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  • BERTIL, PRINCESS LILIAN (DUCHESS OF HALLAND), (1915 - 2013) 1976. They honeymooned in Kenya. Over the years their faithful love story became better known and after her marriage Princes Lilian played a prominent and very acceptable role in the public life of Sweden. She won the hearts of ordinary folk, as a person full of humour and fun, with an unaffected air, though it was often said that she looked more regal than many members of the family. Bertil died 5
  • BEYNON, THOMAS (bu farw 1729), minister fullest account of him is in D. M. Lewis, Cofiant Evan Lewis, Brynberian (Aberystwyth, 1903). In Llyfryddiaeth y Cymry, under 1719 (1), we find him mentioned among the sponsors of a book published by Isaac Carter at Atpar; see also ibid., 1717 (5).
  • BIANCHI, ANTHONY (Tony) (1952 - 2017), writer Tony Bianchi was born on 5 April 1952 in North Shields, Northumberland, the only child of George Bianchi (1910-1988), a policeman of Italian descent, and his wife Catherine (née Nesbitt, 1916-2001). Tony attended a Roman Catholic school in Newcastle upon Tyne. He left school with poor exam results, probably because his teachers had persuaded him to sit his exams a year early. However, in 1969, he
  • BLACKWELL, JOHN (Alun; 1797 - 1840), cleric and poet and the College library. Having been ordained, and licensed curate of Holywell in 1829, he was appointed rector of Maenordeifi in 1833. He was editor of Cylchgrawn y Gymdeithas er Taenu Gwybodaeth Fuddiol, published under the auspices of the S.P.C.K., for the eighteen months of its existence, 1834-5. In 1839 he married Matilda Dear, Pistyll, near Holywell. He died 19 May 1840. A marble tablet to his
  • BOWEN, EMRYS GEORGE (1900 - 1983), geographer , he was for many years a Sunday School teacher at Bethel, a Welsh Baptist Chapel in Aberystwyth and after his retirement he lectured on church history in the United Theological College at Aberystwyth. Amongst his publications are papers which reflect this interest, for example 'Bedyddwyr Cymru tua 1714' in Trafodion Cymdeithas Hanes Bedyddwyr Cymru (1957-8, 5-14) and 'Eglwys Bethel a Bedyddwyr
  • BOWYER, GWILYM (1906 - 1965), minister (Congl.) and college principal . Christianity for Gwilym Bowyer meant an allegiance to Jesus Christ - an unquestionable allegiance. Politically he was a radical, a convinced pacifist and a strong advocate for Welsh-medium education. He made a substantial contribution towards making it possible for theological students in the University of Wales to follow courses and take their examinations in Welsh. Gwilym Bowyer died in Bangor on 5 October
  • BRADNEY, Sir JOSEPH ALFRED (Achydd Glan Troddi; 1859 - 1933), historian use of historians that he will be remembered. The first part of his History of Monmouthshire appeared in 1904; a part of the fourth volume came in 1932, but he did not live to complete this monumental work. Volume 5 of History of Monmouthshire (ed. Madeleine Gray) was published in 1993. See NLWJ, 14 (1965-66), 114. Besides the History of Monmouthshire, Bradney published several books and articles
  • BROMWICH, RACHEL SHELDON (1915 - 2010), scholar Hengerdd at Oxford and edited together with Dr Brinley Jones its fruits in Astudiaethau ar yr Hengerdd (1978) in honour of the professor. She was one of the editors of The Arthur of the Welsh (1991), presenting an up-to-date account of Arthurian scholarship. Her two volumes of bibliography: Medieval Celtic Bibliography (Vol. 5 in the Toronto Series of Bibliographies, 1974) and Medieval Welsh Literature
  • teulu BROSTER, printers Bangor PETER BROSTER printed an edition of Y Llyfr Plygain at Chester in 1783. In 1807 JOHN BROSTER started in business at Bangor; he was probably the John Broster who had been apprenticed to W. C. Jones, printer, Chester. John Broster's son, CHARLES BROSTER, was owner, publisher, and printer in 1817 of The North Wales Gazette, a newspaper of which the first number had been produced at Bangor on 5
  • BRUCE, HENRY AUSTIN (1815 - 1895), 1st baron Aberdare Council on Education and was admitted a Privy Councillor; he was also appointed a Charity Commissioner for England and Wales in the same year. His interests in education had been shown by the speech on Welsh education which he had made on 5 May 1862, and by his introduction of a deputation on that subject to the president and vice-president of the Privy Council. The advance of education in fact became
  • BRUCE, MORYS GEORGE LYNDHURST (4th Baron Aberdare), (1919 - 2005), politician and sportsman with eminent sportsmen and Bible stories for children. Bruce's mother died on 8 September 1950 and his father remarried on 12 September 1957, but died in a car accident in Yugoslavia, during his honeymoon, on 4 October; he was buried at Mountain Ash, Glamorganshire, on 8 October. The new Lord Aberdare took his seat on the Conservative benches in the House of Lords on 5 February 1958; he made his
  • BRUCE, WILLIAM NAPIER (1858 - 1936), educationalist and lawyer commissioner in the Charity Commission under the Endowed Schools Acts. His duties enabled him to become thoroughly acquainted with the problems of secondary education in England and Wales. It was natural, therefore, that he should be appointed secretary of the Commission on secondary education which collected evidence under the chairmanship of James Bryce in 1894-5; when the details of the Welsh Intermediate