Dafydd ab Edmwnd

Dafydd ab Edmwnd

Dafydd ap Edmwnd (fl. c. 1450–97) was one of the most prominent Welsh language poets of the Later Middle Ages.

Contents

Life

Dafydd was born into a family of Norman ancestry in Hanmer, in Flintshire (now Wrexham County Borough), north-east Wales. As a freeman and landowner within Welsh society he was not, like most of his contemporaries, dependent upon patronage.

Dafydd was the bardic disciple of Maredudd ap Rhys and was in turn, the bardic tutor of Tudur Aled and Gutun Owain.

Poetry

The main themes of Dafydd’s poetry were love and nature in the tradition of Dafydd ap Gwilym. His best-known poems include the following cywyddau:

Unlike many of his contemporaries, such as Guto'r Glyn or Lewys Glyn Cothi, Dafydd eschewed the Wars of the Roses and politics. However, Dafydd was moved to compose an elegy for his friend, the harpist Siôn Eos, who was hanged for killing a man in a tavern brawl. In this, arguably his finest poem, Dafydd expresses his own anti-English sentiment, and regrets that Siôn Eos could not have been tried under the more humane Laws of Hywel Dda, resulting in compensation being paid to the victim’s family under the old Welsh law rather than the capital punishment of “cyfraith Lundain” (="London’s law").

1450 Eisteddfod and its Legacy

In 1450 Dafydd won the silver chair at an eisteddfod held at Carmarthen. This was achieved with a cywydd in praise of the Trinity, which exemplified the 24 metres of Welsh bardic poetry reformed by Dafydd, previously codified by Einion Offeiriad and Dafydd Ddu o Hiraddug. He deleted two metres and replaced them with the more complicated Gorchest y Beirdd and the Cadwynfyr.

The 24 metres presented by Dafydd at the Eisteddfod became widely adopted throughout Wales. While the training of poets had always been kept within bardic circles, with the craft handed down fron tutor to pupil, Dafydd’s reforms of the metres subsequently increased the segregation between the “professional elite” and the amateur poets. However the consequence of this, and of Dafydd in particular, was that greater emphasis was placed upon the bardic craft with its adherence to the stricter metres rather than on the content and theme of the poems. The passion and intensity of Dafydd ap Gwilym and Llywelyn Goch ap Meurig Hen tended to be lost.

Bibliography

  • Gwaith Dafydd ab Edmwnd (ed. by Thomas Roberts, Bangor, 1914).
  • “Welsh Literature - Chapter 7: Poets of the Gentry”, http://www.britannia.com/wales/lit/lit7.html
  • Meic Stephens, The New Companion to the Literature of Wales (University of Wales Press, Cardiff 1998)
  • Gwyn Williams, The Burning Tree: Poems from the First Thousand Years of Welsh Verse (Faber and Faber, 1956). Includes a complete translation of the poems.

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Dafydd ab Edmwnd — ▪ Welsh poet flourished c. 1450–97       poet who authoritatively classified and defined the 24 Welsh bardic metres (announced at the Carmarthen eisteddfod, or poets assembly, about 1451). A master of bardic forms, he wrote elegant and… …   Universalium

  • List of Welsh language poets (6th century to c.1600) — See also Welsh language poetry has, until quite recently, been regulated by specific verse forms (Canu Caeth), with the encouragement of the eisteddfod movement. The following list is as inclusive as possible for the years prior to 1600. It… …   Wikipedia

  • Celtic literature — Introduction       the body of writings composed in Gaelic and the languages derived from it, Scottish Gaelic and Manx, and in Welsh and its sister languages, Breton and Cornish. For writings in English by Irish, Scottish, and Welsh authors, see… …   Universalium

  • Welsh law — For the current Welsh law, see Contemporary Welsh Law. For the law currently in force in England and Wales, see English law. Drawing of a judge from the Peniarth 28 manuscript …   Wikipedia

  • Oxford Book of Welsh Verse in English — The Oxford Book of Welsh Verse in English was a 1977 poetry anthology edited by Gwyn Jones. It covered both Welsh poetry, in English translation, and Welsh poets writing in English (often called Anglo Welsh). Poets in The Oxford Book of Welsh… …   Wikipedia

  • 15th century in Wales — This article is about the particular significance of the century 1400 1499 to Wales and its people. Princes of Wales*Henry of Monmouth (later King Henry V) (to 1413) *Owain Glyndŵr (unofficially, 1400 1415) *Edward of Westminster (1454 1471)… …   Wikipedia

  • Gutun Owain — (fl. 1456 1497) was a Welsh language poet. Gutun Owain was born near Oswestry in what is now north Shropshire and was a student of Dafydd ab Edmwnd. Gutun Owain was closely associated with the Cistercian abbey of Valle Crucis where he was the… …   Wikipedia

  • Llawdden — (or Ieuan Llawdden) (fl. 1440 1480) was Welsh language poet and a priest.Llawdden composed poems to many prominent noble families.Perhaps Llawdden’s greatest claim to fame is his inauguration in the Eisteddfod held at Caerfyrddin attended by… …   Wikipedia

  • Maredudd ap Rhys — was a Welsh language poet and priest from Powys. Maredudd composed poems on themes of love, religion and nature. He is thought to have been the bardic tutor to Dafydd ab Edmwnd. References E. Roberts, Gwaith Maredudd ap Rhys a i Gyfoedion,… …   Wikipedia

  • List of Welsh language authors — For Welsh language poets prior to 1600, see List of Welsh language poets.A*Richard Ithamar Aaron (1901 87) *William Ambrose (Emrys) (1813 73) *Gwynn ap Gwilym (1950 ) *Charles Ashton (1848 98)B*Thomas Baddy (d. 1729) *William Ambrose Bebb (1894… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”