Cylchgronau Cymru

Chwiliwch trwy dros 450 o deitlau a 1.2 miliwn o dudalennau

F. Suppe contrasts Welsh and English attitudes to the practice of decapitation in Wales and the Marches in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, in Bull. Board of Celtic Studies, XXXVI, 147-60. References to Llywelyn ap Gruffudd in literary sources of the late thirteenth and fourteenth centuries are collated by D. Johnston, in Bull of Celtic Studies, XXXVI, 97-101 (in Welsh); and L. Butler presents a report on the excavations at Llywelyn's castle of Dolforwyn between 1981 and 1986, in Archaeologia Cambrensis, CXXXVIII, 78-98. M. Siddons adds to his previous lists of Welsh seals in Paris, in Bull. Board of Celtic Studies, XXXVI, 185-6, while D. H. Williams concludes his catalogue of ecclesiastical seals to 1600, in Archaeologia Cambrensis, CXXXVIII, 67-77. Evidence for medieval Welsh church music in the works of the cywyddwyr is analysed by B. Miles and D. R. A. Evans, in Welsh Music, VIII/9, 28-42 (in Welsh). T. Roberts traces the history of the Meyrick family of Bodorgan from the middle ages, in Anglesey Antiquarian Soc. and Field Club Trans., 1989, pp. 15-23. T. James analyses the development of the town of Carmarthen in the later thirteenth century, and gives a gazetteer of the burgesses, in Carmarthenshire Antiquary, XXV, 9-26. Excavations within the medieval town of Montgomery in 1984 and 1987 are the subject of an article by J. Britnell and N. Jones, in Montgomeryshire Collections, LXXVII, 41-72. A medieval house, Penallt, Kidwelly, is described by P. R. Davis, in Carmarthenshire Antiquary, XXV, 27-33. D. T. Loyd traces the history of Hengaer, Llawrybetws, from the late thirteenth to the late sixteenth century, in Journal Merioneth Hist. and Rec. Soc., X, 4, 299-305 (in Welsh). The fourteenth-century service book known as the Penpont Antiphonal is analysed by O. T. Edwards, ante, XIV, 553-73. M. Siddons adduces evidence for Welshmen in the service of France during the Hundred Years' War, giving a list of relevant documents in French and English archives, and muster lists which name Welshmen, in Bull. Board of Celtic Studies, XXXVI, 161-84.