verch Pabo, Queen Arddyn Benasgel

Female 710 - 746  (36 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  verch Pabo, Queen Arddyn Benasgel was born in 710 in Powys, Wales; died in 746 in Wales.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Appointments / Titles: Saint
    • FSID: LWFG-LYH

    Notes:

    Arddyn de Penniines and also known as The Wing Headed

    Family/Spouse: ap Elisedd, King Brochwel Ysgythrog. Brochwel (son of ap Gwylog, King Elisedd) was born in 692 in Wales; died in 773 in Wales. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. ap Brochfael, King Cadell  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 730 in Deheubarth, Wales; died in 808 in Deheubarth, Wales.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  ap Brochfael, King Cadell Descendancy chart to this point (1.Arddyn1) was born in 730 in Deheubarth, Wales; died in 808 in Deheubarth, Wales.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Appointments / Titles: King of Ceredigion
    • Appointments / Titles: King of Powys
    • FSID: LD3L-7ZN

    Notes:

    BIO: from http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/WALES.htm#TewdrMawrA
    CADELL ap Brochwell (-[804/08]). The Gwentian Chronicle names "Cadell of Derrnllwg, son of Brochwel Ysgithrog" when recording his daughter´s marriage[591]. King of Powys. The Chronicle of the Princes of Wales records the death in 808 of "Cadell king of Powys"[592]. The Gwentian Chronicle records that "Arthen king of the Ceredigiawn, Rhydderch king of Dyved, and Cadell king of Teyrnllwg now called Powys" died in 804[593]. m ---. The name of Cadell´s wife is not known. Cadell & his wife had two children...

    ** from British Kings and Queens (Mike Ashley) p 155
    Cadell ap Brochfael Powys, ? - 808.
    Ruler of Powys during the oppressive reign of the Mercian Cenwulf. Cadell died before Cenwulf's main drive into Wales, and he may have benefitted from the comparative peace that followed the construction of Offa's Dyke. However, in the last year of Offa's reign, the Mercian penetrated into Rhuddlan, and this was a signal of the fragile relationship that would exist between Welch and Mercians for the next thirty years.

    Cadell ap Brochfael (English: Cadell, son of Brochfael; died c. 808), also known as Cadell Powys, was an 8th- and 9th-century king of Powys.

    He was the son of Brochfael ap Elisedd, whom he succeeded to the throne c. 773.

    The Annals of Wales mention his death, and Phillimore's reconstruction dates the entry to AD 808. His name also was inscribed (as "Cattell") in the Pillar of Eliseg.

    Children:
    1.) Nest ferch Cadell, b. Abt 770, of Powys gwlad, Wales, d. 842 (Age ~ 72 years)

    2.) Cyngen ap Cadell, Brenin of Teyrnllwg, b. Abt 770, of Powys gwlad, Wales (Age ~ 85 years)

    Family/Spouse: N.N., N.N.. N.N. was born in 750 in Wales; died in 771 in Wales. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 3. verch Cadell, Queen Nest  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 770 in Montgomery, Montgomeryshire, Wales; was christened in 770; died in 825 in Anglesey, Wales; was buried in 825 in Wales.


Generation: 3

  1. 3.  verch Cadell, Queen Nest Descendancy chart to this point (2.Cadell2, 1.Arddyn1) was born in 770 in Montgomery, Montgomeryshire, Wales; was christened in 770; died in 825 in Anglesey, Wales; was buried in 825 in Wales.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FSID: LDQ1-T9Y

    Notes:

    Nest ferch Cadell was the daughter of Cadell ap Brochfael, an 8th-century King of Powys, the wife of Merfyn Frych, King of Gwynedd.

    On the death of her brother Cyngen ap Cadell in 855, authority over the Kingdom of Powys was claimed by Rhodri the Great, who had previously inherited the Kingdom of Gwynedd on the death of his father in 844. Rhodri thus united the Kingdoms of Powys and Gwynedd. Traditionally, Nest was claimed to be Rhodri's mother, hence his claim to Powys would have been matrilineal.

    However, it is unclear why the inheritance of Powys would have passed through Nest to her son, and not to one of the sons of Cyngen: Elisedd ap Cyngen, Ieuaf ap Cyngen, Aeddan ap Cyngen, and Gruffudd ap Cyngen. The texts of Welsh laws which survive to us were written down no earlier than the 12th century, but they provide no evidence that women were capable of transmitting legal title of kingship or lordship.

    Equally, although Rhodri's pedigree in a manuscript in Jesus College Oxford[1] states Nest as his mother, another pedigree in a fourteenth-century manuscript[2] in the National Library of Wales records his mother as Essyllt ferch Cynan. There are no strong grounds to accept either manuscript as reliable, but it is reasonable to believe that the royal house of Gwynedd promoted the view that the Kingdom of Powys had passed to Rhodri the Great through his mother in order to legitimise their control over it.[3] Either way, this possible genealogical manipulation became part of the accepted story of the unification of the two kingdoms.

    Most now take Nest ferch Cadell to be the Nest who was married to Gwerstan son of Gwaithfoed, whose Grandson Bleddyn founded Powys' ruling House of Mathrafal. Rhodri's mother is instead taken to be Essylt daughter of Cynan Dindaethwy, last King of the House of Cunedda; it follows that Essylt was not Merfyn's mother, but his wife. Consequently those taking this view conclude that Nest's alleged marriage to Merfyn (or Rhodri) was merely a rumour spread and recorded by supporters of Gwynedd to demean the Kings of Powys, and to claim lordship over them. The House of Gwynedd's Kingship is recorded being passed jure uxoris through Essylt to her husband Merfyn, and thence distaff (ie. by the female line) to their son Rhodri on Merfyn's death, the same going for Rhodri's wife Angharad, the daughter of Meurig King of Seisyllwg when her brother Gwgon drowned without an heir, allowing Rhodri to rule Seisyllwg jure uxoris, and his son Cadell to inherit it matrilinearly.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nest_ferch_Cadell

    Family/Spouse: ap Gwriad, King Merfyn Frych. Merfyn (son of ap Elidyr, King Gwriad Manaw and verch Cynan, Esyllt) was born in 790 in Gwynedd, Wales; died in 843 in Wales; was buried in 843 in Wales. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 4. ap Merfyn, King Rhodri Mawr  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 820 in Caer Seiont, Carnarvon, Caernarvonshire, Wales; died in 878 in Anglesey, Wales; was buried in 878 in Isle of Anglesey, Wales.


Generation: 4

  1. 4.  ap Merfyn, King Rhodri Mawr Descendancy chart to this point (3.Nest3, 2.Cadell2, 1.Arddyn1) was born in 820 in Caer Seiont, Carnarvon, Caernarvonshire, Wales; died in 878 in Anglesey, Wales; was buried in 878 in Isle of Anglesey, Wales.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FSID: LDQ1-TMR
    • Military: 843; The Gwentian Chronicle records that "Rhodri the Great opposed [Berthwrd king of Mercia]…with the assistance of Meuryg son of Hywel king of Glamorgan" in 843, adding that Meuryg was killed in the battle and was succeeded by "Ithel son of Hywel" who was killed by "the men of Brecknockshire" on his way to assist Rhodri.
    • Appointments / Titles: Between 844 and 878; King of Gwynedd (succeeded his father, Merfyn Frych)
    • Appointments / Titles: 844; Prince of Wales
    • Military: 856; Won a notable victory against the Danish and killed their leader Gorm.
    • Appointments / Titles: 856; King of Powys (succeeded his maternal uncle Cyngen ap Cadell)
    • Appointments / Titles: 871; King of Seisyllwg
    • Military: 872; Vvictories by Rhodri: the first at a place given as Bannoleu, where he defeated the Vikings
    • Appointments / Titles: 877; King of the Britons

    Notes:

    877 AD; The Annals of Ulster record that "Rhodri, son of Merfyn, King of the Britons, came in flight from the dark foreigners to Ireland."

    According to legend, the first Dinefwr Castle was build by Rhodri Mawr

    "Roderick the Great" "Mawr the Great"

    Rhodri ap Merfyn (c. 820–878), later known as Rhodri the Great (Welsh: Rhodri Mawr), succeeded his father, Merfyn Frych, as King of Gwynedd in 844. Rhodri annexed Powys c. 856 and Seisyllwg c. 871. He is called "King of the Britons" by the Annals of Ulster. In some later histories, he is referred to as "King of Wales", although the title is anachronistic and his realm did not include southern Wales.

    Lineage and inheritance

    Rhodri was the son of Merfyn Frych, who had claimed Gwynedd upon the extinction of Cunedda's male line. Rhodri then inherited the realm after his father's death around 844. Merfyn hailed from "Manaw" which may either refer to the Isle of Man or Manau, the ancestral homeland of all Gwynedd's kings since Cunedda.

    According to later genealogies, his mother or grandmother was Nest ferch Cadell of the ruling dynasty in Powys. Although surviving texts of Welsh law expressly forbid inheritance along the maternal line, Nest and Rhodri's supposed inheritance was later used to justify Gwynedd's annexation of Powys after the c. 855 death of Cyngen ap Cadell in preference to Cyngen's other heirs.

    Similarly, Rhodri's marriage to Angharad ferch Meurig was used to explain his supposed inheritance of her brother Gwgon's kingdom of Ceredigion after that king's death in 872[a] via a principle of jure uxoris that does not survive in our sources for Welsh law.

    Reign
    Now the master of much of modern Wales, Rhodri faced pressure both from the English and, increasingly, from Vikings, called the "black gentiles"[b] in the Welsh sources. The Danish are recorded ravaging Anglesey in 854. In 856, Rhodri won a notable victory and killed their leader Gorm.

    The Chronicle of the Princes records two victories by Rhodri in 872: the first at a place given variously as Bangolau,[1] Bann Guolou,[2] or Bannoleu,[3] where he defeated the Vikings on Anglesey "in a hard battle"[1] and the second at Manegid[1] or Enegyd[4] where the Vikings "were destroyed".

    The Chronicle of the Princes records his death occurring at the Battle of Sunday on Anglesey in 873;[1] the Annals of Wales record the two events in different years[2][3] and Phillimore's reconstruction of its dates places Rhodri's death in 877.[2] According to the Chronicle, Rhodri and his brother Gwriad were killed during a Saxon invasion (which probably would have been under Ceolwulf of Mercia, given that the Wessex forces under Alfred the Great were fighting Vikings in East Anglia at the time). The Annals record no great details of the death, but where the B text calls Gwriad Rhodri's brother,[3] the A text has him as Rhodri's son instead.[2] It is likely he was killed in battle given that all the sources call his son Anarawd's victory over the Mercians at the Battle of the Conwy a few years later "God's vengeance for Rhodri".

    Succession
    Rhodri died leaving at least four sons to share his land among themselves. The traditional account is that his eldest, Anarawd, became king of Gwynedd and the head of the subsequent House of Aberffraw which produced Gruffudd ap Cynan and Llywelyn the Great. Another, Cadell, was given Ceredigion and killed his brother Merfyn to claim Powys as well. Cadell's family was later known as the House of Dinefwr, after its base of operations was moved by Hywel the Good to Dyfed following another (supposed) inheritance via his marriage to Elen ferch Llywarch. Hywel's wide domain, later known as Deheubarth, briefly eclipsed Gwynedd under his immediate heirs before fracturing.

    A fourth son, possibly too young to have been considered for the first division of Rhodri's lands, took part in Anarawd's 881 revenge against Mercia and, wounded there, became known to history as Tudwal the Lame, a condition disqualifying him from rule under Cyfraith Hywel, Welsh customary law.

    Children
    Anarawd ap Rhodri (died 913)[5]

    Cadell ap Rhodri (854–907)[5]

    Gwriad ap Rhodri: He had a son named Gwgawn who was killed in 955.[5]

    Tudwal ap Rhodri (born 860)

    Rhodri married verch Meurig, Queen Angharad in 840 in Gwynedd, Wales. Angharad (daughter of ap Dyfnwallon, Lord Meurig and N.N., Lady N.N.) was born in 825 in Wales; died in 900 in Wales; was buried in 900 in Wales. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 5. ap Rhodri Mawr, King Merfyn  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 859 in Caer Seiont, Carnarvon, Caernarvonshire, Wales; died in 900 in Montgomery, Montgomeryshire, Wales.