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A History of Wales from the Earliest Times to the Edwardian Conquest

 By John Edward Lloyd

Contents

1
cromlech, carnedd, neolithic
17
goidelic, brythonic, neolithic
27
galatic, goidelic, pytheas
37
silures, ordovices, druidism
47
silures, catuvellauni, ordovices
59
déva, segontium, wroxeter
81
caradog, cymr, telyn
91
wledig, gildas, macsen
102
germanus, haverfield, gildas
110
cantref, maelgwn, hywel

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References from books

Welsh Cistercians: Written to Commemorate the Centenary of the Death of Stephen William Williams ...
by David Henry Williams - 2001 - 352 pages
Limited preview
- Table of Contents - About this book

The First Six Hundred Years
by Jean Danîaelou, Henri Irénée Marrou - 1964 - 522 pages
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- About this book

Publications in English
by University of California - 1929
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- About this book

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Related books

A History of Wales: From the Norman Invasion to the Edwardian Conquest
by Sir John Edward Lloyd - 2004 - 448 pages
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The Age of Conquest: Wales 1063-1415
by Robert Rees Davies - 2000 - 530 pages
An account of the last major revolt under Owain Glyn Dwr forms the culmination of this excellentwork.
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The Age of Owain Gwynedd: An Attempt at a Connected Account of the History of Wales from ...
by Paul Barbier - 1908 - 182 pages
"Published exactly as it was written, eleven years ago, for the Newport nationaleisteddfod."--2d prelim. leaf.
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Places mentioned in this book

Rome - Page 91
successes; some great captain or other had always arisen to vindicate the honour of Rome and drive them back into their forests. ...
more pages: 48 51 59 81 146 173 176 203 204 335
Cardiff - Page 77
It had long been suspected from the situation, the name and the visible remains of the ancient stronghold of Cardiff that it had commenced its history ...
more pages: 78 83
Pembroke - Page 261
The modern county of Pembroke was thus entirely included in Dyfed, but to it has to be added a substantial part of Carmarthenshire if an idea, ...
more pages: 39 265
Marseilles - Page 29
be no difficulty in obtaining from the CHAP. mines of the Cornish peninsula an ample supply of tin for the purposes of his employers in Marseilles. ...
more pages: 19 31 86
York - Page 82
but also with the disaffection of the Brigantes, who in the time of Hadrian annihilated the legion quartered at York and for many years afterwards ...
more pages: 60 83 147 187 226 322 325 328
Swansea - Page 269
was the largest in all Wales; it included not only the cliff-bound peninsula which stretches westward from Swansea, but also the wilder country to the ...
more pages: 321
Glasgow - Page 166
a time took up his abode; in the course of a few years the monastic centre of Glasgow was founded, not far from Rhydderch's stronghold of Dumbarton. ...
more pages: 136
Llandrindod Wells - Page 72
The southward road from Caersws led to Castell Cohlen,7' a fort on the banks of the Ieithon, not far from Llandrindod Wells, which held in subjection ...
London - Page 330
a blow directed most probably at his brother Cadell.34 During most of 894 and 895 the Danes were busy in the neighbourhood of London ; at the end of ...
more pages: xiv xv xvii xx
Dublin - Page 322
But, if there was no colonisation, such as took place in East Anglia, in the Hebrides, around Dublin and York, there were marauding expeditions ...
Canterbury - Page 183
he established his ascendancy, his acceptance of Christianity at the instance of a Roman missionary from Canterbury, and his assumption of something ...
Mold - Page 242
The ancient kingdom of Powys”took in most of this region, extending in its widest limits from the neighbourhood of Mold to the river Wye, ...
Jerusalem - Page 155
The exception is the journey to Jerusalem which, according to the legend, he made in company with Padarn and Teilo and which had as its issue his ...
Leeds - Page 183
Attacking the British kingdom of Elmet, or Elfed, as it would now be written, which lay around our Leeds, he completely ...
Neath - Page 68
while Edward Liwyd called attention to its occurrence also in the parish of Llanbadarn Odwyn, Cardiganshire, and between Brecon and Neath (Gibson, ...
Cambridge - Page 160
In 1568 John Josselin, Latin secretary to Archbishop Parker, published a second, based upon the Cottonian MS. and its Cambridge derivative, Dcl. i. ...
more pages: xviii
Manchester - Page 63
Another road, leaving the fort by the East Gate, ran by way of Condate, which is perhaps Kinderton, near Middlewich, to Manchester, and thus supplied ...
Poole - Page 248
It is possible that Pool itself, called Welsh Pool to distinguish it from Poole in Dorset, may owe its origin to an English settlement,”° thrown ...
Bristol - Page 292
1)anes of Ireland, notably at the ports of Bristol and Chester.'3 It was by means of slaves that much of the field-work of a ...
Triada - Page xxiii
Triada. Cited by reference to the three series (I. u. iii.) printed in Mr. Arch. II. 1-22, 57-75 (388-4!!), the Arabic numeral giving the number of ...
Wrexham - Page xviii
London, Oswestry, and Wrexham. (Recent editions have been revised and amplified by Egerton Phillimore —see prof.] Gr. Colt. (2). Grammatica Celtics. ...
Cologne - Page xvi
Humfredi Liwyd Britannicae Descniptionis Commentariolum [first published, Cologne, 1572). Accedunt Aerae Cambro.Britannicae. ...
Doncaster - Page 186
the impression that it was in Deira, or not far distant from its borders ¿ accordingly, Hatfield, near Doncaster, has been a popular identification. ...
Offa - Page 196
395 and 429) adopted too readily the statement of Welsh writers that Offa conquered the country between the Wye and the Severn and thus brought about ...
more pages: 197 198 199 200 201 203 248 282
St. Augustine - Page 106
grace ever since connected with his name; their promulgation gave rise to a furious controversy throughout the Christian Church, St. Augustine and St. ...
Austin - Page 175
56) and that it appears as “aet Austin” in the charter of 692 Ot 693 which bestowed it on the see of Worcester (Cod. ...