ap Gruffydd, Owain 1 2 3a

Birth Name ap Gruffydd, Owain
Gender male
Age at Death 69 years, 11 months

Narrative

Owain Gwynedd
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Owain Gwynedd (in English, "Owen") (c. 1100–November 28, 1170), alternatively known by the patronymic "Owain ap Gruffydd". He is occasionally referred to as Owain I of Gwynedd, or Owain I of Wales on account of his claim to be King of Wales. He is considered to be the most successful of all the north Welsh princes prior to his grandson, Llywelyn the Great. He was known as Owain Gwynedd to distinguish him from another contemporary Owain ap Gruffydd, ruler of part of Powys who was known as Owain Cyfeiliog. Owain Gwynedd was a member of the House of Aberffraw, a descendant of the senior branch from Rhodri Mawr.

Early life
Owain's father, Gruffydd ap Cynan, was a strong and long-lived ruler who had made the principality of Gwynedd the most influential in Wales during the sixty-two years of his reign, using the island of Anglesey as his power base. His mother, Angharad ferch Owain, was the daughter of Owain ab Edwin. Owain was the second of three sons of Gruffydd and Angharad.

Owain is thought to have been born on Anglesey about the year 1100. By about 1120 Gruffydd had grown too old to lead his forces in battle and Owain and his brothers Cadwallon and later Cadwaladr led the forces of Gwynedd against the Normans and against other Welsh princes with great success. His elder brother Cadwallon was killed in a battle against the forces of Powys in 1132, leaving Owain as his father's heir. Owain and Cadwaladr, in alliance with Gruffydd ap Rhys of Deheubarth, won a major victory over the Normans at Crug Mawr near Cardigan in 1136 and annexed Ceredigion to their father's realm.

Accession to the throne and early campaigns
On Gruffydd's death in 1137, therefore, Owain inherited a portion of a well-established kingdom, but had to share it with Cadwaladr. In 1143 Cadwaladr was implicated in the murder of Anarawd ap Gruffydd of Deheubarth, and Owain responded by sending his son Hywel ab Owain Gwynedd to strip him of his lands in the north of Ceredigion. Though Owain was later reconciled with Cadwaladr, from 1143, Owain ruled alone over most of north Wales. In 1155 Cadwaladr was driven into exile.

Owain took advantage of the civil war in England between King Stephen and the Empress Matilda to push Gwynedd's boundaries further east than ever before. In 1146 he captured the castle of Mold and about 1150 captured Rhuddlan and encroached on the borders of Powys. The prince of Powys, Madog ap Maredudd, with assistance from Earl Ranulf of Chester, gave battle at Coleshill, but Owain was victorious.

War with King Henry II
All went well until the accession of King Henry II of England in 1154. Henry invaded Gwynedd in 1157 with the support of Madog ap Maredudd of Powys and Owain's brother Cadwaladr. The invasion met with mixed fortunes. King Henry was nearly killed in a skirmish near Basingwerk and the fleet accompanying the invasion made a landing on Anglesey where it was defeated. Owain was however forced to come to terms with Henry, being obliged to surrender Rhuddlan and other conquests in the east.

Madog ap Maredudd died in 1160, enabling Owain to regain territory in the east. In 1163 he formed an alliance with Rhys ap Gruffydd of Deheubarth to challenge English rule. King Henry again invaded Gwynedd in 1165, but instead of taking the usual route along the northern coastal plain, the king's army invaded from Oswestry and took a route over the Berwyn hills. The invasion was met by an alliance of all the Welsh princes, with Owain as the undisputed leader. However there was little fighting, for the Welsh weather came to Owain's assistance as torrential rain forced Henry to retreat in disorder. The infuriated Henry mutilated a number of Welsh hostages, including two of Owain's sons.

Henry did not invade Gwynedd again and Owain was able to regain his eastern conquests, recapturing Rhuddlan castle in 1167 after a siege of three months.

Disputes with the church and succession
The last years of Owain's life were spent in disputes with the Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Becket, over the appointment of a new Bishop of Bangor. When the see became vacant Owain had his nominee, Arthur of Bardsey, elected. The archbishop refused to accept this, so Owain had Arthur consecrated in Ireland. The dispute continued, and the see remained officially vacant until well after Owain's death. He was also put under pressure by the Archbishop and the Pope to put aside his second wife, Cristin, who was his first cousin, this relationship making the marriage invalid under church law. Despite being excommunicated for his defiance, Owain steadfastly refused to put Cristin aside. Owain died in 1170, and despite having been excommunicated was buried in Bangor Cathedral by the local clergy. The annalist writing Brut y Tywysogion recorded his death "after innumerable victories, and unconquered from his youth".

He is believed to have commissioned the propaganda text, The Life of Gruffydd ap Cynan, an account of his father's life. Following his death, civil war broke out between his sons. Owain was married twice, first to Gwladus ferch Llywarch ap Trahaearn, by whom he had two sons, Maelgwn ab Owain Gwynedd and Iorwerth Drwyndwn, the father of Llywelyn the Great, then to Cristin, by whom he had three sons including Dafydd ab Owain Gwynedd and Rhodri ab Owain Gwynedd. He also had a number of illegitimate sons, who by Welsh law had an equal claim on the inheritance if acknowledged by their father.

Heirs and Successors
Owain had originally designated Rhun ab Owain Gwynedd as his successor. Rhun was Owain's favourite son, and his premature death in 1147 plunged his father into a deep melancholy, from which he was only roused by the news that his forces had captured Mold castle. Owain then designated Hywel ab Owain Gwynedd as his successor, but after his death Hywel was first driven to seek refuge in Ireland by Cristin's sons, Dafydd and Rhodri, then killed at the battle of Pentraeth when he returned with an Irish army. Dafydd and Rhodri split Gwynedd between them, but a generation passed before Gwynedd was restored to its former glory under Owain's grandson Llywelyn the Great.

According to legend, one of Owain's sons was Prince Madoc, who is popularly supposed to have fled across the Atlantic and colonised America.

Altogether, the prolific Owain Gwynedd is said to have had the following children from two wives and at least four mistresses:

Rhun ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
Hywel ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
Iorwerth ab Owain Gwynedd (from first wife Gwladys (Gladys) ferch Llywarch)
Maelgwn ab Owain Gwynedd, Lord of Ynys Môn
Gwenllian ferch Owain Gwynedd
Dafydd ab Owain Gwynedd (from second wife Cristina (Christina) ferch Gronw)
Rhodri ab Owain Gwynedd
Angharad ferch Owain Gwynedd
Margaret ferch Owain Gwynedd
Iefan ab Owain Gwynedd
Cynan ab Owain Gwynedd, Lord of Meirionnydd (illegitimate)
Rhirid ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
Madoc ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
Cynwrig ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
Gwenllian II ferch Owain Gwynedd (also shared the same name with a sister!)
Einion ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
Iago ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
Ffilip ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
Cadell ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
Rotpert ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
Idwal ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
Other daughters

Fiction
Owain is a recurring character in the Brother Cadfael series of novels by Ellis Peters, often referred to, and appearing in the novels Dead Man's Ransom and The Summer of the Danes. He acts shrewdly to keep Wales's borders secure, and sometimes to expand them, during the civil war between King Stephen and Maud, and sometimes acts as an ally to Cadfael and his friend, Sheriff Hugh Beringar. Cadwaladr also appears in both these novels as a source of grief for his brother.

--------------------------------------------------------
Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd, Prince of Gwynedd from 1137 until his death in 1170, took advantage of the troubled reign of King Stephen of England and seized some neigbouring territories. In 1157, Henry II led an army into Wales and Owain acknowledged Henry II as overlord. Owain kept all the territory he had gained with the exception of Tegeingl in the extreme north east.
Owain died on November 28, 1170 and was interred at Bangor Cathedral.

Owain married Gwladys, a daughter of Llywarch ap Trahaearn ap Cardogog whose father Trahaearn ap Cardogog had been killed in 1081 by Owain's father Gruffydd ap Cynan. Apparently, our ancestors didn't hold long grudges over killings and murders, perhaps because these events were so common.

* _FA1: Acceded: 1137. Interred: Bangor. 9 10
* _FA2: Target of Henry II's campaign(s) in Wales.
* _FA3: Threatened Madoc ap Maredudd Prince of Powys.
* _FA4: Excommunicated by Thomas a' Becket when he didn't abjure his 2nd wife Cristin. 11
* _FA5: AKA Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd, Prince of Gwynedd. 12 9 3
* _FA6: Expanded borders & took back districts lost to the English & other Welsh Princes 13
* _FA7: Able to do so because of King Stephen's pre-occupation with English civil war. 13
* _FA8: Prince of North Wales. 14
* Note:
REF: "Yale Genealogy and History of Wales", 1908, Rodney Horace Yale p. 40: During King Stephen's reign of 17 years in England, he left Wales much to
itself and Owain materially added to the resources of his country & re-occupied several districts, which the Welsh had lost in former years. In the meantime however, he and Cadwaladr quarreld and the latter fled to England. Also during these years (C25) Rhys ap Gruffydd, a son of Gruffydd ap Rhun, who was son of Rhys ap Tewdwr, had won several comparatively important engagements and successes in the south.

 

Events

Event Date Place Description Sources
Birth 1100 Aberffraw Castle, Angelesey, Wales   1
Death 1169-12-00 Carnarvonshire, Wales   1

Age: 69y

Burial   Bangor Cathedral, Is Gwyrfai, Caernavonshire, Wales   4

Parents

Relation to main person Name Birth date Death date Relation within this family (if not by birth)
Father ap Cynan, Gruffydd10551137
Mother Owain, Angharad verch10651162
    Sister     verch Gruffydd, Margred 1080
    Sister     verch Gruffydd, Rhanullt 1083
    Sister     verch Gruffydd, Gwenllian 1085
    Sister     verch Gruffydd, Elen 1089
    Sister     verch Gruffydd, Merinedd 1091
    Sister     verch Gruffydd, Susanna 1095
    Brother     ap Gruffydd, Cadwaladr 1096 1171-03-00
    Brother     ap Gruffydd, Cadwallon 1097 1137
         ap Gruffydd, Owain 1100 1169-12-00

Families

Family of ap Gruffydd, Owain and Gronw, Christina verch

Married Wife Gronw, Christina verch ( * 1125 + ... )
   
Event Date Place Description Sources
Marriage 1155      
Event Note

M: Bef. 1155

  Children
Name Birth Date Death Date
Owain, Angharad verch1155

Family of ap Gruffydd, Owain and verch Llywarch, Gwladus

Unknown Partner verch Llywarch, Gwladus ( * 1098 + 1155 )
  Children
Name Birth Date Death Date
Owain Gruffydd, Margred verch1123
Owain, Gwenllian verch11251165
ap Owain, Iowerth Drwyndwn11291176
ap Owain, Owain1132
ap Owain, Dafydd1134
ap Owain, Maelgwyn Oychon1136
ap Owain, Rhodri1138
ap Owain, Cynan1140
verch Owain, Angarad1143

Source References

  1. http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=PED&db=tjglad&id=I68192&style=TABLE
  2. http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tjglad&id=I67934 @ RootsWeb
  3. Michael Neuman: http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=clcaldwell&id=I027307 @ RootsWeb Caldwell and related families
      • Source text:

        ID: I027307
        Name: Owain Fawr ap Gruffydd , Prince of Gwynedd 1 2
        Sex: M
        Birth: ABT 1095 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales 1 2
        Death: DEC 1169 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales 1 2
        Note:
        Owain Gwynedd
        From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

        Owain Gwynedd (in English, "Owen") (c. 1100–November 28, 1170), alternatively known by the patronymic "Owain ap Gruffydd". He is occasionally referred to as Owain I of Gwynedd, or Owain I of Wales on account of his claim to be King of Wales. He is considered to be the most successful of all the north Welsh princes prior to his grandson, Llywelyn the Great. He was known as Owain Gwynedd to distinguish him from another contemporary Owain ap Gruffydd, ruler of part of Powys who was known as Owain Cyfeiliog. Owain Gwynedd was a member of the House of Aberffraw, a descendant of the senior branch from Rhodri Mawr.

        Early life
        Owain's father, Gruffydd ap Cynan, was a strong and long-lived ruler who had made the principality of Gwynedd the most influential in Wales during the sixty-two years of his reign, using the island of Anglesey as his power base. His mother, Angharad ferch Owain, was the daughter of Owain ab Edwin. Owain was the second of three sons of Gruffydd and Angharad.

        Owain is thought to have been born on Anglesey about the year 1100. By about 1120 Gruffydd had grown too old to lead his forces in battle and Owain and his brothers Cadwallon and later Cadwaladr led the forces of Gwynedd against the Normans and against other Welsh princes with great success. His elder brother Cadwallon was killed in a battle against the forces of Powys in 1132, leaving Owain as his father's heir. Owain and Cadwaladr, in alliance with Gruffydd ap Rhys of Deheubarth, won a major victory over the Normans at Crug Mawr near Cardigan in 1136 and annexed Ceredigion to their father's realm.

        Accession to the throne and early campaigns
        On Gruffydd's death in 1137, therefore, Owain inherited a portion of a well-established kingdom, but had to share it with Cadwaladr. In 1143 Cadwaladr was implicated in the murder of Anarawd ap Gruffydd of Deheubarth, and Owain responded by sending his son Hywel ab Owain Gwynedd to strip him of his lands in the north of Ceredigion. Though Owain was later reconciled with Cadwaladr, from 1143, Owain ruled alone over most of north Wales. In 1155 Cadwaladr was driven into exile.

        Owain took advantage of the civil war in England between King Stephen and the Empress Matilda to push Gwynedd's boundaries further east than ever before. In 1146 he captured the castle of Mold and about 1150 captured Rhuddlan and encroached on the borders of Powys. The prince of Powys, Madog ap Maredudd, with assistance from Earl Ranulf of Chester, gave battle at Coleshill, but Owain was victorious.

        War with King Henry II
        All went well until the accession of King Henry II of England in 1154. Henry invaded Gwynedd in 1157 with the support of Madog ap Maredudd of Powys and Owain's brother Cadwaladr. The invasion met with mixed fortunes. King Henry was nearly killed in a skirmish near Basingwerk and the fleet accompanying the invasion made a landing on Anglesey where it was defeated. Owain was however forced to come to terms with Henry, being obliged to surrender Rhuddlan and other conquests in the east.

        Madog ap Maredudd died in 1160, enabling Owain to regain territory in the east. In 1163 he formed an alliance with Rhys ap Gruffydd of Deheubarth to challenge English rule. King Henry again invaded Gwynedd in 1165, but instead of taking the usual route along the northern coastal plain, the king's army invaded from Oswestry and took a route over the Berwyn hills. The invasion was met by an alliance of all the Welsh princes, with Owain as the undisputed leader. However there was little fighting, for the Welsh weather came to Owain's assistance as torrential rain forced Henry to retreat in disorder. The infuriated Henry mutilated a number of Welsh hostages, including two of Owain's sons.

        Henry did not invade Gwynedd again and Owain was able to regain his eastern conquests, recapturing Rhuddlan castle in 1167 after a siege of three months.

        Disputes with the church and succession
        The last years of Owain's life were spent in disputes with the Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Becket, over the appointment of a new Bishop of Bangor. When the see became vacant Owain had his nominee, Arthur of Bardsey, elected. The archbishop refused to accept this, so Owain had Arthur consecrated in Ireland. The dispute continued, and the see remained officially vacant until well after Owain's death. He was also put under pressure by the Archbishop and the Pope to put aside his second wife, Cristin, who was his first cousin, this relationship making the marriage invalid under church law. Despite being excommunicated for his defiance, Owain steadfastly refused to put Cristin aside. Owain died in 1170, and despite having been excommunicated was buried in Bangor Cathedral by the local clergy. The annalist writing Brut y Tywysogion recorded his death "after innumerable victories, and unconquered from his youth".

        He is believed to have commissioned the propaganda text, The Life of Gruffydd ap Cynan, an account of his father's life. Following his death, civil war broke out between his sons. Owain was married twice, first to Gwladus ferch Llywarch ap Trahaearn, by whom he had two sons, Maelgwn ab Owain Gwynedd and Iorwerth Drwyndwn, the father of Llywelyn the Great, then to Cristin, by whom he had three sons including Dafydd ab Owain Gwynedd and Rhodri ab Owain Gwynedd. He also had a number of illegitimate sons, who by Welsh law had an equal claim on the inheritance if acknowledged by their father.

        Heirs and Successors
        Owain had originally designated Rhun ab Owain Gwynedd as his successor. Rhun was Owain's favourite son, and his premature death in 1147 plunged his father into a deep melancholy, from which he was only roused by the news that his forces had captured Mold castle. Owain then designated Hywel ab Owain Gwynedd as his successor, but after his death Hywel was first driven to seek refuge in Ireland by Cristin's sons, Dafydd and Rhodri, then killed at the battle of Pentraeth when he returned with an Irish army. Dafydd and Rhodri split Gwynedd between them, but a generation passed before Gwynedd was restored to its former glory under Owain's grandson Llywelyn the Great.

        According to legend, one of Owain's sons was Prince Madoc, who is popularly supposed to have fled across the Atlantic and colonised America.

        Altogether, the prolific Owain Gwynedd is said to have had the following children from two wives and at least four mistresses:

        Rhun ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
        Hywel ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
        Iorwerth ab Owain Gwynedd (from first wife Gwladys (Gladys) ferch Llywarch)
        Maelgwn ab Owain Gwynedd, Lord of Ynys Môn
        Gwenllian ferch Owain Gwynedd
        Dafydd ab Owain Gwynedd (from second wife Cristina (Christina) ferch Gronw)
        Rhodri ab Owain Gwynedd
        Angharad ferch Owain Gwynedd
        Margaret ferch Owain Gwynedd
        Iefan ab Owain Gwynedd
        Cynan ab Owain Gwynedd, Lord of Meirionnydd (illegitimate)
        Rhirid ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
        Madoc ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
        Cynwrig ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
        Gwenllian II ferch Owain Gwynedd (also shared the same name with a sister!)
        Einion ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
        Iago ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
        Ffilip ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
        Cadell ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
        Rotpert ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
        Idwal ab Owain Gwynedd (illegitimate)
        Other daughters

        Fiction
        Owain is a recurring character in the Brother Cadfael series of novels by Ellis Peters, often referred to, and appearing in the novels Dead Man's Ransom and The Summer of the Danes. He acts shrewdly to keep Wales's borders secure, and sometimes to expand them, during the civil war between King Stephen and Maud, and sometimes acts as an ally to Cadfael and his friend, Sheriff Hugh Beringar. Cadwaladr also appears in both these novels as a source of grief for his brother.

        --------------------------------------------------------
        Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd, Prince of Gwynedd from 1137 until his death in 1170, took advantage of the troubled reign of King Stephen of England and seized some neigbouring territories. In 1157, Henry II led an army into Wales and Owain acknowledged Henry II as overlord. Owain kept all the territory he had gained with the exception of Tegeingl in the extreme north east.
        Owain died on November 28, 1170 and was interred at Bangor Cathedral.

        Owain married Gwladys, a daughter of Llywarch ap Trahaearn ap Cardogog whose father Trahaearn ap Cardogog had been killed in 1081 by Owain's father Gruffydd ap Cynan. Apparently, our ancestors didn't hold long grudges over killings and murders, perhaps because these events were so common.

        * _FA1: Acceded: 1137. Interred: Bangor. 9 10
        * _FA2: Target of Henry II's campaign(s) in Wales.
        * _FA3: Threatened Madoc ap Maredudd Prince of Powys.
        * _FA4: Excommunicated by Thomas a' Becket when he didn't abjure his 2nd wife Cristin. 11
        * _FA5: AKA Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd, Prince of Gwynedd. 12 9 3
        * _FA6: Expanded borders & took back districts lost to the English & other Welsh Princes 13
        * _FA7: Able to do so because of King Stephen's pre-occupation with English civil war. 13
        * _FA8: Prince of North Wales. 14
        * Note:
        REF: "Yale Genealogy and History of Wales", 1908, Rodney Horace Yale p. 40: During King Stephen's reign of 17 years in England, he left Wales much to
        itself and Owain materially added to the resources of his country & re-occupied several districts, which the Welsh had lost in former years. In the meantime however, he and Cadwaladr quarreld and the latter fled to England. Also during these years (C25) Rhys ap Gruffydd, a son of Gruffydd ap Rhun, who was son of Rhys ap Tewdwr, had won several comparatively important engagements and successes in the south.

        Sources:

        1. Title: University of Hull Royal Database (England)
        Author: Brian Tompsett, Dept of Computer Science
        Publication: copyright 1994, 1995, 1996
        Note: usually reliable but sometimes includes hypothetical lines, mythological figures, etc
        Repository:
        Note: WWW, University of Hull, Hull, UK HU6 7RX bct@tardis.ed.ac.uk
        Call Number:
        Media: Electronic
        Text: Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd Prince of Gwynedd
        2. Title: Royal Genealogies DB
        Author: Denis R. Reid
        Publication: 149 Kimrose Lane, Broadview Heights, OH 44147-1258
        Note: 216/237-5364
        Note: OK
        Repository:
        Note: http://ftp.cac.psu.edu/~saw/royal/royalgen.html ah189@cleveland.freenet.edu
        Call Number:
        Media: Electronic
        Text: Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd
        3. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760
        Author: Frederick Lewis Weis
        Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992
        Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6
        Note: good to very good
        Repository:
        Note: J.H. Garner
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        Page: line 239 pp 202-203
        4. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760
        Author: Frederick Lewis Weis
        Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992
        Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6
        Note: good to very good
        Repository:
        Note: J.H. Garner
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        Page: line 239 pp 202-203
        Text: no place
        5. Title: Gwydir Family & Memoirs
        Author: J.Gwynfor Jones
        Publication: Gomer Press, 1990
        Repository:
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        Text: Says died 1170.
        6. Title: University of Hull Royal Database (England)
        Author: Brian Tompsett, Dept of Computer Science
        Publication: copyright 1994, 1995, 1996
        Note: usually reliable but sometimes includes hypothetical lines, mythological figures, etc
        Repository:
        Note: WWW, University of Hull, Hull, UK HU6 7RX bct@tardis.ed.ac.uk
        Call Number:
        Media: Electronic
        Text: Dec 1169, no place
        7. Title: Royal Genealogies DB
        Author: Denis R. Reid
        Publication: 149 Kimrose Lane, Broadview Heights, OH 44147-1258
        Note: 216/237-5364
        Note: OK
        Repository:
        Note: http://ftp.cac.psu.edu/~saw/royal/royalgen.html ah189@cleveland.freenet.edu
        Call Number:
        Media: Electronic
        Text: 1170 given as end of reign
        8. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760
        Author: Frederick Lewis Weis
        Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992
        Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6
        Note: good to very good
        Repository:
        Note: J.H. Garner
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        Page: line 239 pp 202-203
        Text: d 1170, no place
        9. Title: University of Hull Royal Database (England)
        Author: Brian Tompsett, Dept of Computer Science
        Publication: copyright 1994, 1995, 1996
        Note: usually reliable but sometimes includes hypothetical lines, mythological figures, etc
        Repository:
        Note: WWW, University of Hull, Hull, UK HU6 7RX bct@tardis.ed.ac.uk
        Call Number:
        Media: Electronic
        10. Title: Royal Genealogies DB
        Author: Denis R. Reid
        Publication: 149 Kimrose Lane, Broadview Heights, OH 44147-1258
        Note: 216/237-5364
        Note: OK
        Repository:
        Note: http://ftp.cac.psu.edu/~saw/royal/royalgen.html ah189@cleveland.freenet.edu
        Call Number:
        Media: Electronic
        Text: Reigned 1137-1170
        11. Sharon Kay Penman "Here be Dragons", p. 248
        12. Title: Gwydir Family & Memoirs
        Author: J.Gwynfor Jones
        Publication: Gomer Press, 1990
        Repository:
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        13. Title: Yale Genealogy & History of Wales
        Author: Rodney Horace Yale
        Publication: 1908
        Repository:
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        14. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760
        Author: Frederick Lewis Weis
        Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992
        Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6
        Note: good to very good
        Repository:
        Note: J.H. Garner
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        Page: line 176 p 151
        15. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760
        Author: Frederick Lewis Weis
        Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992
        Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6
        Note: good to very good
        Repository:
        Note: J.H. Garner
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        Page: line 239 pp 202-203
        Text: his 1st m, no date
        16. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760
        Author: Frederick Lewis Weis
        Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992
        Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6
        Note: good to very good
        Repository:
        Note: J.H. Garner
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        Page: line 239 pp 202-203
        Text: his 2nd m, they were cousins[gwladys verch llywarche.ged]

        Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd, Prince of Gwynedd from 1137 until his death in 1170, took advantage of the troubled reign of King Stephen of England and seized some neigbouring territories. In 1157, Henry II led an army into Wales and Owain acknowledged Henry II as overlord. Owain kept all the territory he had gained with the exception of Tegeingl in the extreme north east.
        Owain died on November 28, 1170 and was interred at Bangor Cathedral.

        Owain married Gwladys, a daughter of Llywarch ap Trahaearn ap Cardogog whose father Trahaearn ap Cardogog had been killed in 1081 by Owain's father Gruffydd ap Cynan. Apparently, our ancestors didn't hold long grudges over killings and murders, perhaps because these events were so common.

        * _FA1: Acceded: 1137. Interred: Bangor. 9 10
        * _FA2: Target of Henry II's campaign(s) in Wales.
        * _FA3: Threatened Madoc ap Maredudd Prince of Powys.
        * _FA4: Excommunicated by Thomas a' Becket when he didn't abjure his 2nd wife Cristin. 11
        * _FA5: AKA Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd, Prince of Gwynedd. 12 9 3
        * _FA6: Expanded borders & took back districts lost to the English & other Welsh Princes 13
        * _FA7: Able to do so because of King Stephen's pre-occupation with English civil war. 13
        * _FA8: Prince of North Wales. 14
        * Note:
        REF: "Yale Genealogy and History of Wales", 1908, Rodney Horace Yale p. 40: During King Stephen's reign of 17 years in England, he left Wales much to
        itself and Owain materially added to the resources of his country & re-occupied several districts, which the Welsh had lost in former years. In the meantime however, he and Cadwaladr quarreld and the latter fled to England. Also during these years (C25) Rhys ap Gruffydd, a son of Gruffydd ap Rhun, who was son of Rhys ap Tewdwr, had won several comparatively important engagements and successes in the south.

         

        Sources:

        1. Title: University of Hull Royal Database (England)
        Author: Brian Tompsett, Dept of Computer Science
        Publication: copyright 1994, 1995, 1996
        Note: usually reliable but sometimes includes hypothetical lines, mythological figures, etc
        Repository:
        Note: WWW, University of Hull, Hull, UK HU6 7RX bct@tardis.ed.ac.uk
        Call Number:
        Media: Electronic
        Text: Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd Prince of Gwynedd
        2. Title: Royal Genealogies DB
        Author: Denis R. Reid
        Publication: 149 Kimrose Lane, Broadview Heights, OH 44147-1258
        Note: 216/237-5364
        Note: OK
        Repository:
        Note: http://ftp.cac.psu.edu/~saw/royal/royalgen.html ah189@cleveland.freenet.edu
        Call Number:
        Media: Electronic
        Text: Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd
        3. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760
        Author: Frederick Lewis Weis
        Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992
        Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6
        Note: good to very good
        Repository:
        Note: J.H. Garner
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        Page: line 239 pp 202-203
        4. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760
        Author: Frederick Lewis Weis
        Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992
        Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6
        Note: good to very good
        Repository:
        Note: J.H. Garner
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        Page: line 239 pp 202-203
        Text: no place
        5. Title: Gwydir Family & Memoirs
        Author: J.Gwynfor Jones
        Publication: Gomer Press, 1990
        Repository:
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        Text: Says died 1170.
        6. Title: University of Hull Royal Database (England)
        Author: Brian Tompsett, Dept of Computer Science
        Publication: copyright 1994, 1995, 1996
        Note: usually reliable but sometimes includes hypothetical lines, mythological figures, etc
        Repository:
        Note: WWW, University of Hull, Hull, UK HU6 7RX bct@tardis.ed.ac.uk
        Call Number:
        Media: Electronic
        Text: Dec 1169, no place
        7. Title: Royal Genealogies DB
        Author: Denis R. Reid
        Publication: 149 Kimrose Lane, Broadview Heights, OH 44147-1258
        Note: 216/237-5364
        Note: OK
        Repository:
        Note: http://ftp.cac.psu.edu/~saw/royal/royalgen.html ah189@cleveland.freenet.edu
        Call Number:
        Media: Electronic
        Text: 1170 given as end of reign
        8. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760
        Author: Frederick Lewis Weis
        Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992
        Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6
        Note: good to very good
        Repository:
        Note: J.H. Garner
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        Page: line 239 pp 202-203
        Text: d 1170, no place
        9. Title: University of Hull Royal Database (England)
        Author: Brian Tompsett, Dept of Computer Science
        Publication: copyright 1994, 1995, 1996
        Note: usually reliable but sometimes includes hypothetical lines, mythological figures, etc
        Repository:
        Note: WWW, University of Hull, Hull, UK HU6 7RX bct@tardis.ed.ac.uk
        Call Number:
        Media: Electronic
        10. Title: Royal Genealogies DB
        Author: Denis R. Reid
        Publication: 149 Kimrose Lane, Broadview Heights, OH 44147-1258
        Note: 216/237-5364
        Note: OK
        Repository:
        Note: http://ftp.cac.psu.edu/~saw/royal/royalgen.html ah189@cleveland.freenet.edu
        Call Number:
        Media: Electronic
        Text: Reigned 1137-1170
        11. Sharon Kay Penman "Here be Dragons", p. 248
        12. Title: Gwydir Family & Memoirs
        Author: J.Gwynfor Jones
        Publication: Gomer Press, 1990
        Repository:
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        13. Title: Yale Genealogy & History of Wales
        Author: Rodney Horace Yale
        Publication: 1908
        Repository:
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        14. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760
        Author: Frederick Lewis Weis
        Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992
        Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6
        Note: good to very good
        Repository:
        Note: J.H. Garner
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        Page: line 176 p 151
        15. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760
        Author: Frederick Lewis Weis
        Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992
        Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6
        Note: good to very good
        Repository:
        Note: J.H. Garner
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        Page: line 239 pp 202-203
        Text: his 1st m, no date
        16. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760
        Author: Frederick Lewis Weis
        Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992
        Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6
        Note: good to very good
        Repository:
        Note: J.H. Garner
        Call Number:
        Media: Book
        Page: line 239 pp 202-203
        Text: his 2nd m, they were cousins

         

        Father: Gruffydd ap Cynan , Prince of Gwynedd b: 1055 in Dublin, Ireland
        Mother: Angharad Verch Owain b: ABT 1065 in Tegaingl, Flint, Wales

        Marriage 1 Gwladys Verch Llywarche b: ABT 1110 in Pembroke, Pembrokeshire, Wales
        Children
        Iorwerth Drwyndwn ap Owain , Prince of Gwynedd b: ABT 1130 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales
        Owain ap Owain b: ABT 1132 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales
        Dafydd ap Owain b: ABT 1134 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales
        Maelgwyn Oychon ap Owain , Lord of Ynys Môn b: ABT 1136 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales
        Rhodri ap Owain b: ABT 1138 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales
        Cynan ap Owain b: ABT 1140 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales
        Angarad verch Owain b: ABT 1143 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales

        Marriage 2 Christin Verch Goronwy b: ABT 1100 in Tegaingl, Flintshire, Wales
        Children
        Margaret Verch Owain b: ABT 1132 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales
        Ievan Ap Owain b: ABT 1134 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales
        Dafydd Ap Owain , Prince of North Wales b: 1136 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales
        Gwenllian Verch Owain b: ABT 1138 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales
        Angharad verch Owain Gwynedd b: ABT 1145 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales

        Marriage 3 Spouse Unknown
        Children
        Cynwrig ap Owain Gwynedd b: ABT 1128 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales

        Marriage 4 Pyfog b: ABT 1100 in Ireland
        Children
        Rhun ap Owain Gwynedd b: ABT 1118 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales
        Hywel ap Owain Gwynedd b: ABT 1120 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales
        Madoc Ap Owain , Prince of Gwynedd b: ABT 1122 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales
        Gwenllian Verch Owain b: ABT 1124 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales
        Rhirid Ap Owain b: ABT 1126 in Caernarvonshire, Gwynedd, North Wales

        Sources:
        Title: gruffydd ap madoc.ged
        Repository:
        Media: Other
        Text: Date of Import: 23 Mar 2005
        Title: gwladys verch llywarche.ged
        Repository:
        Media: Other
        Text: Date of Import: 26 Mar 2005

         

      • Citation:

        michaelneuman@earthlink.net

  4. http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tjglad&id=I67934