- Caradog ap Gruffydd
Caradog ap Gruffydd (died 1081) was a Prince of Gwent in south-east
Wales who made repeated attempts to gain power over all of southernWales by seizing the Kingdom ofDeheubarth .Lineage
Caradog was the grandson of
Rhydderch ab Iestyn who had seized the throne ofDeheubarth before his death in 1033. Caradog's father,Gruffydd ap Rhydderch also held sway inDeheubarth for a while before being eventually driven out and killed byGruffydd ap Llywelyn who eventually ruled most of Wales.Early career
The family's stronghold was the
Kingdom of Gwent , and Caradog appears to have been able to addMorgannwg during his early career. He first appears in the historical record in 1065.Harold Godwinson , after defeating Gruffydd ap Llywelyn in 1063 had begun to build a hunting lodge in Portskewet. Caradog attacked and destroyed it, going on to ravage the district with his forces.Ambition & Aggression
Caradog now set out to emulate his father and grandfather by adding Deheubarth to his realm. In 1072 he defeated and killed the ruler of Deheubarth,
Maredudd ab Owain , in a battle by theRiver Rhymney .In 1078 he won another victory over
Rhys ab Owain who had succeeded Maredudd as prince of Deheubarth, killing him too.By 1081 he had forced the new prince of Deheubarth,
Rhys ap Tewdwr to flee to theSt David's Cathedral .Welsh Alliance Against Him
However the situation was changed by the arrival from
Ireland ofGruffydd ap Cynan , who was aiming to seize the throne of Gwynedd fromTrahaearn ap Caradog .Rhys ap Tewdwr andGruffydd ap Cynan met at St David's Cathedral and made an alliance with the blessing of theBishop of St Davids .Killed at the Battle of Mynydd Carn
Caradog countered this by himself making an alliance with the King of Gwynedd,
Trahaearn ap Caradog . The two factions met in battle at Mynydd Carn, about a day's march north ofSt David's . Caradog and his ally Trahaearn were both killed.Succession
Caradog left a son,
Owain ap Caradog , who contented himself with the rule ofGwynllwg and was the founder of the line of theLords of Caerleon in south east Wales.References
John Edward Lloyd (1911) "A history of Wales from the earliest times to the Edwardian conquest" (Longmans, Green & Co.)
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