To Rheinallt ap Gruffudd ap Bleddyn of the Tower - Tudor Penllyn
Edited by Helen Fulton
The son of Gruffydd ap Bleddyn and his wife Gwerfyl, Rheinallt ap Gruffydd was a Lancastrian supporter and part of the rebel garrison at Harlech which backed Jasper Tudor and the exiled Henry VI in their campaigns against Edward IV. Harlech, held since 1460, finally surrendered to William Herbert in 1468, by which time Rheinallt was dead. Marginal notes in a number of manuscripts (BL Harley 1975, p. 103; NLW Peniarth 75, p. 5; BL Add. 14866, p. 329) record Rheinallt’s death in 1465 when he was ‘not yet 27 years old’ (Roberts 1958, 112).
A year or so before he died, Rheinallt attacked the men of Chester, a Yorkist stronghold, at a New Year’s fair at Mold (Yr Wyddgrug), his home town. The attack followed a proclamation by Edward IV in 1464 requiring the mayor and sheriff of Chester to announce that the defenders of Harlech would be put to death unless they submitted by 1st January 1465 (Rot. Parl., 512). Rheinallt himself was found guilty of treason and told that his lands would be forfeit to the crown unless he took an oath of loyalty before Ascension Thursday that year (1464). The men of Chester took this to be an invitation to start plundering Rheinallt’s lands around Mold, and Rheinallt retaliated with a brutal attack on them which took place on dydd Calan, New Year’s Day, 1465, Edward’s deadline for the surrender of Harlech. In one of a number of violent assaults on the day, Rheinallt seized Robert Bryne (or Byrne), a former mayor of Chester (who held office in 1462), and executed him by hanging (Ormerod 1882, I. 233). Further retaliation by the men of Chester in later weeks resulted in the burning down of Rheinallt’s fortified house, Y Tŵr, ‘the Tower’, with a number of Englishmen inside it, and an attack on Chester itself by Rheinallt’s men, during which part of the city was set on fire (Roberts 1919, 120-121).
The fact that the poem survives in at least 30 copies, mainly from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, suggests that it held a particular resonance for the antiquarian gentry scholars of early modern Wales. A cywydd commemorating the same attack, in praise of Rheinallt, was composed by Hywel Cilan (Jones 1963).
Author: Tudur Penllyn
Metre: Awdl with some englynion
Manuscripts:
- Bodley e. 1, 23b
- BL Add. 14866, 90b
- BL Add. 14875, 110a
- BL Add. 14969, 365
- BL Add. 14971, 250a
- Cardiff 2.619, 305
- NLW Cwrtmawr 12, 33
- NLW Gwyneddon 3, 45a
- NLW Llanstephan 122, 169
- NLW Mostyn 147, 369
- NLW Peniarth 99, 125
- (total of 30 manuscripts)
Printed Text: Roberts, 1958, 19
Footnotes
- 1.
- Einion: Rheinallt’s great-grandfather on his father’s side. For his genealogy, see Roberts (1958), p. 111. Back to context...
- 2.
- Hywel: Rheinallt’s maternal grandfather. References to the genealogy and ancestors of patrons was an important part of the Welsh tradition of praise poetry. Back to context...
- 3.
- Oswallt, ‘Oswald’: king of Northumbria from 634 to 642, who united Bernicia and Deira into the kingdom of Northumbria and was responsible for the spread of Christianity there. He defeated the British ruler, Cadwallon ap Cadfan, and a pagan army at Heavenfield, near Hexham in Northumbria, where, according to Bede, Oswald raised a cross on the field which subsequently became associated with miracles of healing. Back to context...
- 4.
- Emrys, ‘Ambrosius’: this is the character known as Aurelius Ambrosius in Geoffrey of Monmouth’s Historia Regum Britanniae, known in Welsh as Emrys Wledig, ‘Ambrosius the Protector’ (Bromwich, 1978, 345-6). He was, in Welsh tradition, the son of Custennin Fendigaid (Constantine the Blessed), a ruler of the British kingdom of Dumnonia and whom Geoffrey of Monmouth conflates with Constantine the Great, the first Christian emperor. Emrys was celebrated in Welsh poetry for his role in killing the tyrant and traitor Vortigern (Welsh Gwrtheyrn) who allied himself with the Saxons against the British people. Back to context...
- 5.
- Cad Gamlan, ‘the battle of Camlan’: this was the battle in which Arthur and Mordred were both killed. It is mentioned in the ninth-century Annales Cambriae and in Geoffrey of Monmouth’s Historia Regum Britanniae (c. 1136). In Welsh literature, the battle is often invoked as a symbol of particularly violent and chaotic warfare. Back to context...
- 6.
- Ffwg, ‘Fouke’: The dynasty of Fouke le Fitz Waryn, lords of Whittington in Shropshire, was celebrated in a late-thirteenth-century Anglo-Norman verse romance, surviving only in a prose version of about 1325-40. There are quite a number of references in Welsh poetry of the fourteenth and fifteenth century to Ffwg, or Syr Ffwg, celebrating his outlaw exploits and martial heroics. Back to context...
- 7.
- egin Alis, literally ‘offspring of Alice’: that is, the English. ‘Alice’ is Alice Rhonwen, the daughter of Hengist whose marriage to Vortigern was regarded by the British as the beginning of the hated Saxon race in Britain. Back to context...
- 8.
- Efrawg, ‘York’: in Welsh legend, Efrawg was the father of Peredur, the Welsh equivalent of Perceval the Grail knight. Efrawg (modern Welsh Efrog) is actually a place-name rather than a personal name, deriving from the Latin name for York, Eburacum. The name is used here to align Rheinallt with an early British warrior hero. Back to context...
- 9.
- ŵyr Rydderch, ‘descendant of Rhydderch’. Rheinallt was the grandson (ŵyr) of Tibot daughter of Einion, and her maternal grandfather was Rhydderch ab Ieuan Llwyd of Ceredigion, a leading patron of Welsh literature and culture in the fourteenth century. Back to context...
- 10.
- the mother of St David (Dewi). Back to context...
- 11.
- gwirgrog, ‘true cross’: a silver-gilt cross in the church of St John’s in Chester was supposed to contain relics of the true cross. References in Welsh poetry suggest that it was renowned for its healing powers. See Lewis and Thacker, 2003, pp. 85-6 Back to context...
- 12.
- y ddelw fwy, ‘the living image’. There was a ‘living image’ of Mary in the church at Mold (Yr Wyddgrug), that is, a wooden statue which probably had some kind of jointed parts which allowed movement of head or hands (Cartwright, 2008, 61-2). Here Rheinallt, who comes from Mold, is likened to a ‘living image’ of Christ, as if he were the counterpart to the statue of Mary. Back to context...
- 13.
- Alac: probably a man’s name – Alec? The poet is deliberately using a list of very English names to indicate the kind of men – ordinary working men, not soldiers - cut down by Rheinallt and his forces. Back to context...
- 14.
- bon: possibly an English borrowing? See OED bane, with variants ban, bon, meaning (1) murder, death, destruction; (2) that which causes ruin, the curse; (3) ruin. So perhaps means angau, melltith, dinistr here. See variant readings. Mae’r brifodl – on yn ofynnol yn ôl y mesur. Back to context...
- 15.
- Iarll y Ffynnon, ‘lord of the Fountain’: a reference to the medieval Welsh tale of Owain neu Iarlles y Ffynnawn, ‘Owain or the Lady of the Fountain’, based on the French verse romance by Chrétien de Troyes, Yvain. The hero, Owain ab Urien, defeats the lord of the Fountain and then takes on the role himself, including marriage to the lady of the Fountain. The reference in the poem to the English ‘yeomen’ and the Welsh ‘Lord of the Fountain’ suggests a class element which is typical of anti-English commentary in Welsh literature. Back to context...