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HEN OGLEDD

A map showing the northern part of ''Yr Hen Ogledd'' or 'The Old North' before the incursions of Angles and Gaels into Britain

'Yr Hen Ogledd' is a Welsh term meaning 'The Old North' and referring to the sub-Roman Brythonic kingdoms of what is now northern England and southern Scotland.
These kingdoms flourished during the 5th, 6th and 7th centuries in the area south of the Pictish lands. The people of these nations, and most often their kings, are referred to as the ''Gwŷr y Gogledd'' or 'Men of the North'. A series of Old Welsh pedigrees under this title appears to show the descent of many of these monarchs. Almost all of them begin with a common ancestor, Coel Hen, and John Morris has suggested that this man was the last Roman Dux Britanniarum with military control over all of the north of Romanised Britain at the time of the Roman withdrawal. After his death, his large and powerful 'realm' would thus have been divided, as was the custom, between his sons or, more probably, subordinate commanders, to be ruled by them and their successors. The names of many of these realms have been lost to history, but the ones that are known to us are listed:

Bryneich

Efrog (York) (exact name uncertain)

Elmet

Gododdin and its probable sub-kingdom Manau Gododdin

Rheged

Strathclyde
These states were all extinguished or brought under other kingdoms following successive attacks or diplomatic takeovers from the 6th Century onwards by the Angles of Bernicia and Deira (which merged to become Northumbria), and by the Kingdom of Alba which also absorbed the Kingdoms of the Picts.
The earliest extant Welsh poetry, known as ''Hengerdd'' and represented by the works of Aneirin and Taliesin, was composed in ''Yr Hen Ogledd''.

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See also

External links



Wales and the Welsh Language

History of Nant Gwrtheyrn

BBC News - Ancient 'black book' goes online

BBC News - Historical who's who goes online

welsh language

See also



Britannia Inferior

Cumbric language

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