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Canlyniadau chwilio
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121 - 132
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JONES, WILLIAM
(1770 - 1837), Calvinistic Methodist minister
widow, of Mathafarn (the ancestral home of Dafydd Llwyd ap
Llywelyn
) in Llanwrin, Montgomeryshire, and removed there, setting up as a cattle dealer. He began preaching in 1802. In 1805, he removed to the neighbouring farm of Dôl-y-fonddu, where he died 1 March 1837. There is a memoir (1840) by John Hughes of Pontrobert.
teulu
LACY (DE)
, lords Ewyas, Weobley,
had become involved in the affairs of
Llywelyn
and William de Breos), thereafter appears as a staunch supporter of the Crown, being among the marcher lords on the side of John in the crisis of 1215, and on that of Henry III during the Marshal rising of 1233. Hugh, 1st earl of Ulster, proved less amenable; he spent many years in exile and may, for a short time, have been a fugitive in Wales. William
teulu
LESTRANGE
Great Ness, Cheswardine, Knockin,
the prince of Powys against
Llywelyn
in 1257, and ROGER LESTRANGE (died 1311), son of John, guarded the castle of Dolforwyn for Gruffydd, in whose support he wrote to Edward I claiming lands between the Rhiw and the Luggy. Hawise (above), Gruffydd's wife, was a leader in the plot for the rebellion of Dafydd against
Llywelyn
in 1274. Roger Lestrange was a justice at Rhuddlan in 1278, controlled the
LEWIS GLYN COTHI
(fl. 1447-1486), one of the greatest of the 15th century Welsh bards
LLYWELYN ap RHISIART
(fl. 1520-1565), Chief Bard of the Three Provinces', and one of the most notable poets in the history of Glamorgan
LLEWELLYN, THOMAS
(1720? - 1783), Baptist minister and tutor
Born at Penalltau-isaf, Gelligaer, c. 1720, son of Evan Llewellyn and descended, it is said, from Tomas
Llywelyn
of Rhigos. After following the trade of tailor in the Castleton district, he was baptized in 1738, and underwent a course of training for the Baptist ministry, first at Trosnant (Pontypool) in 1740, then at Bristol in 1741, and finally in London in 1742, but although he was ordained at
teulu
LLOYD
Dolobran,
Owain Glyn Dŵr. His widow, Lucy, daughter of Griffith ab Ednyfed Lloyd of Bromfield, was then alive. His third son, DEIO AP
LLYWELYN
, was the first to be associated with Dolobran. (The Vaughan family of Llwydiarth, issued from the eldest son, Jenkin). Deio's first wife was Mary, daughter of Griffith Goch of Ruyton xi Towns or of Knockyn. The Vaughans of Glasgoed issued from this marriage, and David ap
LLOYD, Sir JOHN CONWAY
(1878 - 1954), public figure
Llywelyn
ap Gruffudd at Cefn-y-bedd than the one raised fifty years previously by S.P.M. Bligh, but he did not live to see the unveiling of the monument in 1956. He died 30 May 1954; his remains were cremated and the ashes were buried in the grave, at Mailleraye-sur-Seine, of his youngest son, John Richard, who lost his life when his aeroplane was shot down near Rouen on 22 June 1940. He lost his eldest
LLOYD, Sir RICHARD
(1606 - 1676) Esclus, royalist and judge
The son of Evan Lloyd of Dulasau, Caernarfonshire (not of Primus Lloyd of Marrington, as in D.N.B.). His family had been settled for centuries in the neighbourhood of Penmachno, claiming descent from a bastard son of Dafydd, brother of prince
Llywelyn
ap Gruffydd; he was nephew to a vicar of Ruabon and first cousin to three other North Wales incumbents, and a bishop of Bangor (Humphrey Lloyd
(fl. 1268), eulogist
Gwilym Ddu associates him with 'Twr Edeirnion,' i.e. Hendwr, Llandrillo, Meironnydd. His poems fall into two groups: (a) in praise of minor princes in northern Powys, viz. Gruffudd (died 1269) and Hywel (died c. 1268), sons of Madog ap Gruffudd Maelor; and
Llywelyn
, son of the above-mentioned Gruffudd ap Madog. These princes were usually loyal to
Llywelyn
ap Gruffydd, and they are praised for
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 LLAETY
(fl. c. 1140-1160), one of the poets of the period of the Welsh Princes
A series of englynion in praise of
Llywelyn
ap Madog ap Maredudd of Powys remain in MSS. It is also probable that he was the same person as the poet Llywarch y Nam, of whose work another series of englynion to the same prince is found.
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