tribute of the Black Army Anâ Ireland too at this time received no inconsiderablâ blow from the Danes who slew Elwmaen the Son ãâã Abloic King of the Country and so spoiled and râvaged that Kingdom that a great Number of the Naâtives perished by Famine A.D. 989 The year following Owen the Son of Dyfnwal a Maâ of a considerable Note and Reputation among the Welcâ was slain besides which nothing remarkable happeâed this year But the next year Edwyn ap Eineon whâ was right Heir to the Principality of South-Waleâ having drawn to his help a great Army of English A.D. 990 ând Danes hostibly entered into Meredith's Country âpoiled all the Land of Cardigan Dyfed Gwyr Kydâely and St. Davids and received Hostages of the Chief Persons of those Countries to own him as their rightful Prince To return these Outrages upon Edwyn Meredith destroyed the Town of Radnor spoilâd A.D. 991 Glamorgan and carried the Chiefest Men therein Prisoners who paying their Ransom were set at Liberty But whilâ Wales was in this tottering Conâition and scarce any place free from Hostility it happily fell out that Meredith and Edwyn were made Friends and the Differences composed between them âo that the English and Danes who came in with Edwyn ând who expected to fare best by these Civil Disturbances of the Welch were unexpectedly cashiered and sent home And soon after this agreement Cadwalhon the only Son of Meredith died which rendered the Composition between Meredith and Edwyn more firm by reason that this latter thought now without any Dispute to succeed Meredith in his Principality But this fell short of his aim for Meredith being very much disturbed in South-Wales had âo much work upon his hands to defend that Counâry that he left North-Wales open and exposed to the Common Enemy which the Danes were quickly acquainted with and so landing in Anglesây they ravaged and laid waste the whole Island The North-Wales Men finding themselves thus forsaken by Meredith and their Country like to be over-run by the Danes if not timely prevented set up Edwal the Son A.D. 992 of Meyric the indisputable Heir of North-Wales though long kept from it and owned him for their Prince But those incessant Wars and Commotions in South-Wales occasioned a very dismal Famine and Scarcity in the Country of which a very considerable number of People perished And thus Meredith who had once conquered North-Wales and for a long time had got possession of South-Wales without any Right or Title to either was now obliged to relinquish the one and was scarce able to maintain the other Edwal ap Meyric A.D. 993 EDwal after a long and tedious expectation being now joyfully received by the North-Wales Men for their Prince endeavoured the first thing to defend his Subjects from the Injuries and Depredations they received from the Danes And having in a measure effected that he was accosted by another Enemy for Meredith being resolved to Revenge the Indignity and Disgrace put upon him by the North-Wales Men in depriving him of the Government of their Country gathered and mustered together all his Power intending to recover again that Principality Being advanced as far as Lhangwm Edwal met him and in plain Battel routed his Army in which Action Theodor or Tewdor Mawr Meredith's Nephew was slain leaving behind him two Sons Rhys and Rytherch and a Daughter named Elen. But 't is probable that it was not Tewdor Mawr but his Brother Edwyn that was slain in this Battel which also seems rather to have been fought at Hengwm in Ardudwy in Merioneth shire than at Lhangwm for in that place there are to this Day certain Monuments of Victory to be seen as heaps of Stones Tomb-Stones and Columns which they call Carneddi Hengwm Edwal returning home triumphantly after this Victory thought he had now secured himself in his Government and expected to enjoy his Dominions quietly and without any molestation But he had scarce recovered the Fatigue of the last Engagement when Swane the Son of Harold having lately pillaged and wasted the Isle of Man landed in North-Wales whom Edwal endeavouring to oppose was slain in the Encounter leaving one Son behind him called Iago Within a while after the Danes returned again against St. Davids and destroying all before them with Fire and Swords slew Morgency or Vrgeney Bishop of that Diocese Prince Meredith being highly concerned at the Mischiefs these Barbarous People continually did to his Country and the more because he was not able to âepel their Insolencies out of Grief and Vexation died having Issue one Only Daughter named Angharad who was twice Married first to Lhewelyn ap Sitsylhe and after his Death to Confyn Hirdref or âas others think to Confyn ap Gwerystan She had Children by both Husbands which occasioned afterwards great Disturbances and Civil Commotions in Wales the Issue of both Adventures pretending a Right of Succession to the Principality of South-Wales Aedan ap Blegorad EDwal Prince of North-Wales being killed in the Battel against Swane and having no other Issue âhan Iago who was a Minor and too young to take upon him the Government and Meredith Prince of South-Wales dying without any other Issue than a Daughter caused very heavy Quarrels and Contentions among the Welch several without any colour of Right putting in their Claims and Pretensions to the Government In North-Wales Conan the Son A.D. 1003 of Howel and Aedan the Son of Blegorad were the chief Aspirers to that Principality and because they could not agree who should be the Man they fairly consented to try the matter in open Field where Conan had the misfortune to be slain and so Aedan was Victoriously proclaimed Prince of Noâth Wales But who this Aedan was descended from or what Colour or Pretence he could lay to this Principality cannot be as much as guessed at there being none of that Name to be met with in any Welch Records excepting that Blegorad who is mentioned in the Lire of Howel Dha whose Estate and Quality was too mean that his Posterity should lay any Claim to the Principality of Wales But be that how it will Aedâ after his Victory over Conan ap Howel was owned Prince by the North-Wales Men over whom he bore Rule for the space of twelve Years tho' besides his Conquest of Conan ap Howel there be nothing recorded of him excepting his being slain together with his four Sons by Lhewelyn ap Sitsylhe But whilst the Welch are in this inconstant and unsettled Condition the Scots in Ireland began to grow powerful and having destroyed the Town and Country of Develyn they took Gulfath and Vbiad two Irish Lord prisoners whose Eyes they most
Gruffydh Llwyd Son of Rhys ap Gruffydh ap Ednyfed Fychan a stout and a valiant Gentleman tho' not very fortunate and as Florus says of Sertorius he was magnae quidem sed calamitosae virtutis He was Knighted by King Edward the First upon his bringing the first News of the Queen 's safe delivery of a Son at Caernarvon Castle the King holding then a Parliament at Ruthlan This Sir Gruffydh continued for some time very gratious with the King of England but observing at length the intolerable Oppression and Tyranny exercised by the English Officers especially by Sir Roger Mortimer Lord of Chirke and Justice of North-Wales towards his Country-men the Welch became so far concerned and discontented with such unwarrantable Practices that he presently brake out into open Rebellion against the English And the better to effect what he purposed he treated with Sir Edward Bruce Brother to Robert then King of Scotland who had conquered Ireland to bring or send over some Forces to assist him in his Design against the English upon which account he sent him the following Letter Nobili in Christo Conquestori Domino Edvardo Illustrissimo Regi Hiberniae suus si placet Griffinus Llwyd in North-Wall reverentiam debitam in honore AVditâ nobis vestri in terrarum conquisitione fama egregia in partibus nostris praecipuè debelland aemulos nostros vestros qui tam vos quam nos ab Haereditatibus vi injustè expellendo destruxerunt nomen nostrum memoriamque in terris delere conati fuerunt ab initio supra modum applaudimus ut meritò debemus omnes unanimiter in partibus nostris unde vobis ex parte Wallensium Nobilium significo per praesentes quod si ad Walliam cum hominibus vestris dignemini venire vel si vos in propriâ personâ accedere illuc non poteritis aliquem Nobilem Albanen Comitem Baronem vel Militem cum paucis si plurimi nequeant adesse ad dictas partes nostras volueritis mandare Parati erimus omnes unanimiter ........ dicem eo quod nomen vestrum celebre ubique publicetur expugnat si quid Saxonibus in Albaniâ per illustrem Regem fratrem vestrum ultim per vos in Hibernia per vos nos in Wallia statum vestrum pristinum per Brutum conquisitum recuperabimus ipsisque suppeditatis confusis dispersis Britannia juxta discretam vestrae dominationis ordinationem inter Britones Albaneos in posterum divisa cohaereditabitur Valeat dominatio vestra Regia per cuncta Saecula To this Letter of Sir Gruffydh Llwyd's Sir Edward Bruce returned the following Answer OMnibus desiderantibus à servitute liberari saâutem in eo Qui desiderant in se relevat liberat ab angustiis temporibus opportunis quia quilibet Christianus obligatur suo proximo in omni angustiâ subvenire praecipuè illis qui ex unâ radâce originis sive parentelae patriae primitus processerunt ideo compatientes vestrae servituti angustiae jam ....... Anglicana molestia indigenti decrevimus auxiliante altissimo vestro gravamini occurrere innaturalem barbaricam totis viribus Anglicanam de vestris finibus expellere servitutem ut sic sicut à principio Albanicus Britannicus populus expulsis hostibus in perpetuum fiet unus Et quia nullus inimicus faciliter relevatur libenter praecipimus si jugum Anglicanum in tantum vos deprimit quantum nuper depresserat populum Scotianum ut sic ex vestro concordi conamine nostro superveniente juvamine dispenente semper divino positis jura vestra justitiam recuperare proprietatem ....... haereditatem pacificè possidere Veruntamen Dei cum omnia serviunt in isto proposito filium invocamus quod non ex praesumptione ambitione injusti dominii talia attemptamus sed ex mera compassione effusionis innocentis vestri sanguinis subjectionis intollerabilis signant ad hoc quod vellemus inimicorum vestrorum nostrorum vtres reprimere qui nec pacem nec concordiam defiderant Imo vestram nostram finalem destructionem sicut à principio ingressionis eorum in Britanniam incessanter diebus ac noctibus molientur quia nullo modo est nostrae conscientioe quemquam decipere nec etiam decipi à quocunque nostram intentionem Proposit sine âergiversatione aliquâ declaramus quod libenter sciremus vestram voluntatem si rationem nostri laboris conaminis intuitu relevationis vestrae acceptare decrement nobis committere prosecutionem querelae vestrae justitiae nec non capitale dominium vestri prout alius hactenus Princeps vester liberius habere consuevit Ità quod vos omnes singuli cujuscunque extiteritis conditionis pristinis haereditatibus terris libertatibus possessionibus consuetis omnibus conditionibus ad vos expectantibus integrè finaliter gaudeatis Vestram igitur voluntatem super hiis quibuscunque aliis in quibus vos consolari poterimus si videatur expediens cautè celeriter nobis remandetis Valete Domini in Domino But for all that these Letters passed betwixt them whether by reason that Bruce's Terms were conceived unreasonable nothing however was concluded upon and the whole Treaty came to nothing But Sir Gruffydh tho' without any hopes of assistance from the Scots would not lay aside what he had once undertaken and therefore having gathered all the Forces he could desperately set upon and almost in an instant over-ran all North-Wales and the Marches seising upon all the Castles and Strong-holds thro' the Country But all to no purpose for as the most violent stream is quickly over so Sir Gruffydh's Army was presently spent and then being met with by a strong Detachment of English his Party was easily discomfited and himself taken Prisoner The same Year being the 15th of the reign of King A.D. 1322 Edward the Second his eldest Son Edward born at Windsor in a Parliament holden at York was created Prince of Wales Duke of Aquitaine and Earl of Chester This Prince succeeded his Father in the Kingdom of England by the Name of Edward the Third one of the greatest and most powerful Monarchs that ever sat upon the English Throne Edward born at Woodstock eldest Son and Heir to A.D. 1343 King Edward the Third was created Prince of Wales upon the 12th day of May in the 17th year of his Father's reign being then about fourteen years of age He was a Prince of incomparable Qualifications but so signally Famous in Martial Affairs that upon the account of the several Actions he was engaged in he received the Name of Black-Prince He took John the French King Prisoner at the Battel of Poictiers and shamefully vanquished the French Army in the Battel of Cressy He did not live to enjoy the Crown but died one year before his Father in the Forty Sixth Year of his Age no Prince was in his life-time better beloved and after
THE HISTORY OF WALES Comprehending the Lives and Succession OF THE PRINCES of WALES FROM CADWALADER the last King to Lhewelyn the last Prince of British Blood WITH A short Account of the Affairs of WALES under the Kings of England Written originally in British by Caradoc of Lhancarvan and formerly published in English by Dr. Powel Now newly augmented and improved by W. WYNNE A. M. and Fellow of Jesus Colledg Oxon. LONDON Printed by M. Clark for the Author and are to be sold by R. Clavell at the Peacock at the West-End of S. Pauls 1697. TO THE Right Rev d Father in GOD HUMPHREY Lord BISHOP of BANGOR My Lord WHEN I had finished the following Book I was not long to determin under whose Patronage I should make it publick your Lordship 's Extraordinry Knowledge in all the British Antiquities especially that Part which relates to the Welch justly claiming what I now make bold to offer to your Favour For it seems to be as Natural a Design of a Dedication to present one's Labours to the greatest Judge as to him who is the greatest Encourager of his Writings and if so my Lord this single Reason would sufficiently justify me from any Presumption in submitting the following Papers to your Lordship's Protection But where the Obligation is corroborated by an equal Engagement and since your Lordship has been pleased to encourage and promote the Design before it came to any Growth I hope I may safely present now in its perfect Strength and Vigor what you were then pleased to receive in its Infancy The History of our Country my Lord has been so much neglected that there seems a very great Necessity of reviving what to the generality of the Kingdom is almost lost and there are too many otherwise very Learned Persons nay some of our own Nation who are so great Strangers to this Subject that they are almost ignorant that there is such a History in being We have hopes indeed that from your Lordship's Excelling Knowledge in the Welch History and other British Antiquities with those Curious Collections you have with great Labour made towards that Matter and from others now Travelling the same good Way we may expect that the World shall receive such Information relating to our Country that they who have hitherto despised our History will be ready to Light that Candle which they now purposely extinguish and ignorantly undervalue In the mean time if by the following History I can revive the Memories of the several Princes therein contained which in the English Histories are either totally omitted or but partially interwoven and render our History more generally Known I have my Aim and especially since I gain the Opportunity of Acknowledging my self Your Lordship 's most humble Servant W. WYNNE THE PREFACE THE History of the Britains may not improperly be distinguished into two Periods the former comprehending the interval from Brute to Cadwalader whilst the Britains are thought to have enjoyed a general Possession of the whole Island the other containing the Memoirs and Transactions of the Britains under their several Princes after their recession to that part of the Island since called Wales The former of these has been generally accounted of late absolutely false and unhistorical and 't is undoubtedly concluded that all the Passages in Geoffrey of Monmouth the only remaining Monument of the Affairs of the antient Britains which are not consonant to and agreeable with the Roman Historians that speak of Britain are absolutely fabulous and unsincere The History of the Princes of Wales has indeed met with better fortune and the Author Caradoc of Lhancarvan is accounted just and authentick so that there need no other Apology for the following Work than that it is for the best part the genuine History of that Author But because the History of Wales has no small dependance upon and relation to the History of the antient Britains published by Geoffrey I think it necessary to make some general reflection in relation to the Truth and Authority of that Copy And here in the first place I must take notice of two sorts of Opinions most widely repugnant and as I may say diametrically opposite to each other and both in my opinion equally deviating from the right apprehension of the matter in debate The one perfectly rejecting the whole foundation and process of Geoffrey's History will not believe so much as one passage relating to the antient Britains but what is delivered by Roman Writers as if nothing remarkable could happen in Britain but what must needs fall under their special Cognizance and Observation The other without any allowance to the Age when these British Affairs were transacted not to mention the utmost Antiquity of some part of this History cotemporary with which nothing is certain among the more civilized Greeks and Romans will believe the whole Frame and all the Circumstances of Geoffrey's History be they never so ridiculous and extravagant But not to insist on so bigotted an Opinion as to think that the British History is universally true and altogether authentick I will confine my self to the examination of the other Extream to see whether that History published by Geoffrey be so absolutely fabulous as is frequently represented and generally believed Now they who discredit this History either wholly attribute the Frame and Invention of it to Geoffrey or else granting him to be a faithful Translator assure themselves that the Copy he received was fictitious and perfectly owing to the unwarrantable Forgeries of the fabulous Monks So that the subject of my present enquiries will naturally fall under those two Disquisitions 1. Whether Geoffrey be the real Contriver and Composer of this History And 2ly Supposing him to be innocent of this Suspicion whether the History published by him be perfectly fabulous and in all respects a Monkish Legend 1. As to what relates to Geoffrey though methinks there need no greater Argument to evidence his Innocency from so suspected an Imposture as his being the Contriver of this History than that be professedly owns the receipt of the British Manuscript from Walter Arch Deacon of Oxford yet because the Prejudice of some Men oftentimes obscures their Understanding in things otherwise very clear and open it will be requisite to dwell somewhat more particularly upon that Subject or if the World be once perswaded that the whole Invention is owing to Geoffrey and that there was no such Account of the Britains in being before he published his History the whole series of British Affairs not mentioned in the Writings of the Roman Authors and all that long continued Succession of British Kings for so many Ages must of necessity be accounted fabulous and a perfect Legend But before that Geoffrey should be so unreasonably attainted of such notorious Forgery and his History be so generally condemned one might expect that such evident Proofs could be produced to evince so absolute a Position as to render it past all Dispute and Contradiction
Forces obtained a very bloody Victory over the powerless Britains Bââ Adelred who was shortly follow'd by Edwyn King ãâã the Picts did not long survive this Battel and Cudââ took upon him the Government of the West-Saxons The Welch found themselves unable to cope with the Saxons and too weak to repress their endless Incursions 3. therefore they apply themselves to Cudred and joyned in league with him who upon some occasion or other was actually fallen out with Ethelbald King of Mercia But Ethelbald was so proud with the success A.D. 746 of the last Engagement that notwithstanding the League with Cudred he must needs again fall upon the Welch He advanced as far as Hereford where the Britains by the help of Cudred gave him a signal Overthrow and caused him to repent of his rash and precipitous Expedition But shortly after Cudred and Ethelbald were unluckily reconciled and made Friends together and Cudred relinquishing the Welch joyned his Forces to Ethelbalds Hereupon ensued another Battel in which the Welch being greatly overpower'd were vanquish'd by the Saxons after which Victory Cudred shortly dyed To him succeeded Sigebert a A.D. 743 Man of a loose and vicious inclination who for his ill Behaviour in the Management of his Kingdom was in a short time expell'd and depriv'd by his Nobility ând at last miserably slain by a rascally Swineherd After him Kenulph was chosen King of the West Saxons Ann. 750. in whose time dyed Theodore the Son of A.D. 750 Bâlin a Man of great Esteem and Reputation among the Britains And about the same time a remarkable Barâel was fought between the Britains and the Picts ât a place call'd Magedawc in which the Picts were âut to a total rout and Dalargan their King casually âlain But the Britains did not succeed so well against the Saxons for Roderic Molwynoc was at length forced to forsake the Western Countries of Britain and âo claim his own Inheritance in North Wales The Sons of Bletius or Bledericus Prince of Cornwal and Devonshire who was one of them that vanquished Adelred and Ethelbert at Bangor on the River Dee had enjoyed the Government of North Wales ever since Cadfan was chose King of Britain Roderic therefore demanded the Government of this Country as his âight which he was now willing to accept of seeing âhe was forced to quit what he had hitherto possessed But he did long enjoy it but dyed in a short time leaving behind him two Sons Conan Tindaythwy and Howel after that he had in all reigned over the Britains Thirty Years Conan Tindaythwy A.D. 755 ROderic Molwynoc being dead his Son Conan Tindaythwy took upon him the Government and Principality of Wales in the Year 755. He was scarce settled in his Throne but the Saxons began to make in-Roads into his Country to spoil and destroy what they conveniently could meet with They were animated hereto by the bad Success of Roderic and having forced the Britains out of Cornwal and Devonshire they thought it practicable to drive them out of Wales too and so to reduce the Possession of the whole Island to themselves This was their Aim and this they endeavour'd to put in execution but they were met with at Hereford where a severe Battel was fought between them and the Welch in which Dyfnwal the Son of Theodor a stout and valiant Soldier was slain And shortly afterwards dyed Athelbeââ King of Northumberland and was succeeded by Oâwald About the same time happened a religious Quarreâ between the Britains and Saxons concerning the observation of the Feast of Easter which Elbodius ãâã learned and a pious Man endeavoured to rectifie ãâã Wales and to reduce it to the Roman Calculation which the Saxons always observed The Britains diâ differ from the Church of Rome in the celebration oâ this Feast and the difference was this The Church of Rome according to the order of the Council of Nicâ always observed Easter-day the next Sunday after thâ 14th day of the Moon so that it never happen'â upon the 14th day it self nor passed the 21th Thâ Britains on the other hand celebrated their Easter upon the 14th and so forward to the 20th which occasioned this Difference that the Sunday observed as Easter-day by the Britains was but Palm-Sunday with the Saxons Upon this account the Saxons did most uncharitably traduce the Britains and would scarcely allow them the Name and Title of Christians Hereupon about the Year 660. a great Contest happen'd managed on the one part by Colman and Hylda who defended the Rites and Celebration of the Britains and Gilbert and Wilfride on the part of the Saxons Hylda was the Neece of Edwine King of Northumberland educated by Pauline and Aedan She publickly opposed Wilfride and other superstitious Monks as to such Trifles and Bigotry in Religion alledging out of Polycrates the Fact of Irenaeus who withstood Victor Bishop of Rome upon the same account and the custom of the Churches of Asia observed by S. John the Evangelist Philip the Apostle Polycarpus and Melito and likewise observed in Britain by Joseph of Arimathea who first preached the Gospel here Offa was made King of Mercia and Brichtrich of A.D. 763 the West-Saxons about which time dyed Fermael the Son of Edwal and Cemoyd King of the Picts The Saxons did daily encroach upon the Lands and Territories of the Welch beyond the River Severn but more especially towards the South part of the Country These Enchroachments the Welch could not endure and therefore were resolved to recover their own and to drive the Saxons out of their Country The Britains of South-Wales as receiving the greatest A.D. 776 Injury and Disadvantage from the Saxons presently took up Arms and entered into the Country of Mercia which they ravag'd and destroyed with Fire and Sword And shortly after all the Welch joyned their Forces together fell upon the Saxons and forced them to retire beyond the Severn and then returned home with a very considerable Spoil of English Cattel The Welch finding the Advantage of this last Incursion and how that by these means they gauled and vexed the Saxons frequently practised the same and entering their Countrey by stealth they killed and destroyed all before them and driving their Cattel beyond the River ravaged and laid waste the whole Countrey Offa King of Mercia not being able to endure these daily Incursions and Depredations of the Welch entered into a League with the rest of the Saxon Kings to bend their whole Force against the Welch who having raised a very strong and numerous Army passed the Severn into Wales The Welch being far too weak to oppose and encounter so great an Army quitted the even and plain Countrey lying upon the Banks of Severn and Wye and retired to the Mountains and Rocks where they knew they could be most safe from the inveterate and revengeful Arms of the Saxons But as soon as the Saxons decamped being not able to effect any thing against them in these strong and
âanes Passing from thence to Cambridge they met âith Ethelstan King Edelred's Nephew by his Sister who with an Army was come to oppose them but the Danes proving too powerful he with many other Noblemen were slain among whom were Duke Oswyn and the Earls Edwyn and Wolfrike From hence they passed through Essex leaving no manner of Cruelty and Barbarity unpractised and returned laden with Booty to their Ships which lay in the A.D. 1010 Thames But they could not contain themselves long in their Vessels and therefore sallying out they passed by the River side to Oxford which they ransack'd over again adding to their Prey Buckingham Bedford Hartford and Northamptonshire and having accomplished that Years Cruelties at Christmas they returned to their Ships Yet the Prey of the Countrey from the Trent Southward would not satisfie these unmerciful Barbarians but as soon as the Season A.D. 1011 gave them leave to peep out of their Dens they laid siege to the City of Canterbury which being deliver'd up by the Treachery of Almarez the Archdeacon was condemned to Blood and Ashes and Alfegoâ the Archbishop carried Prisoner to the Danish Fleet where he was at length most cruelly put to death A.D. 1012 The next Year Swane King of Denmark came up the Humber and landed at Gainesborow whitheâ repaired to him Vthrâd Earl of Northumberland with his People the Inhabitants of Lindsey with all thâ Countries Northward of Watling-street being a high-way crossing from the East to the West Sea and gave their Oath and Hostages to obey him Whereupon King Swane perceiving his Undertaking to prove ãâã fortunate beyond expectation committed the care oâ his Fleet to his Son Cnute and marched himself ãâã to Oxford and then to Winchester which Citieâ whether for fear of further Calamities readily acknowledged him for their King From thence hâ marched for London where King Edelred then layâ and which was so stoutly defended by the Citizens that he was like to effect nothing against that Town and therefore he directed his course to Wallingforâ and Bath where the principal Men of West-Saxoâ yielded him Subjection The Londoners too at last âearing his Fury and Displeasure made their peace ând sent him Hostages which City being received to âercy Swane from that time was accounted King of âll England King Edelred perceiving all his Astairs ân England to go against him and his Authority and Government reduced to so narrow a compass having sent his Queen with his two Sons Edward and Alfred âo Normandy he thought convenient within a while âfter to follow himself Being honourably received by his Brother in Law Richard he had not been there âong but News arrived of the death of Swane and that he was desired by the English to return to his Kingdom Being animated and comforted with this surprising News he set forward with a great Army âor England and landing at Lyndsey he cruelly harâssed that Province by reason that it had owned Subjection to Cnute the Son of Swane whom the Danes âad elected King in his Fathers stead King Cnute being at Ipswich and certified of the arrival of King Edelred and the Devastation of Lyndsey fearing that âis Authority was going down the wind barbarously cut off the Hands and Noses of all the Hostages he received from the English and presently struck sail for Denmark And whilst England was in this general Confusion there fell out no less a storm in Ireland for Brian King of that Island and his Son Murâth with other Kings of the Countrey subject to âârian joyned their Forces against Sutric the Son of Aâloic King of Dublin and Mailmorda King of Lagoâes Sutric being of himself too weak to encounter so numerous a Multitude hired all the Pyrates and Rovers who cruised upon the Seas and then gave Brian battel who with his Son Murcath was slain and on the other side Maihnorda and Broderic General of the Auxiliaries But Cnute though he was in a manner forced to A.D. 1013 forsake England upon the recalling of King Edelred yet he did not abandon all his pretence to the Kingdom and therefore the next year he came to renew his Claim and landed with a strong Fleet in West-âex where he exercised very great Hostility To prevent his Incursions Edric and Edmund Bastard-Son to Edelred raised their Forces separately bââ when both Armies were united they durst not whâther for fear or the Dissention of the two Generals fight with the Danes Edmund therefore passed to the North and joyned with Vthred Duke of Northumberland and both together descended and spoiled Stafford Leicester and Shropshire On the otheâ side Cnute marched forcibly through Buckingham Bedford Huntingtonshire and so by Stafford passed toward York whither Vthred hastened and finding ãâã other remedy submitted himself with all the Northumbrians to Cnute giving Hostages for the performance of what they then agreed upon But nevertheless this Submission Vthred was treacherously slain not without the permission of Cnute and hiâ Dukedom bestowed upon one Egrick a Dane whereupon Edmund left them and went to his Father whâ lay sick at London Cnute returning to his Ships presently followed and sailed up the Thames towardâ London but before he could draw nigh the City King Edelred was dead having prolonged a long and troublesom Reign for Thirty Seven Years After his decease the English Nobility chose his base Son Edmund for his eminent strength and hardiness in War surnamed Ironside for their King Upon this Cnuââ brought his whole Fleet up the River to London and having cut a deep Trench round about the Town invested it on all sides but being valourously repulsed by the Defendants he detached the best part of his Army to fight with Edmund who was marching to raise the Siege and both Armies coming to battel at Proman by Gillingham Cnute with his Danes were put to flight But as soon as time and opportunity would give him leave to increase his Forces Cnute gave Edmund a second Battel at Caerstane but Edric Almar and Algar under-hand siding with the Danes Edmund was hard put to it to maintain the fight obstinately till Night and Weariness parted them Both Armies having sufficiently suffered in this action Edmund went to West-Sex to reinforce himself and the Danes returned to the siege of London where Edmund ââickly followed raised the siege and forced Cnute ââd his Danes confusedly to betake themselves to their ââips and then entered triumphantly into the City âwo days after passing the Thames at Brentford he ââll upon the Enemies backs by which lucky opporâânity obtaining a considerable Victory he returned âgain to raise Recruits among the West-Saxons Cnute ââon Edmund's removal appeared again before Lonâân and invested it by Land and Water but all in ââin the besieged so manfully and resolutely defenââng themselves that it was impracticable to master ââe Town before Edmund could come to the relief of ãâã And this they presently experienced for Edmund ââter having augmented his Forces crossed again the âhames
with loud Acclamations and joyfully saluted Prince of North-Wales who treading in his Father's steps behaved himself in his Government with that Prudence and Conduct that he manfully defended his Country from the frequent Invasions of the English and Danes For he was scarce settled in his Throne when these inveterate Enemies of the Welch entered in an hostile manner into Wales and advanced as far as Crosford upon the Severn where Gruffydh met them and forced them shamefully to fly and retire back to their own Country From thence Gruffydh passed to Lhanbadarn Vawr in Cardiganshire which he laid in Ashes and afterwards marched through all the Country of South Wales receiving of the People Oaths of Fidelity and Subjection to him In the mean time Howel ap Edwyn Prince of South-Wales fled to Edwyn Brother to Leofric Earl of Chester and prevailed with him to come with an Army consisting of English and Danes to his aid against Gruffydh who meeting his Enemies in the Field easily overcame them Edwyn being slain upon the spot and Howel forced to preserve his Life by flight After which Victory Gruffydh having reduced all the Country of Wales to subjection returned again to North Wales But Howel as soon as he could recover himself and A.D. 1039 recruit his Army entred again into South-Wales intending the recovery of that Principality which he was now so well assur'd of that he brought his Wife with him to the Field to let her see how easily he could conquer and overcome Prince Gruffydh ãâã too great an assurance of Victory seldom proves prosperous which Howel presently experienced for Gruffydh meeting with him at Pencadair gave him so warm an Entertainment that he was forced presently to take his Heels which however could not so well secure him but that he was narrowly pursued and his Wife who was to be entertained with the Conquest of Gruffydh on the contrary saw her self taken Prisoner by him and forced to comply so far to his humour as to be his Concubine The same time Harold King of England died and was succeeded by his Brother Hardycnute a Prince very famous for Hospitality and a great lover of good Chear having his Table covered four times a day with great plenty and variety of Dishes with other Superfluities for all Comers But he likewise dying at Lambeth after two Years reign the English agreed to send for Alfred the eldest Son of Edelred from Normandy and to make him King This Message by no means pleased Earl Godwyn a Man of great sway now in England who knowing Alfred to be a person of greater spirit than to permit him to domineer as he pleased endeavoured all he could to dissuade the English from sending for Alfred He shewed them how dangerous it was to permit a warlike Nation to take root in their Country and how well Alfred was accompanied with Normans to whom he had promised the chief Places and Rule of the Kingdom by which and other like Insinuations he so disgusted the English Nobility against the Normans that to diminish their number they put every tenth Man to death But seeing this was not sufficient they acted the same part over again and tythed them the second time and being highly enraged against the Normans they lead Alfred who had brought them over from Gilford where this Execution was committed to Gillingham where having put out his Eyes they removed him to Ely and there at length pitifully murthered him Then they sent for Edward out of Normandy and made him King who according to his promise to Earl Godwyn married âis Daughter Edith a Lady much commended not only for Beauty Modesty and other feminine Qualifications but also beyond what is requisite for a Woman Learning But King Edward did not deal so favourably with her Brother Swane Son to Earl Godwyn who upon some Distaste was banished England and thereupon forced to betake himself to Baldwyn Earl of Flanders by whom he was very honourably received A.D. 1041 These Troubles and Revolutions in England were succeeded by others of no less consequence in Wales For Howel not brooking to be kept so shamefully out of his Kingdom returns again the third time into South-Wales where he had not continued long but a great number of Strangers landed in the West of Wales and advancing farther into the Country pillaged and destroyed all places they came to Howel tho desirous to reserve his Army to fight with Prince Gruffydh yet could not behold his Country so miserably wasted and over-run by Strangers and thinking moreover that by so charitable an Action he should win the universal Love of the South-Wales Men drew up his Forces against them and overtaking them at Pwll Fynach forced them with much loss to retire to their Ships which Action was call'd in Welch Gwaith Pwll Fynach At the same time Conan the Son of Iago ap Edwal who was forced for fear of Prince Gruffydh to flee to Ireland with the Forces of Alfred King of Dublin whose Daugher named Ranulph he had married landed in North-Wales and having by some treacherous Stratagem taken Gruffydh triumphantly carried him Prisoner towards his Ships This unhappy accident being discovered and publickly known the North Wales Men did rise on a sudden and so unexpectedly overtook the Irish that they easily recover'd their Prince and drove his Enemies with great slaughter to their Ships who without any farther consultation were glad to strike sail with Conan for Ireland And now Wales both North and South is free from all foreign Invasion and Howel as yet too weak to dispute his Title with Gruffydh so that A.D. 1042 the next Year could be subject to no great Action in which nothing happen'd remarkable saving the death of Howel the Son of Owen Lord of Glamorgan a Man of great Quality and Esteem in Wales But as A.D. 1043 soon as Howel could call in his Danes to whom he added all the Forces he could raise in South-Wales he intended presently to march against Prince Gruffydh But he being aware aforehand to what end those Levies were designed prepared against the ensuing storm and to avert the War from his own Country marched courageously to South Wales not fearing to face an Enemy whom he had shamefully vanquished twice already Both Armies being joyned Gruffydh easily overcame and pursued Howel as far as the Spring-Head of the River Towy where after a long and a bloody Fight Howel was at last slain and his Army so universally routed that few escaped with their Lives But though Howel was dead yet there remained still more Pretenders to the Principality of South-Wales so that Gruffydh was in no great prospect to enjoy the same peaceably For as soon as it was published that Howel's Army was defeated and himself slain Rytherch and Rhys the Sons of Rytherch ap Iestyn put in their claim to South-Wales in right of their Father who had once enjoyed the Sovereignty of that Country And in order to the recovery of the same they
Son Harold and his upon ââgar Earl of Chester To this time is referred the Original of the Steâârds in Scotland which being a remarkable passage ãâã in a great measure dependant upon the Affairs ãâã the Welch is requisite to be here recorded Macâââh King of Scotland having caused Bancho a Noble-âân of that Kingdom to be inhumanly murdered âence Bancho's Son to avoid the like Cruelty to âââself fled to Gruffydh ap Lhewelyn Prince of Wales âo taking a very great liking to his Person and ââthal commiserating his Condition shewed him all ââe Respect and Kindness possible But Fleance had ãâã continued long with Gruffydh when he fell enaââred upon the Prince's Daughter and having obâââed her Good-Will without any regard had to ââr Father's Civility towards him abused her so far ãâã to beget her with Child Gruffydh being acââainted with the Matter of Fact so hainously reâââted the Affront that he occasioned Fleance to be âââin and treated his Daughter most servilely for prostrating her Chastity especially to a Strangââ However she was in a short time delivered of a Sââ whose Name was Christened Walter a Child wââ in his Youth expressed very great hopes and in ãâã probability like to make a very considerable Mââ which happened according to expectation But ãâã first Original of his future Greatness happened upââ a very accidental occasion being reproached of ãâã stardism by one of his Fellow Companions he ãâã it in so unpardonable a dudgeon that nothing ãâã satisfy his Revenge but the Life of the Aggreââââ Being upon this Mischance affraid to undergo the âânishment of the Law he thought it safe to fly ãâã Scotland where falling in Company with ceâââââ English Men who were come thither with Quâââ Margaret Sister to Edgar Edeling he behaved himââââ so soberly and discreetly that he won the Favour ãâã good Character of all that knew him But his ãâã daily increasing he grew at length to that height ãâã Reputation as to be employed in the most inwâââ Affairs of the Commonwealth and at last was maââ Lord Steward of Scotland from which Office ãâã Posterity retained the Surname of Steward the Kiââ of Scotland of that Name with several other Fââlies of Quality in that Kingdom being descended ãâã him But to return to England Siward the worthy ãâã of Northumberland died about this time of the Blooâ Flux a Man of a rough Demeanour and a mâââ Soldierly Temper as he plainly manifested at ãâã point of Death For bewailing his Misfortune ãâã had escaped so many dangerous Engagements ãâã withal disdaining to die so effeminately in Bed ãâã caused himself to be compleatly Armed and aâââ ãâã were in Defiance of Death presently expired in Martial Bravery But his Son being too young ãâã King bestowed his Earldom upon Tosty the Son ãâã Earl Godwyn A.D. 1054 Wales had been now a long time quiet and ãâã of all troubles both abroad and at home but it coâââ not be expected that such a Life should prove duââbââ ãâã but something or other would create New Comââtions and Disturbances Gruffydh Son to Rytherch ap ââyn having recruited and recovered himself after the ãâã Blow he received from Prince Gruffydh must needs âââture another trial for the Principality of South-Wales ãâã Prince protracting no time speedily marched aâââ him and both Armies being joined Gruffydh ãâã Ryâherch was easily vanquished and in fine slain ãâã the troubles of the Welch did not end with him ãâã Algââ Earl of Chester being convicted of Treason ãâã thereupon banished the Kingdom fled to Gruffydh ãâã of Wales requesting his Aid against King âââard who repeating the frequent Wrongs he had ãâã at the hands of the English by upholding ãâã Enemies against him gladly embraced the Opâââtunity and promised him all imaginable Support ââd thereupon assembling his Forces he entred with ãâã into Hereford shire and advancing into the ââââtry within two Miles of the City of Hereford ãâã were opposed by Randulph Earl of that Counâââ ãâã boldly gave them Battel The Fight conââââââ very dreadful and dubious for some hours till ãâã Gruffydh so encouraged his Soldiers with the ââââmbrance of their former Victories over the ãâã that they fell on a main and easily disââââred Randulph and slew the best part of his Army ââterwards they pursued their Chase to the Town ãâã having made all the waste and havock they were âââe they laid the Town it self in ashes and so reâââned home triumphantly laden with rich Booty ãâã Plunder King Edward receiving notice of this ãâã presently gathered a great Army at Glocester ââder the Conduct of Harold Earl Godwyn's Son âo couragiously pursuing the Enemies entred into âales and encamped beyond Stradelwyd But Gruââdh and Algar dreading to oppose him retired furâââr into South Wales of which Harold being certified ãâã one part of his Army behind with Orders to ââght if occasion offered and with the other passed ãâã Hereford which he fortified with a strong Wall âââând the Town Gruffydh perceiving his undaunted Industry after many Messages concluded a Peâââ with Harold at a place called Biligelhag by wââââ Articles Algar was pardoned by the King and ââstored to his Earldom of Chester But he did ãâã continue long in the King's Favour for about ãâã years after upon Conviction of Treason he was âgain banished the Land so that he was forced to ãâã take himself to his old Friend Gruffydh Prince ãâã Wales by whose Aid and a Fleet from Norway ãâã spight of the King he was restored to his Earldââ But King Edward was sore offended with the Priâââ of Wales for harbouring Traytors and therefore ãâã be Revenged upon him he dispatched Harold ãâã with an Army to North-Wales who coming ãâã Ruthlan burnt the Prince's Palace there and his ãâã that lay in the Harbor and then returned to ãâã King at Glocester This year Edward the Son of Edmund Ironside ãâã was sent for out of Hungary being designed Succession the Crown came to England but in a short time ãâã his coming died at London leaving behind him ãâã Son called Edgar Edeling and a Daughter naâââ Margaret who was afterwards Queen of the ãâã and Mother to Maud the Wife of Henry the fââââ A.D. 1056 About two Years after Roderic Son to Harold King of Denmark came with a considerable Army ãâã Wales and being kindly received by Prince Gruffâââ united his Power with the Welch and so entred ãâã England which they cruelly harassed and destroyââ But before they could advance any considerable ââstance Roderic was compelled to Sail for Denmark and so Gruffydh returned laden with Spoils ãâã Wales The same time Harold Earl Godwyn's ãâã sailing to Flanders was driven by force of Weaâââ to Land at Poytiers where being seized upon ãâã was brought before William Bastard Duke of Nââmandy to whom he declared the reason of his Vââage that it was purposely to tender him his Serââââ in the Affairs of England and so taking an Oath ãâã to Marry the Duke's Daughter and after the
Death ãâã Edward to secure the Kingdom of England for hâ ãâã was honourably dismissed Upon his return to England by the persuasions of Caradoc the Son of âruffydh ap Rytherch himself with his Brother Tosty âiled a great Army and entred into South-Wales âhich they destroyed after that manner that the Welch were glad to deliver up Hostages for the âayment of the antient Tribute which afore-time âhey were used to pay Gruffydh hearing of the Inâlencies of the English in South Wales made all posââble haste and preparation to oppose them but all ãâã no purpose Harold having already treacherously ââed some of Gruffydh's nearest Friends to Murder ãâã who watching their opportunity executed their âicked Design and brought his Head to Harold Gruffydh being dead Harold by King Edward's Orders ââpointed Meredith Son of Owen ap Edwyn Prince ãâã South Wales and the Government of North-Wales ãâã Blethyn and Rywaâhon the Sons of Coâfyn Brothers ãâã the Mother side to Prince Gruffydh and who proâably for the desire of Rule were accessary to the Murder of that Noble Prince This Gruffydh ap Lheâââyn enjoyed the Principality of Wales for the space of thirty four years a Prince of incomparable Verâââ both Wise and Valiant Beloved of his Subjects ând Formidable to his Enemies in all his Actions he âehaved himself Great and Princely and having Demanded his Country so bravely against all Foreign Opposition he was far unworthy of that treacherous ând cruel Death which his unkind Subjects and unâatural Friends bestowed upon him He left Issue âut ââe Daughter called Nest abused first by Fleaâce âon of Bâncho and afterwards married to Trahaern âp Caradoc Prince of North-Wales Blethyn and Rywalhon AFter the deplorable Murder of Prince Gruffyââ Meredith the Son of Owen ap Edwyn who aâcording to some was Son to Howel Dha did take ãâã on him as 't is said the Government of South-Waâââ and Blethyn and Rywalhon the Sons of Confyn hââ Brothers to Gruffydh as descended from Augboâ Daughter to Meredith sometime Prince of Walââ entered upon the Principality of North-Wales Cââââ the Son Iago ap Edwal the right Heir to that Croââ being then with his Father-in-Law in Ireland Tââ partition of Wales fell much short of the expectation of Caradoc ap Gruffydh ap Rytherch who bâing the chief promoter of Harold's making an ââpedition against Gruffydh ap Lhewolyn made no qâstion to attain to the Government of South-Wales ââcase Gruffydh got the worse But it happened otheâwise Harold being sensible of Caradoc's Subtilty aââ Knavery and doubting whether if he was maââ Prince of South-Wales he could obtain a certain Loâââship nigh Hereford which he had a longing mindâ made a Composition with Meredith ap Owen for ãâã said Lordship and created him Prince of South-Walââ and on the contrary banished Caradoc out of ãâã Country Harold having obtained his Request buâ a very magnificent House at a place called Portasââ in Monmouth-shire and storing it with great quaâtity of Provision splendidly entertained the King who honoured him with a Visit This was by a means pleasing to Tofty to see his younger Brother in greater Esteem and Favour with the King thââ himself and having concealed his displeasure for ãâã time could not forbear at length but discover ãâã grievance For one day at Windsor while Harââ reached the Cup to King Edward Tosty ready to burâ for Envy that his Brother was so much respected beyond himself could not refrain to run furiously upon him and pulling him by the Hair dragged him to the Ground for which unmannerly Action the King forbad him the Court But he with continued Rancour and Malice rides to Hereford where Harold had many Servants preparing an Entertainment for the King and setting upon them with his Followers ââopped off the Hands and Legs of some the Arms and Heads of others and threw them into the Buts of Wine and other Liquors which were put in for the King 's drinking and at his departure charged the Servants to acquaint him That of other fresh Meats he might carry with him what he pleased but for âince he should find plenty provided ready for him for which barbarous Offence the King pronounced a Sentence of perpetual Banishment upon him But Saradoc ap Gruffydh gave a finishing stroak to Harold's House and the King's Entertainment at Portascyth for coming thither shortly after Tosty's departure to be revenged upon Harold he killed all the Work-men and Labourers with all the Servants he could find and utterly defacing the Building carried away all the Costly Materials which with great Charges and Exâence had been brought thither to beautify and adorn the Structure Soon after which the Northumbrians who could not endure the Insolencies of the two Brothers Harold and Tosty who bearing an uncontroulâble sway in the Kingdom were used to practise most hellish Villanies to encompass any Man's Estate that displeased them in a Tumult at York beset the Palace of Tosty and having pillaged his Treasure ââew all his Family as well English-men as Danes Then adjoining to themselves the People of Lincoln Nottingham and Derby shire they elected Marcher the Son of Earl Algar their General to whom came his Brother Edwyn with a considerable number of Forces ând a great party of Welch men Then they marched in an hostile manner to Northampton where Harold met them being sent by the King to know their Demands to whom they laid open their Grievances and the Cruelty of Tosty's Government and at last with an absolute refusal of admitting him again desired that Marcher should be appointed Earl over them which the King upon the reasonable Complaints of Injuries done by Tosty easily granted and willingly confirmed Marcher's Title Whereupon they peaceably returned back to the North and the Welch with several Prisoners and other Booties got in this Expedition returned to Wales A.D. 1066 The year following King Edward died and was buried at Westminster being the last King of the Saxon Blood before the Conquest that Governed the Kingdom of England which from Cerdic King of the West-Saxons had continued 544 and from Egbert the first Monarch 171 Years Edward being dead the next debate was about an Election of a Successor Edgar Edeling being set up by some as lawful Heir to the Crown which Harold as being a Person of greater Power and Authority in the Kingdom much wealthier and better befriended presently thwarted and brought Matters so cunningly about that himself was chosen King without any regard observed to the Oath and Promise he had formerly made to William Duke of Normandy Duke William upon notice of Harold's advancement how that he had accepted of the Crown of England contrary to the Articles between them convened together his Nobles and laid before them the several Wrongs and Affronts be had received at the Hands of Harold as the Death of his Cosin Alfred the Banishment of Archbishop Robert Earl Odan and all the Normans and lastly the Breach of his Oath and
as much as in him lay opposed sent him to the King's Officers to be imprisoned at Winchester from whence he quickly found a way to escape And by the advice of the rest of his Brethren he returned home to his Country King Henry continued all this while in Normandy and during his stay there a Match was concluded upon betwixt his Son Henry and Margaret Daughter to Lewis King of France But this new alliance could not prevent these two Monarchs from A.D. 1160 falling at variance with each other which happened the Year following and thereupon King Henry marched with his Army to Gascoyne to quell certain Rebels who upon first notice of this Breach between both Kings were up in Arms against the English But the next Year a Peace was again concluded and so all things returned to their former state of A.D. 1161 Amity and Quietness But it was not so in Wales for Howel the Son of Ievaf ap Cadwgan ap Athlestlan Glodryth having got to his hand the Castle of Walwern in Cyfeilioc rased it to the ground which so incensed Prince Owen who was Owner of it that nothing could lay his fury till he had drawn his Forces together and made an incursion into Lhandhinam in Arustly Howel's Country which he cruelly harrassed and carried away considerable Booty The People of the Country perceiving these Devastations of the North-Wales Men came together to the number of 300 Men offering their Service to their natural Lord Howel ap Iefaf who upon this addition of strength followed the Enemy to the Banks of Severn where they were encamped Prince Owen finding them to march after him was glad of the opportunity to be further revenged upon Howel and so turning suddenly upon them he slew about Two Hundred Men the rest narrowly escaping with Howel to the Woods and Rocks Owen being more joyful for the Revenge he had taken of Howel than for any Victory he had gained rebuilt Walwern Castle and having well fortified and mann'd it returned home to North-Wales A.D. 1162 The Year following the like thing happened Owen the Son of Gruffydh ap Meredith commonly called Owen Cyfeilioc o Wynedh together with Owen ap Madawc ap Meredith and Meredith ap Howel set upon Carrechofa Castle near Oswestry and having over-power'd the Garison committed great Waste and Destruction therein But about the same time a pleasant passage happened in England Robert Mountford and Henry de Essex who had both fought against the Welch upon the Marches and both run began now to impeach each other as being the first occasion of flying The Dispute was to be tryed by Combat in which being engaged Henry was overcome and for his false accusing of Robert he was sentenced to have his Estate forfeited and then having his Crown shorn he was entered a Monk at Redding Within a little after King Henry calling to mind what Prince Rhys had committed during his absence out of the Kingdom drew up a great Army against South-Wales and having marched as far as Pencadyr near Brecknock Rhys met him and did his Homage and having delivered up Hostages for his future Behaviour stopp'd the King's farther progress so that thence he returned to England But after the King's departure two very unlucky Accidents happened in Wales Eineon the Son of Anarawd ap Gruffydh Nephew to Prince Rhys being villainously murthered in his Bed by his own Servant called Walter ap Lhywarch as also Cadwgan ap Meredith in like manner by one Walter ap Riccart But the loss of his Nephew Prince Rhys made up by possessing himself of that large Country called Cantref Maâr and the Land of Dynefowr which he afterwards enjoyed Of men of Learning there dyed this Year Cadifor ap Daniel Archdeacon of Cardigan and Henry ap Arthen the greatest Scholar that had flourished in Wales for many Years The next Year a total Rupture broke forth betwixt A.D. 1163 the English and Welch Prince Rhys a Man of an active and uncontroulable Spirit being now experimentally sensible he could never carry on the Greatness and Grandeur of his Quality with such lands as the King of England had allotted him made an Invasion into the Lordship of Roger de Acre Earl of Glocester being moved thereto in a great measure by reason that his Nephew Anarawd ap Gruffydh was murthered by his motive and instigation Being advanced with a strong Army into the Earl of Glocester's Estate without any great opposition he took Aberheidol Castle with those belonging to the Sons of Wyhyaon all which he rased to the ground Thence he marched to Cardigan bringing all that Country under his subjection and from thence he marched against the Flemings whose Country he cruelly harassed with Fire and Sword The rest of the Estates of Wales perceiving Prince Rhys to prosper so successfully against the English thought they might equally succeed and shake off the English Yoke which so unreasonably oppressed them And therefore they unanimously agreed to cast off their Subjection to the English whose Tyranny they could no longer bear and to put over them Princes of their own Nation whose Superiority they could better tolerate And so this Year concluded with making suitable Preparations for the following Campaign A.D. 1164 And therefore as soon as the time of year for action was advanced David Son of Owen Prince of North-Wales fell upon Flintshire which pertained to the King of England and carrying off all the People and Cattel with him brought them to Dyffryn Clwyd otherwise Ruthyn Land King Henry understanding this gathered together his Forces and with all speed marched to defend both his Subjects and Towns from the Incursions and Depredations of the Welch Being come to Ruthlan and encamped there three days he quickly perceived he could do no great matter by reason that his Army was not sufficiently numerous and therefore he thought it more advisable to return back to England and to augment his Forces before he should attempt any thing against the Welch And accordingly he levied the most chosen Men throughout all his Dominions of England Normandy Anjou Gascoin and Gwien besides those Succours from Flanders and Britain and then set forward for North-Wales purposing to destroy without Mercy every living thing he could possibly meet with and being advanced as far as Croes-Oswalt called Oswestry he incamped there On the other side Prince Owen and his Brother Cadwalader with all the strength of North-Wales Prince Rhys with those of South-Wales Owen Cyfeilioc and Madawc ap Meredith with all the Power of Powys the two Sons of Madawc ap Ednerth with the People living betwixt the Rivers of Severn and Wye met together and pitched their Camp at Corwen in Edeyrneon intending unanimously to defend their Country against the King of England King Henry understanding that they were so near was very desirous to come to Battel and to that end he removed to the Banks of the River Ceireoc causing all the Woods thereabouts to be cut down for fear of
following Maelgon who had before routed his Brother Prince Gruffydh's Army and taken him Prisoner begins now to enlarge his Territories and takes in his Brothers Castles of Aberteifi and Ystratmeyric Also the youngest Son of Prince Rhys about this time recovered the Castle of Dynefowr from the Normans The same Summer Gwenwynwyn took up a resolution of attempting to extend Wales to its antient Limits and for this purpose he raises a powerful Army with which he first designs to be avenged of William de Bruce for the inhuman Death of his Cosin Trahaern Fychan and therefore he besiegeth his Castle of Payn in Elfel where he makes a Protestation that as soon as he had taken it for a farther satisfaction to his Revenge he would unmercifully ravage the whole Country as far as Severn But these mighty Menaces were soon blown over for he had neither Battering Engins nor Pioneers so that he was forced to lay before the Castle for three Weeks without effecting any thing whereby the Murtherers had time enough to apply themselves to England for Succours which they obtained For upon this Geoffrey Fitz-Peter Lord Chief Justice of England levies a considerable Army to which he joyns all the Lords Marchers and comes in all hast to the Relief of the place where he meets Gwenwynwyn with whom before he would hazard a Battel he was desirous to have a Treaty of Peace to which Gwenwynwyn and his Adherents would in no wise hearken or condescend but returned in answer that their business there was to be revenged of old Injuries done them Hereupon the English Lords resolved to enlarge Prince Gruffydh of South-Wales whom they knew to be an inveterate Enemy of Gwenwynwyn as he that delivered him up to their hands and likewise to be a Man of great Authority in his Country therefore they rightly concluded he might be more serviceable to them when at liberty than under confinement wherein they were not disappointed for he immediately got together a strong Body of his Countrymen and joyning with the English advanced towards the Castle where they furiously attack'd Gwenwynwyn who made no less vigorous defence hereupon there ensued a bloody Battel with a great slaughter on both sides but at length the English got the Victory and Gwenwynwyn lost a great number of common Soldiers if we believe Matthew Paris 3700 Men besides a great many of his best Commanders among whom were Anarawd Son of Eineon Owen ap Cadwalhon Richard ap Iestyn and Robert ap Howel Meredith ap Conan was likewise taken Prisoner with many more After this the English returned home triumphantly and requited Prince Gruffydh's Service with a perfect Liberty who immediately partly by his own Force partly by the Affection of his People repossessed himself of all his Dominions save the Castles of Aberteifi and Ystratmeyrie which his usurping Brother Maelgon by the Assistance of Gwenwynwyn had during his Confinement by the English taken from him and still unjustly detained Hereupon some of Prince Gruffydh's prime Nobility and Clergy came to him and offered him their Endeavours of reconciling him to his Brother and made him so apprehensive of his just Displeasure at him that he took a solemn Oath before them that in case his Brother would give him Hostages for the security of his own Person he would deliver him up his Castle of Aberteifi by a day appointed which Proposals Prince Gruffydh accepted of and accordingly sent him his Demands But it was the least of Maelgon's intention to make good his part or else he was very unconstant in his resolution for he had no sooner received the Hostages but instead of delivering up the Castle he fortifies it and puts in a Garrison for his own use and commits the Hostages to the custody of Gwenwynwyn Prince Gruffydh's mortal Enemy but not long after their Innocency procured them an opportunity of an Escape In the Year 1199 Maelgon still pursuing his Hatred A.D. 1199 of his Brother Prince Gruffydh gets an Army wherewith he besiegeth his Castle of Dynerth which he was Master of in a short time and then put all the Garrison to the Sword But about the same time Prince Gruffydh in lieu of this wan the Castle of Cilgerran and strongly fortified it This Year Richard the First of England as he was besieging the Castle of Chalons in France was shot from the Walls with an Arrow whereof he not long after dyed and left his Kingdom to his Brother John who thereupon was with great Solemnity crown'd at Westminster But he could not expect to enjoy this Kingdom peaceably for his elder Brother Geoffry Plantagenet had left a Son behind him named Arthur whose Right the Crown of England was by lineal descent which now therefore he justly lays claim to and by the assistance of King Philip of France who espoused his Quarrel endeavours to recover But before Prince Arthur had made sufficient Preparations to carry on his Design he was unexpectedly set upon by his Uncle his Army routed and he himself taken Prisoner and committed to safe custody not long after which he dyed and so King John was rid of his Competitor A.D. 1200 The following Year Gruffydh ap Conan ap Owen Gwynedh dyed and was buried in a Monk's Cawl in the Abby of Conway which way of burying was very much practised especially by the better sort in those days for the Monks and Friers had deluded the People into a strong Conceit of the Merits of it and had firmly persuaded them it was highly conducing to their future Happiness to be thus interr'd But this Superstition together with the Propagators of it they had lately received from England For the first Abby or Monastery we read of in Wales since the Destruction of that famous House of Bangor which favour'd of Romish Dregs was the Ty-Gwyn built in the Year 1146. after which they mightily increased and spread over all the Country and now the Fountain Head began to be corrupted for the Clergy maintained a Doctrin which their Ancestors abhorr'd as may easily be gathered from the Writings of that worthy Divine Ambrosius Telesinus who flourished in the Year 540. when the Christian Faith which we suppose to be deliver'd at the Isle of Afalon by Joseph of Arimathea flowed in this Land in a pure and uncorrupted Stream before it was infected and polluted by that proud and blood-thirsty Monk Augustine I say he then wrote and left behind him as his own Opinion and the Opinion of those days these following Verses Gwae'r offeiriad byd Nys angreifftia gwyd Ac ny phregetha Gwae ny cheidw ei gail Ac ef yn figail Ac nys areilia Gwae ni cheidw ei dhefaid Rhae bleidhie Rhufeniaid A'i ffon gnwppa From whence it is apparent that the Church of Rome was then corrupt and that the British Churches persevered in the primitive and truly Apostolical Profession of Christianity as it was at first planted in the Island and that no Roman Innovations had crept in
Warden of the Marches of Wales who thinking to get to himself an eternal Name in conquering the Welch raised all the Power he could and imagining that the Welch could not be privy to his purpose he apprehended he could fall upon the Earl-Marshal unexpected But in this he was to his sorâow most widely mistaken for the Earl having received private intimation of his Design hid himself ân a certain Wood by which the English were to march and when they were come so far the Welch of a sudden gave a great shout and leaping out of the place they had absconded themselves in they fell âpon the English being unprovided and putting their whole Army to flight they slew an infinite number both of the English and their Auxiliaries John of Monmouth himself made his escape by flight but the Earl-Marshal entering his Country destroyed it with Fire and Sword And what added to the Misery of the English Prince Lhewelyn in the Week after Epiphany joyning the Earl-Marshal made an Incursion into the King's Territories destroying all before them from the Confines of Wales to Shrewsbury a great part of which they laid in Ashes King Henry was all this while with the Bishop of Winchester at Glocester and for want of sufficient Power or Courage to confront the Enemy durst not take the Field of which being at length perfectly ashamed he removed to Winchester leaving the Marches naked to the mercy of the Enemy And now there being no apprehension of fear from the English the Earl of Pembrock by the Counsel of Geoffrey de Marisco transported his Army into Ireland thinking to obtain a Conquest in that Kingdom but in the first Encounter with the Irish he was unfortunately slain through the Treachery of his own Men And so his Estate and Title descended to his Brother Gilbert But King Henry finding it impracticable to force the Welch to a Submission and being in a great measure weary of continual Wars and incessant Hostilities thought it his best Prudence to make some honourable Agreement with the Prince of Wales and therefore he deputed Edmund Archbishop of Canterbury the Bishops of Rochester Coventry and Lichfield and Chester to treat with Prince Lhewelyn about a Peace When the King came to meet with them in their return from this Negotiation being at Woodstock he was certified of the death of the Earl of Pembrock which he took so much to heart that he presently melted into Tears being afflicted for the death of so great a Person whom he openly declared had not left his Second in all his Kingdom Going from thence to Glocester he met with the Archbishop and Bishops who delivered to him the * See the Appendix Form of the Treaty of Peace with Prince Lhewelyn which he would not conclude unless upon this condition That all the English Nobility who were confederated with him and by evil Counsel were exil'd should be recalled and restored to the King's Favour The Archbishop further acquainted his Majesty with what Difficulty he had brought the matter to this conclusion being sometimes forced to add Threatnings on the King's behalf with his Clergy to which Menaces the Prince is said to have answered That he bore more regard to the King's Charity and Piety than he did fear his Arms or dread his Clergy But the King who was very desirous of a Peace readily consented to what the Prince required and therefore he issued out his Letters recalling all the Nobles who were out-law'd or otherwise exil'd requiring them to appear at Glocester upon Sunday next before Ascension day where they should receive their Pardons and be restored to their Estates which the King had taken into his own hands The Peace being thus concluded betwixt the English and Welch Prince Lhewelyn set his Son Gruffydh at liberty whom for his disobedient and restless Humour he had detained in close Prison for the space of Six Years About the same time Cadwalhon ap Maelgon of Melienydh departed this Life who was quickly follow'd by Owen Gruffydh ap Rhys's Son a Person of great Worth and exceedingly beloved and A.D. 1235 was buried at Ystratflur by his Brother Rhys And the Year following dyed Owen ap Meredith ap Rotpert of Cydewen and not long after him Madawc A. D. 1236. the Son of Gruffydh Mayelor Lord of Bromfield Chirk and Yale who was buried at the Abby of Lhan Egwest or Vale Crucis which he had built leaving Issue behind him one Son called Gruffydh who succeeded into the Possession of all these Lordships A little after Gilbert Earl of Pembrock got by Treachery Marchen Castle which belonged to Morgan ap Howel and fortified the same very strongly for fear of Prince Lhewelyn The next Spring Joan King John's Daughter and Princess of Wales departed this Life and was A.D. 1237 buried according to her own desire upon the Sea-shore at a place called Lhanfaes in the Isle of Anglesey where the Prince in memory of her afterwards founded a religious House for the Order of Mendicant-Friars About the same time also dyed John Scot Earl of Chester without any Issue upon which account the King seized that Earldom into his own hands Hugh Lupus was the first that enjoyed this Honour who coming over to England with the Conquerour was by him created Earl of Chester and Sword-bearer of England Habendum tenendum dictum comitatum Cestriae sibi haeredibus suis ita liberè ad gladium sicut ipse Rex totam tenebat Angliam ad coronam To have and to hold the said County of Chester to him and his Heirs by right of the Sword so freely and securely as the King held the Realm of England in the right of the Crown After Five Descents Randulph Bohun came to be Earl of Chester who was Uncle to this John the last Earl This Randulph had several Encounters with Prince Lhewelyn and was in continual agitation against him but once more particularly meeting with the Prince and being sensible of his Inability to withstand him he was obliged to retire for Refuge to the Castle of Ruthlan which the Prince presently besieged Randulph perceiving himself to be in danger sent to Roger Lacy Constable of Chester requesting him to raise what strength he could possible and come to succour him in this Extremity Wherefore Lacy having received this Express called to him presently all his Friends desiring them to make all the Endeavours imaginable to rescue the Earl from that imminent Danger which so severely threatned him At whose request Ralph Dutton his Son in Law a valorous Youth assembled together all the Players and Musicians and such as then being Fair-time had met to make merry and presenting them to the Constable he forthwith marched to Ruthlan raised the Siege and delivered the Earl from all his fear In recompence of this Service the Earl granted the Constable several Freedoms and Priviledges and to Dutton the ruling and ordering all Players and Musicians within the said Country to be
did not last long the Eâglish Governours in the Marches and in-land Coââtries of Wales presuming upon the Prince's submiâsion to the King grievously oppressed the Inhabâtants of the Country with new and unheard of ãâã actions and with intolerable partiality openly eâcouraged the English to defraud and oppress tââ Welch These insupportable practices moved tââ Welch to go in a Body to David Lord of Denbigâ to endeavour a reconciliation between him and ãâã Brother the Prince that they both being at Unity might easily deliver themselves and their Couâtry from the unmerciful Tyranny of the English David was not ignorant of the miseries of his Couâtry-men A.D. 1281 and therefore gladly submitted to be recoâciled to his Brother with promise never to side agaiâ with the King of England but to become his ãâã Enemy This happy Union being thus effected David was chose General of the Army with which he presently marched to Hawarden and surprizing the Castle slew all that opposed him and took Rogeâ Clifford Prisoner who had been sent by King Edward Justitiar into those parts From thence being joyned by the Prince he passed to Ruthlan and laid Siege to the Castle but upon notice given that the King was marching to raise the Siege he thought convenient to withdraw and to retire back At the same time Rhys ap Maelgon and Gruffydh ap Meredith ap Owen with other Lords of South-Wales took from the English the Castle of Aberystwyth with divers others in that Country and spoiled all the People thereabouts who owned subjection to the Crown of England In the mean while John Peckham Archbishop of Canterbury perceiving how matters were like to proceed between the King and the Prince and how the Kingdom was effectually involved in a War of his own proper motion came to Prince Lhewelyn to endeavour a re-submission from him and his Brother David to King Edward and so to put a stop to any farther Hostilities But he sent before-hand to the Prince and People of Wales intimating to them That for the Love he bore to the Welch Nation he undertook this Arbitration without the knowledg and contrary to the King 's liking and therefore earnestly desired that they would submit to a Peace with the English which himself would endeavour to bring to pass And because he could make no long continuance in those Parts he wished them to consider how that if he should be forced to depart before any thing was brought to a conclusion they could hardly find another who would so heartily espouse their Cause and farther threatned that in case they contemned and derided his Endeavours he would not only instigate the English Army now greatly strengthned and increased to fall upon them but also signifie their Stubbornness to the Court and Bishop of Rome who esteemed and honoured England beyond any other Kingdom in the World Moreover he much lamented to hear of the excessive Cruelty of the Welch even beyond that of the Saracens and other Infidels who never refused to permit Slaves and Captives to be ransomed which the Welch were so far from practising that even some time they slew those for whose Redemption they received Money And whereas they were wont to esteem and reverence holy and ecclesiastical Persons they are now so far degenerated from Devotion and Sanctity that nothing is more acceptable to them than War and Sedition which they had now great need to forsake and repent of Lastly he proposed that they would signifie to him wherein and what Laws and Constitutions of theirs was violated by the English and by what means a firm and a lasting Peace might be established which if they rejected they must expect to incur the Decree and Censure of the Church as well as endure the violent In-roads and Depredations of a powerful Army To these partly Admonitions and partly Threatnings of the Archbishop Prince Lhewelyn returned an Answer That he humbly thanked his Grace for the Pains and Trouble he undertook in his and his Subjects behalf and more particularly because he would venture to come to Wales contrary to the pleasure and good liking of the King And as for concluding a Peace with him he would not have his Grace be ignorant that with all readiness he was willing to submit to it upon condition that the King would duly and sincerely observe the same And though he would be glad of his longer A.D. 1201 continuance in Wales yet he hoped that no Obstructions would happen of his side why a Peace which of all things he most desired might not be forthwith concluded and rather by his Graces procuring than any others so that there would be no farther need of acquainting the Pope with his Obstinacy nor moving the King of England to use any Force against him And though the Kingdom of England be under the immediate Protection of the See of Rome yet when his Holiness comes to understand of the great and unsufferable Wrongs done to him by the English how the Articles of Peace were broken Churches and all other religious Houses in Wales were burned down and destroyed and religious Persons unchristianly murthered he hoped he would rather pity and lament his Condition than with addition of Punishment increase and augment his Sorrow Neither shall the Kingdom of England be any wise disquieted and molested by his means in case the Peace be religiously observed towards him and his Subjects But who they are that delight themselves with War and Bloodshed manifestly appears by their Actions and Behaviour the Weâch being glad to live quietly upon their own if they might be permitted by the English who coming to the Country utterly destroy whatever comes in their way without regard either to Sex Age or religious places But he was extreme sorry that any one should be slain having paid his Râââââ the Author of which unworthy Action he did not pretend to maintain but would inflict upon him his condign Punishment in case he could be got out of the Woods and Desarts where as an Outlaw âhe lives undiscovered But as to commencing a War in a Season inconvenient he protested he knew nothing of that till now yet those that did so do solemnly attest that to be the only measure they had to save themselves and that they had no other security for their Lives and Fortunes than to keep themselves in Arms. Concerning his Sins and Trespasses against God with the assistance of his Grace he would endeavour to repent of neither should the War be willingly continued by him in case he might save himself harmless but before he would be unjustly dispossessed of his legal Propriety he thought it but reasonable by all possible measures to defend himself And he was very willing upon due Examination of the Trespasses committed to make Satisfaction and Retribution of all Wrongs committed by him and his Subjects so that the English would observe the same of their side and likewise was ready to conclude a Peace which he thought was impossible
the Battel of Kettell his Son Roderic surnamed the Great without any Opposiâion or Contest succeeded in the Principality of Wales The first thing he effected after his Advancement to âhe Crown was the dividing of Wales into several Provinces which he distinguished into these three Aberffraw Dinevowr and Mathraval Berthred King âf Mercia being animated by his late Success against Merfyn Frych purposed to perform the like Exploits âgainst his Son Roderic And having gained the Aid ând Assistance of King Ethelwulph he entred North Wales with a strong Army and advanced as far as Anglesey which he cruelly and miserably destroyed Roderic met him several times and the Welch did at length so gaul and torment him that in fine he had little or nothing to boast of only Meyric one of the chiefest Princes among the Britains was slain But he was soon forced to quit his Expedition against the Welch and to convert his Forces another way his own Dominions requiring their constant Residence being severely threatned by a foreign Invasion A.D. 846 For the Danes were by this time grown so very powerful that they over-ran a great part of England fought with Athelstan King of Kent Brother to Ethelwulph and obtained so much Conquest that whereas before they returned to their own Country when the Weather grew too cold for Action they now took up their Winter-quarters in England The Welch in the mean time being secure from any Violence which might otherwise be expected from the English began to quarrel and fall out amongst themselves Ithel King of Gwent or Wântland for what occasion not known fell foul upon the Meâ of Brecknock who were so resolute as to fight him and the Event proved very unfortunate to Ithel whâ was slain upon the spot It is the Unhappiness of a Nation that is governed by several Petty States when it is apprehensive of no Danger from an outward Enemy that it will fall at variance and create Disturbances among it self Had the Britains instead of falling upon one another taken the Advantage of this opportunity wheâ the Saxons were altogether imployed in opposing and repelling the Danes to increase and strengthen their Number and to fortify their Towns they might aâ least securely have possessed their own Dominions ãâã not extended their Government to a great part of England But a sort of an Equality in Power begat aâ Emulation between the several Princes and this Emulation for the most part ended in Blows and Contention so that instead of strengthning themselves whilst they had respite from the English they rather weakened their Power by inward Differences Kongen King of Powys was gone to Rome there to A.D. 854 âend his Days peaceably and religiously but his Death did not prove so natural as he expected being barbarously slain or as some say choaked by his own Servants Shortly after died Cemoyth King of the Picts and Jonathan Lord of Abergeley It was now become Customary for Princes wearied with Government to go to Rome and the Pope willingly dispensed with the Resignation of their Crowns by reason that his Holiness seldom lost by it King Ethelwulph paid very dear for his Entertainment there made his Kingdom tributary to the Pope and paid the Peter-Pence to the Church of Rome The Saxon Genealogists bring the Pedegree of Ethelwulph for several Successions and Generations up to Adam as may be seen in Matthew of Westminster who in like manner derives the Pedigree of Offa King of Mercia This has been the Custom of most Nations both antient and modern and is always practised by them whose Families are any thing Antient and Honourable so that it is a very great mistake to scoff at and deride the Welch because they keep up this antient and laudable Custom Berthred King of Mercia became at length far âoo weak to repel the daily increasing Power of the Danes who so numerously poured upon him that at last he was forced to relinquish his Kingdom and fly to Rome where in a short time he sorowfully ended his days Ethelwulph shortly followed and left his Sons Athelbald King of the West-Saxons and Athelbright King of Kent and the East-Saxons Ethelwulph is reported to be so Learned and Devout that the Church of Winchester elected him in his youth Bishop of that See which Function he took upon him about seven years before he was made King He is said also to have Conquered the Kingdom of Demetia or South-Wales which together with the Kingdom of the South-Saxons he bestowed upon his Son Alfred upon Condition he would bring a Thousand Men out of Wales to Winchester to the Aid of his Brother Ethelbert against the Danes Athelbald succeeding his Father in the Kingdom of the West-Saxons kept his Mother-in-Law the Wife of Ethelwulph for hiâ Concubine and afterwards married her in the City of Chester But he did not live long to enjoy the unnatural Conjunction but dying without Issâ after that he had reigned Eight Years left his Kingdom to his Brother Athelbright About the same time the Danes began again to be stir themselves and fell upon the City of Winchester and destroyed it which Athelbright perceiving after a long Fight forced them to quit the Land and tâ betake themselves to Sea again But the Danes quickly returned to the Isle of Thanet where they remained for that Winter doing much Mischief upon the Sea-Coast and destroying all places near the shoaâ of England The English were very glad that they durst venture no further and the more because the Welch began again to be troublesome against whoâ an Army must be speedily dispatched otherwise they would certainly advance to the English Countrey Both Armies met at Greythen where a fierce Battel was fought and a great Number slain on either side but the Victory was not plainly discoverable Bââ the Welch not long after received a considerable Loâ by the Death of Conan Nârit Nifer a Stout and Skilful Commander who oftentimes had Valiantly repulsed the English Forces and obtained many signââ Victories over them The Danes had been for some time quiet being ââable to venture upon any considerable Action anâ therefore they thought it advisable to secure only whâ they had already won and to expect a re-inforcement from their own Countrey This was quickly sent them under the Command of Hungare and Hubâââ who landed in England with a very considerable Armâ of Danes King Athelbright whether terrified with a dismal apprehension of these Invaders or otherwisâ being indisposed quickly afterwards gave up the Ghost leaving the management of his Kingdom together with that of his Army against the Danes to his Brother Ethelred The Danes in the mean time âot sure footing and advanced as far as York which âhey miserably destroyed killing Osbright and Elba âwo Kings of Northumberland that opposed them ârom hence they proceeded and over-run all the Countrey as far as Nottingham destroying and spoilââg all before them and then returned back to York âut having once tasted