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  1. Enw: Madog ap Llywelyn. Rhiant: Llywelyn Fychan. Rhyw: Gwryw. Galwedigaeth: gwrthryfelwr 1294. Maes gweithgaredd: Gwrthryfelwyr; Milwrol. Awdur: Thomas Jones Pierce. Dangoswyd yn bendant mai mab ydoedd i Lywelyn ap Maredudd, arglwydd-ddeiliad olaf Meirionnydd, y gŵr y cymerwyd ei dreftadaeth oddi arno am iddo wrthwynebu Llywelyn II yn 1256 ...

  2. Madog ap Llywelyn (died after 1312) was the leader of the Welsh revolt of 1294–95 against English rule in Wales. The revolt was surpassed in longevity only by the revolt of Owain Glyndŵr in the 15th century. Madog belonged to a junior branch of the House of Aberffraw and was a distant relation of Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, the last recognised native Prince of Wales. During his revolt, Madog ...

  3. 28 de jul. de 2020 · Birthplace: Montgomeryshire, Wales. Death: 1160 (25-34) Immediate Family: Son of Madog ap Maredudd, Brenin Powys and Susanna verch Gruffydd. Husband of Nest verch Llewelyn. Brother of Elisedd ap Madog; Gruffudd Maelor ap Madog, Lord of Bromfield; Owain Fychan ap Madog; Gwenllian verch Madog; Iorwerth ap Madog and 3 others. ; Hywel ap Madog ...

  4. Second son of Gruffydd ap Llywelyn by Senena, and grandson of Llywelyn ap Iorwerth.His career can be traced no further back than 1245 when he emerges as one of a group of magnates in the entourage of Dafydd II, a fact which suggests that, unlike his father and elder brother, Owain, he was favoured by his uncle, and was possibly regarded as Dafydd's destined heir.

  5. When Madog ap Llywelyn was born in 1501, in Cantref, Breconshire, Wales, United Kingdom, his father, Llywelyn Ap Ieuan ap Llewelyn Fychan, was 32 and his mother, Annes ferch Gruffudd, was 20. He had at least 6 sons with Gwenhwyfar ferch Hywel.

  6. The second highlight is Owen Jones’s account of the Penmachno Document, a remarkable surviving charter in which Madog ap Llywelyn appears as Prince of Wales and Lord of Snowdown. Madog’s apparently deliberate effort to revive the old titles of the former lords of Gwynedd, destroyed by Edward in 1283, implies he meant to establish Venedotian hegemony over an independent Wales once the ...

    • Jones, Craig Owen
  7. Llywelyn lived in England as a royal pensioner, and after his death in 1263, Madog continued in favour at the English court. During the year 1277 he was the recipient of two substantial monetary 'gifts' from the king's 'wardrobe,' his claim to Meirionydd being tacitly recognized by the Crown; in 1278 he actually sued Llywelyn ap Gruffydd before the king's justices for the recovery of the cantref .