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  1. Llywelyn ap Iorwerth (also known as Llywelyn Fawr) was the son of Iorwerth Drwyndwn (d.c.1174) and Marared, the daughter of Madog ap Maredudd of Powys. He was the grandson of Owain Gwynedd and was probably born at Dolwyddelan but was taken to live in Powys by Marared on the death of his father. His first marriage may have been to Tangwystl ...

  2. Iorwerth Drwyndwn (Iorwerth an Togn e brezhoneg, rak torret e oa bet e fri) pe Iorwerth ab Owain Gwynedd, anavezet ivez e saozneg evel Edward (c. 1130–1174), a oa kentañ mab hervez lezenn Owain Gwynedd, roue

  3. Iorwerth ab Owain Gwynedd (or Iorwerth Drwyndwn), also called Edward (1145-1174), meaning "the broken-nosed", was the eldest legitimate son of Owain Gwynedd (the king of Gwynedd) and his first wife Gwladys (Gladys) ferch Llywarch. «b»Parents and Siblings«/b» Llywarch, the eldest son, had issue by Dyddgw, his wife, daughter of Idnerth ab ...

  4. In 1172 Iorwerth's eldest son Owain and Iorwerth's brother-in-law Seisyll ap Dyfnwal, Lord of Upper Gwent, were attacked by soldiers of the Earl of Gloucester on their way to Usk Castle, where they were going to negotiate with Henry II. While Seisyll was captured, Owain was murdered. To exact revenge, Iorwerth and his son Hywel plundered large ...

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › IorwerthIorwerth - Wikipedia

    Iorwerth Drwyndwn (1145–1174), son of Owain Gwynedd, king of Gwynedd; Iorwerth (bishop of St David's) (fl. 1215) Thomas Iorwerth Ellis OBE (1899–1970), Welsh classicist and author; Iorwerth Evans (1906–1985), rugby union footballer of the 1930s; Iorwerth Hirflawdd, ancestor of various medieval rulers in mid Wales

  6. When Lorwerth Drwyndwn ap Cynon of Denbigh was born in 1114, in Wales, his father, Cynon ap Llywarch of Wales, was 64 and his mother, Mrs Ferch Cadwallon of Mochnant Uwah Rh, was 36. He married Jonet ferch Ithel about 1137, in Wales. They were the parents of at least 1 son.

  7. This version has clearly conflated local traditions about Iorwerth Drwyndwn, whose tomb Pennant reports (mistakenly) as lying in Pennant Melangell churchyard, with those about the local saint; it has also almost certainly been influenced by the account in the second branch of the Mabinogi, the prose tale Branwen uerch Lyr, of Efnisien's mutilation of the horses of Matholwch, king of Ireland.76 ...