Canlyniadau chwilio

157 - 168 of 476 for "court"

157 - 168 of 476 for "court"

  • HUGHES, JOHN JAMES (Alfardd; 1842 - 1875), journalist Herald Cymraeg at Caernarvon, where he soon won a reputation as a trenchant writer on the Liberal side. He took a prominent part in the campaign for the appointment of county court judges with a knowledge of Welsh, and worked for the reform of the national eisteddfod and the 'Gorsedd.' He died 8 January 1875, and was buried in Glanadda cemetery, Bangor. Short as his career was, he impressed his
  • HUGHES, ROBERT (Robin Ddu yr Ail o Fôn; 1744 - 1785), bardd Ganwyd yn y Ceint Bach, Penmynydd, Môn. Addysgwyd ef gan Ellis Thomas, curad Llanfair Mathafarn Eithaf, a hyfforddwyd ef fel clerc cyfreithiwr yn swyddfa Emrys Lewis y Trysglwyn, yn Biwmares. Bu'n cadw ysgol ym Mhenmynydd, Hen-eglwys, Cerrig-ceinwen, Bodedern, ac Amlwch, a bu'n glerc i Ratcliffe Sidebottom, bargyfreithiwr, Essex Court, Temple, Llundain, o 1763 hyd 1783. Ei batrwm fel bardd oedd
  • HUGHES, ROBERT (Robin Ddu yr Ail o Fôn; 1744 - 1785), poet Born at Ceint Bach, Penmynydd, Anglesey. He was taught by Ellis Thomas, curate of Llanfair Mathafarn Eithaf and was trained as a lawyer's clerk in Emrys Lewis of Trysglwyn's office at Beaumaris. He was a schoolmaster successively at Penmynydd, Heneglwys, Cerrig-ceinwen, Bodedern, and Amlwch; from 1763 to 1783 he was clerk to Ratcliffe Sidebottom, barrister-at-law, of Essex Court, Temple, London
  • HUGHES, THOMAS JOHN (Adfyfr; 1853 - 1927), journalist first editor of the monthly magazine Cymru Fydd. His work as a shorthand writer brought him into touch with many activities in South Wales, and after the passing of the Bankruptcy Act, 1894, he was official shorthand writer to the bankruptcy court at Pontypridd. For some years he was a sub-editor of the South Wales News, and local representative for that paper. By his wife, who survived him, he had
  • HUGHES, WILLIAM (1757 - 1846), Independent minister, hymn-writer, and composer of George Lewis (1794) he was appointed a peripatetic evangelist, and on 17 July 1795, was granted a preacher's licence by the Court of Quarter Sessions. His labours were so successful that it is impossible to relate the history of the oldest Independent chapels in Arfon, Eifionydd, and the Vale of Conway without bringing in his name as one of the principal founders. He was known in his travels as
  • HYWEL ab OWAIN GWYNEDD (bu farw 1170), soldier and poet buried at Bangor. Hywel is probably better known as a poet. He was pre-eminent in his day as a lyric poet. He was not restricted as to subject matter as were the professional court bards; he sang of love and of the natural beauty of his native Gwynedd. Eight of his poems survive; they are printed in The Myvyrian Archaiology of Wales, i, 275-8.
  • HYWEL DDA (bu farw 950), king and legislator 918 he, Clydog his brother, and Idwal Foel did homage to Edward, son of Alfred the Great, and about 926 he and Owain of Gwent journeyed to Hereford to acknowledge the overlordship of Athelstan. His name is frequently mentioned in the English charters as a vassal king and there is little doubt that from time to time he visited the Wessex court. For all that, he was sufficiently independent to mint
  • IEUAN GETHIN ap IEUAN ap LLEISION (fl. c. 1450) Baglan, poet and gentleman A descendant of the family of Caradog ap Iestyn ap Gwrgant. According to some genealogists (e.g. Gruffudd Hiraethog in Peniarth MS 178, i (43)) he married the daughter of Tomas ab Ifor Hael. Bards from North and South Wales were entertained at his court at Baglan, and two cywyddau addressed to him remain in manuscript, one by Ieuan Ddu ap Dafydd ab Owain, and the other by Iorwerth Fynglwyd. A
  • INSOLE, JAMES HARVEY (1821 - 1901), colliery proprietor customers in France, the Mediterranean, Southeast Asia and South America. James took sole control of the business after his father's death in 1851. By 1852 the family had moved just out of town to the more rural Penhill and in 1855 James began building Ely Court (now known as Insole Court) near the newly-fashionable cathedral village of Llandaff. Disaster struck the Cymmer mine in 1856 when 114 men and
  • INSOLE, JAMES HARVEY (1821 - 1901), perchennog glofeydd James reolaeth lwyr dros y busnes ar ôl marwolaeth ei dad yn 1851. Erbyn 1852 roedd y teulu wedi symud allan o'r dref i ardal wledig Penhill, ac yn 1855 dechreuodd James adeiladu Ely Court (a elwir yn Insole Court bellach) ger pentref eglwys gadeiriol Llandaf a oedd newydd ddod yn ffasiynol. Trawyd glofa Cymmer gan drychineb yn 1856 pan laddwyd 114 o ddynion a bechgyn yn y ddamwain danddaearol gyntaf
  • IOLO GOCH (c. 1320 - c. 1398), poet -90); panegyric upon Sir Roger Mortimer, earl of March (and earl of Denbigh), composed between 1395 and 1398; and an awdl calling down blessings on the court of Hywel Cyffin, dean of St Asaph from 1385 to 1397. There are three cywyddau which he sang to Owain Glyndŵr, but the last of these cannot very well have been written later than 1386. Accordingly Iolo belonged entirely to the 14th century, and
  • IOLO GOCH (c. 1325 - c. 1400), poet the Princes. He was in his element celebrating the military exploits of his patrons, and there is a suggestion in one of his poems that he may have done military service himself. The stability of the social order is an important ideal in his poetry, as seen in his depiction of Owain Glyndŵr's court at Sycharth and in 'Cywydd y Llafurwr' which praises the ploughman for humbly accepting his role in