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m Tipcake moved page Gwallog ap Lleenog to Gwallog ap Llenog: Misspelled: As on the talk page, the proper modern spelling of this man's father is Llenog. |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
'''Gwallog ap Llenog''' ([[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
==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 Williams, Ifor (ed.), and Caerwyn Williams, J. E. (trans.),''The Poems of Taliesin'' (Dublin: Institute for Advanced Studies, 1968), henceforth ''PT''.</ref> Though both poems survive in a [[Book of Taliesin|fourteenth-century manuscript]], one of the poems may date to Gwallog's period based on an archaic feature of the text.<ref>
==Harleian Genealogies and the ''Historia Brittonum''==
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 Llenog son of Maeswig Gloff son of Cenau son of [[Coel Hen]]'.<ref>HG[§9] [''G'']''uallauc map Laenauc map Masguic Clop map Ceneu map Coyl Hen''. See Guy, Ben, ''Medieval Welsh Genealogy'' (Woodbridge: Boydell, 2020), chapter 2 for the dating of the genealogies, and p. 335 for Gwallog's patriline.</ref> That Coel was truly the progenitor of all these dynasties, however, is a matter of ongoing academic debate, since the only testimonies of this common descent are from texts written in Wales hundreds of years after the kingdoms they represent disappear from the historical record.<ref>Ben Guy suggests that the genealogies were grouped together and made to derive from Coel Hen by the editor of Harley MS 3859. This is because the four men who are descended from Coel (Urien, Rhydderch Hen, Gwallog, and Morgan) are all mentioned in the narrative of the Historia Brittonum (see below), which also appears in the same manuscript.
The other document of historical interest found in Harley MS 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>
Wales AD 580–950', ''Northern History'' 59, pp. 2-27 (19-20).</ref>
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One cycle of poems in this genre is called the 'Urien Rheged' cycle ([[Welsh language|Welsh]]: 'Canu Urien') by modern scholars, as the poems are concerned with the events after the slaying of Urien. What is suggested by the evidence of these poems is that Urien's kingdom was beset with enemies after his death, and Gwallog is among them. The poem states that 'Gwallog, horseman in battle, intended to make corpses in [[Urien Yrechwydd#Location_of_Yrechwydd|Erechwydd]] against the onslaught of Elffin (ab Urien)'.<ref>Pwyllei wallawc marchawc trin. /
erechwyd gwneuthur dynin. /
yn erbyn kyfryssed elphin. ''EWSP'', 'Canu Urien', §39 ('Dwy Blaid')</ref> There are two poems from the [[Black Book of Carmarthen]] which reference Gwallog as well. Despite Urien's great reputation in Welsh literature, Gwallog is memorialised among other heroes as an ''attwod lloegir'' 'affliction of England'.<ref>''EWSP'', 'Mi a wum', §5 </ref> The other 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.<ref>Rachel Bromich took the story to be an entertaining anecdote, see Bromwich, Rachel (ed. and tr.) Trioedd Ynys Prydein: ''
==''Welsh Triads'', Arthuriana, and later genaeologies==
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