- Rhwng Gwy a Hafren
Rhwng Gwy a Hafren (meaning "between Wye and Severn") was a region of medieval
Wales lying between thekingdom of Powys to the north and thekingdom of Brycheiniog to the south, on theWelsh Marches . It was bounded by the rivers Wye ("Gwy") and Severn ("Hafren"), hence its name.History
In
1093 much of the territory was divided up between theMarcher Lord s including Roger,Earl of Shrewsbury ,Ralph de Mortimer ,Philip de Braose and others. Norman authority suffered a serious reverse within fifty years with the emergence ofCadwallon ap Madog and his younger brotherEinion Clud as rulers ofElfael andMaelienydd .In 1165 Cadwallon and Einion Clud combined forces and marched with the rest of independent Wales to join the massed Welsh army under the leadership of
Owain Gwynedd atCorwen , which humbled the army ofHenry II of England . In 1175 these two brothers had journeyed toGloucester with many of their compatriots of south Wales, as allies of the LordRhys ap Gruffudd ofDeheubarth .Throughout the
13th Century the territory as described was gradually re-occupied by the EnglishMarcher Lord s with castle after castle being lost. Descendants of Cadwallon and Einion Clud are recorded as holdings client fortresses in the area up until the 1240s when they changed allegiance to supportLlywelyn the Great and later his grandsonLlywelyn ap Gruffudd . The territory was annexed by the latter in1267 as part of the terms of theTreaty of Montgomery .Following the defeat of the last native
Prince of Wales at the hands ofEdward I of England in1282 , most remaining native landowners in the area were dispossessed. The county ofRadnorshire was formed out of the area under the variousTudor Government of Wales Acts in the16th Century .Welsh language speakers formed the majority of the population until the end of the19th Century .uggested kingdom of Cynllibiwg
P. M. Remfry attempts to identify Rhwng Gwy a Hafren with the supposed extinct kingdom of
Cynllibiwg , but his views have not found acceptance with historians in Wales. One of the earliest references to the region as 'Rhwng Gwy a Hafren' is byGiraldus Cambrensis . Remfry argues that this shows that the name of Cynllibiwg, last used in the 1090s in theRed Book of the Exchequer andDomesday Book , had been lost after the conquest of the district byRalf de Mortimer ofWigmore Castle andWilliam de Braose ofNew Radnor . Remfry further suggests that the 'kingdom' was briefly re-established in the 1170s by which time its original name had apparently been forgotten; it is certainly never referred to as 'Cynllibiwg' in medieval Welsh sources, and Remfry's theory has yet to be accepted.References
*Remfry, P.M., "The Native Welsh Princes of Rhwng Gwy a Hafren, 1066 to 1282" [M.Phil Thesis, 1989, Aberystwyth]
*Remfry, P.M., "The Political History of Abbey Cwmhir, 1176 to 1282 and the Families of Elystan Godrydd, Mortimer and the Princes of Gwynedd" (ISBN 1-899376-47-X)
*Davies, S., "Welsh Military Institutions 633-1283" [UWP, 2003]
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