'Iolo Morganwg' (or ''Morgannwg'' in modern spelling;
pronounced ) was the
bardic name of 'Edward Williams' (Llancarfan,
Glamorgan,
Wales 1747-
1826), an influential
antiquarian, poet, collector and literary
forger . The name is
Welsh for "Ned of Glamorgan".
Edward Williams spent his working life as a
stonemason. It is as Iolo Morganwg that he is remembered, chiefly for his role in (re)creating modern bardic
ritual and
philosophy. His bardic teacher was
Siôn Bradford of
Tir Iarll. Iolo first came to public notice by revealing some previously undiscovered poetry by
Dafydd ap Gwilym, generally considered to be the greatest Welsh poet, in
1789. These poems were in fact forgeries, but survived critical attention for over hundred years. His success lead Iolo to move to London. Become a significant figure in the Welsh community there he held the first
Gorsedd, ''Gorsedd Beirdd Ynys Prydain'', at a ceremony in
1792 at
Primrose Hill,
London. He went on to author fairly substantial works (most of which are now considered forgeries) claiming that the ancient
druidic tradition had survived intact in Wales, despite the
Roman conquest,
Christianity, the persecution of the bards under
King Edward I, and other adversities.
Iolo's philosophy represented a fusion of
Christian and
Arthurian influences, a proto-
romanticism comparable to that of
William Blake and the Scottish poet and forger
James MacPherson, the revived
antiquarian enthusiasm for all things "
Celtic", and such elements of
bardic heritage as had genuinely survived among Welsh-language poets. Part of his aim was to assert the Welshness of the
South, particularly his home region of Glamorgan, against the prevalent idea that
North Wales represented the purest survival of Welsh traditions.
Like many Romantic poets he was addicted to
laudanum for most of his life, which may have affected his mental condition.
Iolo was the author of the "
Druid's Prayer" or "Gorsedd prayer" (''Gweddi'r Derwydd'' or ''Gweddi'r Orsedd'' in Welsh), which is still a staple of the
ritual of both gorseddau and
Neo-Druidism. His
metaphysics outlined a theory of concentric 'rings of existence', proceeding outward from
Annwn (the Otherworld) through
Abred and
Ceugant to
Gwynfyd (purity or
Heaven).
Among his writings was ''
Cyfrinach Beirdd Ynys Prydain'', or "The Mystery of the Bards of the Isle of Britain" (1829), a treatise on Welsh
metrics. He also forged an extra set of
Welsh Triads.
A Welsh language school in
Cowbridge,
Ysgol Iolo Morgannwg, is named after him.
Further reading
★ Geraint Jenkins (ed.), ''A Rattleskull Genius. The Many Faces of Iolo Morganwg'', Cardiff: University of Wales Press (2005)
★ Prys Morgan, ''Iolo Morganwg'', ''Writers of Wales'' series, Cardiff: University of Wales Press (1975)
★ G J Williams, ''Iolo Morganwg. Y Gyfrol Gyntaf'', Cardiff: University of Wales Press (1956)
★ G J Williams, ''Iolo Morganwg a Chywyddau'r Ychwanegiad'', Cardiff: University of Wales Press (1926)
External links
★
The Barddas of Iolo Morganwg, vol. 1 (English text only) at The Internet Sacred Text Archive
★
The Barddas of Iolo Morganwg, vol. 2 (English text only) at The Internet Sacred Text Archive