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JONES, SARAH RHIANNON DAVIES
(1921 - 2014), author and lecturer
again in 1990. Rhiannon Davies Jones was a Welsh Nationalist, and her beliefs and responses to political events of the period are clearly reflected in her work. The events relating to the Investiture of 1969 influenced Llys Aberffraw ('The court of Aberffraw'), a novel about Owain
Gwynedd
which won the Crown at the Anglesey Eisteddfod in 1973 and was published in 1977. Similarly in the case of Eryr
JONES, SHÂN EMLYN
(1936 - 1997), singer
Ifan ab Owen Edwards, at Penmount chapel, Pwllheli, on 16 April 1958. They had two daughters, Elin and Mari. The marriage was dissolved in 1994. She suffered poor health in her last years and died in Ysbyty
Gwynedd
, Bangor on 30 December 1997. Her funeral took place at Penmount chapel on 6 January 1998, and she was buried in Penrhos cemetery. Donations were received in her memory towards the work of
JONES, WILLIAM BASIL (TICKELL)
(1822 - 1897), bishop
of spiritual, pastoral, and educational work in the diocese, and effected a considerable reorganization of the diocesan machinery. He was able to speak Welsh, though not fluently, but he had little regard for the separate nationhood of Wales. His scholarship was displayed by such works as The Vestiges of the Gael in
Gwynedd
, 1851; The History and Antiquities of S. David's (with E. A. Freeman), 1852
LEK, KAREL (Charles)
(1929 - 2020), artist
. Karel Lek continued to live in Beaumaris. He died on 1 March 2020 in Ysbyty
Gwynedd
, Bangor, aged 90 years, and a celebration of his life was arranged at Bangor Crematorium on 10 March. He is remembered for his distinctive artistic voice, his contributions to the Welsh art community, his exploration of humanitarian themes, his charitable contribution and his lasting impact on the cultural landscape of
teulu
LLOYD
Rhiwaedog, Rhiwedog,
, received a copy of the family pedigree from ELISE AP WILLIAM LLOYD, who was high sheriff of Merioneth in 1565. The ancestry as given by Dwnn (Visitations, ii, 225-6 - see the footnotes by W. W. E. Wynne) is traced through Owain
Gwynedd
and Llywarch Hen to Coel Godebog. J. E. Griffith (Pedigrees, 234) gives the descent from Owain
Gwynedd
down to 1832, and (ibid., 383) shows also the relationship of SIMON
LLOYD GEORGE, DAVID
(the first Earl Lloyd-George of Dwyfor), (1863 - 1945), statesman
of the House of Commons till January 1945, when he resigned his seat and was granted an earldom, taking as his titles Earl Lloyd-George of Dwyfor and Viscount
Gwynedd
. He was given the Order of Merit in 1919 and the Légion d'honneur in 1920. He was Constable of Caernarfon castle from 1908; hon. LL.D. (Wales) 1908, hon. Fellow of Jesus College, Oxford, 1910, hon. D.C.L., Oxford, and hon. LL.D. of
(fl. 1268), eulogist
'; he is leader of
Gwynedd
, Powys, and the South. The like had not been seen since the days of the ' Flamebearer' and the battle of Arfderydd; he is like Arthur, and is 'the true king of Wales.' His quarrel is with a 'foreign nation of alien speech.' The word 'Cymro' (Welshman) occurs several times, and is used with great pride. The poet ventures even to urge the new Arthur to annex Cornwall to his
LLYWARCH ap BRAN
(fl. c. 1137), founder of one of the 'Fifteen (Noble) Tribes of Gwynedd'
is described as brother-in-law of Owain
Gwynedd
, their wives being daughters of Gronw ab Owain ab Edwin, lord of Tegeingl. Like Hwfa ap Cynddelw, he is said to have been steward to Owain
Gwynedd
and to have lived in the township of Tref Llywarch, Anglesey; he is also described as lord of the commote of Menai, Anglesey. For the names of some of the families who claimed descent from him see Philip
LLYWARCH ap LLYWELYN
(fl. 1173-1220) Gwynedd, court-poet
from the death of Owain
Gwynedd
to the rise of Llywelyn the Great to the height of his power. He addresses Dafydd ab Owain
Gwynedd
as ' lord of Aberffraw'; this must have been between 1173 and 1175. Fratricidal strife between the princes was the curse of Wales at that time, and the reference to Cain and Abel in the ode to Rhodri is very much to the point. The solution advocated by Llywarch was
LLYWARCH HEN
(fl. 6th century), British prince and a hero of a cycle of Welsh tales dating from the mid-9th century
pedigrees of the princes of
Gwynedd
as contained in the 'Life of Gruffudd ap Cynan.' According to these, Llywarch was descended from Coel Gotebauc, his father was Elidyr Lledanwyn, and his mother was Gwawr, daughter of Brachan. He was, both on the paternal and the maternal side, a cousin of Urien of Rheged who fought against the sons of Ida in the latter half of the 6th century; and the princes of
Gwynedd
LLYWELYN ap GRUFFYDD
(bu farw 1282), Prince of Wales
challenging the revived power of the English monarchy, a policy which ended with his defeat in the war of 1277 and the collapse of his life's work. The subsequent peace of Aberconway left him with only
Gwynedd
west of Conway, though he was still accorded the now hollow title of Prince of Wales, with which was associated the overlordship of five small baronies on the outskirts of Snowdonia. At Worcester, on
LLYWELYN ap IORWERTH
(fl. 1173-1240), prince
Son of Iorwerth Drwyndwn by Margaret, daughter of Madog ap Maredudd. He may have been born at Dolwyddelan, the royal manor of Nantconwy, over which his father had exercised a brief lordship which ended with his death at about the time of Llywelyn's birth. The infant prince, being a potential menace to the power of his father's half-brothers in
Gwynedd
, probably grew up in Powys under the
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