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{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2024}}
{{Short description|Sixth-century Brythonic monarch}}
{{Infobox royalty
| name = Gwallog ap
| native_lang1 = [[Welsh language|Welsh]]
| succession = King of [[Elmet|Elfed]]?
| reign = c. mid [[6th century
| successor = [[Ceretic of Elmet|Ceredig]]?
| issue = {{ubl|[[Ceretic of Elmet|Ceredig]]?|'Onnen Greg'}}
| house = [[Coel Hen|Coeling]]?
| father =
}}
'''Gwallog ap
▲'''Gwallog ap Llenog''' ({{IPA|cy|ˈɡwaɬɔɡ ap ˈɬeːnɔɡ|lang}}, [[Old Welsh]]: ''Guallauc map Laenauc'') was possibly a sixth-century ruler of [[Elmet|Elfed]], a region in the wider area memorialised in later Welsh literature as the [[Hen Ogledd|'Old North']]. The evidence for Gwallog's existence survives entirely from two poems of spurious date and several other references in semi-legendary genealogies and literature well beyond his era. If this later material is to be believed, he was a member of the Coeling, a family which is supposed to have been prominent across several kingdoms in northern Britain in the sixth century. He is probably best remembered for his role in the [[Historia Brittonum]] as an ally of [[Urien|Urien Rheged]]. As with many figures of this period, he attracted much interest in later [[Medieval Welsh literature]].
==Life==
Our only possibly contemporary source for Gwallog's life comes from two [[Middle Welsh]] poems honouring him attributed to [[Taliesin]] by modern scholarship.<ref>This is because they survive in the [[Book of Taliesin]]. However, these two poems are not attributed to Taliesin in the manuscript itself, and the name 'Book of Taliesin' is an appellation of the seventeenth century. Nevertheless, even if it is uncertain that the medieval compilers of the manuscript attributed the poem to Taliesin, the poems are still called 'historical' Taliesin poems by modern scholars, following the categorisation in [[Ifor Williams|Williams, Ifor]] (ed.), and [[J. E. Caerwyn Williams|
==Later material concerning Gwallog==
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The genealogies from [[Harleian Library|Harley MS]] 3859 (c. 850-950 AD), primarily concerned with northern Brythonic dynasties, give Gwallog's patrilineal descent as 'Gwallog son of
The other document of historical interest found in Harley 3859 is the [[Historia Brittonum]]. This text is a composite narrative cobbled together from Bede and other, lost sources, created in Gwynedd in 829 AD.<ref>[[David Dumville|Dumville, David N.]], “‘Nennius’ and the ''Historia Brittonum''”, ''Studia Celtica'' 10–11 (1975–1976), pp. 78–95. It is still debated as to what extent the ''Historia Brittonum'' is useful as a historical source.</ref> In it, a series of events are connected to the reigns of various Northumbrian kings. Gwallog occurs in a section dated to the reign of [[Theodric of Bernicia]] (d. c. 572 x 593), where he, together with Urien, [[Rhydderch Hael|Rhydderch Hen]], and [[Morcant Bulc|Morgan]], are recorded as fighting against that Anglian king.<ref>[[John_Morris_(historian)|Morris, John]] (ed. and tr.) ''Nennius: British History and the Welsh Annals'' (London: Phillimore, 1980), §63.</ref> Gwallog is only mentioned in one sentence of this narrative, however, and it is unknown what other involvement he had in this campaign. According to the narrative, the four besieged Theodric on [[Lindisfarne]], but the alliance dissolved when Urien was slain by Morgan. This is perhaps because Lindisfarne was situated near Morgan's territory, and so Morgan felt threatened by Urien's power more than that of the weakened Theodric.<ref>Parker, Will, 'The Coeling: Narrative and Identity in North Britain and Wales AD 580–950', ''Northern History'' 59, pp. 2-27 (19-20).</ref>
===Role in
Like many of the figures associated with fifth- and sixth-century Brythonic-speaking territories in Britain, Gwallog becomes a figure in the later Welsh literature about the [[Hen Ogledd|'Old North']]. The historical value of these literary sources is doubtful, as are all to be dated even at their most conservative estimates around the same period as the ''Historia Brittonum''.<ref>Even Jenny Rowland, essentially following the arguments of Ifor Williams set down a half-century prior, dates the material concerning Gwallog in 'Canu Urien' to the late eighth century at the earliest. See Rowland, Jenny (ed.) ''Early Welsh Saga Poetry: A Study and Edition of the'' Englynion (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 1990), pp. 388-9; henceforth ''EWSP''.</ref> The chronologically earliest pieces of literature traditionally dated around the same time as the ''Historia Brittonum'' are called
One group of poems in the
erechwyd gwneuthur dynin. / yn erbyn kyfryssed elphin.}} Rowland, ''EWSP'', 'Canu Urien', §39 ('Dwy Blaid')</ref>
There are two other obscure poems from the Black Book which reference Gwallog as well. The date of these is, however, very uncertain. Despite Urien's great reputation in Welsh literature and Gwallog's apparent hostility to Urien's heirs, in one poem, Gwallog is memorialised among other heroes as an ''attwod lloegir'' 'affliction of England'.<ref>Rowland, ''EWSP'', 'Mi a wum', §5 </ref> The other poem refers to a lost story about Gwallog losing one of his eyes to a goose, though it is apparently not meant to be a humorous tale, despite how it may appear to the modern reader.<ref>[[Rachel Bromwich]] took the story to be an entertaining anecdote, see Bromwich, Rachel (ed. and tr.) Trioedd Ynys Prydein: ''The Triads of the Island of Britain'', fourth ed. (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2014), p. 372. For the counterargument, see Rowland, ''EWSP'', pp. 104-6 for discussion. The poem is found in ''EWSP'' under the title 'Gwallawg'.</ref>
===''Welsh Triads'', Arthuriana, and later genealogies===
Like many figures in this period, Gwallog features in the [[Welsh Triads]], mnemonic devices employed by medieval Welsh [[Bard|poets]] and storytellers (''cyfarwyddyd'').<ref>Bromwich, Rachel (ed. and tr.) Trioedd Ynys Prydein: ''The Triads of the Island of Britain'', fourth ed. (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2014), pp. lixix-lxx. Henceforth ''TYP''.</ref> Gwallog is recorded as a 'Pillar of Battle', though the details of why he might be called this moniker are lost.<ref>Bromwich, ''TYP'' 5.</ref> In ''Ystorya Gereint uab Erbin'', a text of unclear relation to ''[[Érec et Énide]]'', Gwallog is included as one of Arthur's 'best men'.<ref>Evans, J. G., ''The White Book Mabinogion'', 406.19-20</ref> Very late genealogies give Gwallog's sister as [[Dwywe|Dwywai ferch
== References ==
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{{Hen Ogledd}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gwallog Ap
[[Category:Monarchs of Elmet]]
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