See also

Family of Cadwallon + ap EINION and Meddyf + VERCH MAELDAF

Husband: Cadwallon + ap EINION (460-534)
Wife: Meddyf + VERCH MAELDAF (446- )
Children: Maelgwyn + ap CADWALLON ( -547)

Husband: Cadwallon + ap EINION

Name: Cadwallon + ap EINION
Sex: Male
Nickname: Long Hand
Father: Einon ap CUNEDDA (417-500)
Mother: Prawst + verch TIDLET (422- )
Birth 0460 Wales
Occupation King of Gwynedd
Title frm 0500 to 0534 (age 39-74) King of Gwynedd
Death 0534 (age 73-74)

Wife: Meddyf + VERCH MAELDAF

Name: Meddyf + VERCH MAELDAF
Sex: Female
Father: -
Mother: -
Birth 0446 Nanconwy, Arllechwedd, Caernarvonshire, Wales

Child 1: Maelgwyn + ap CADWALLON

Name: Maelgwyn + ap CADWALLON
Sex: Male
Spouse: Gwallwen + verch AFALLACH (471- )
Birth North Wales
Occupation King of Gwynedd
Title to 0547 King of Gwynedd
Death 0547

Note on Husband: Cadwallon + ap EINION

Cadwallon ap Einion (c. 460-534[citation needed]; reigned from c. 500[citation needed]), usually known as Cadwallon Lawhir ('Long Hand') and also called Cadwallon I by some historians, was a king of Gwynedd.

 

According to tradition, Cadwallon ruled during, or shortly after, the Battle of Mons Badonicus, and King Arthur's victory over the Saxons (in either the early 490s or the mid 510s). Cadwallon's name is not connected with the legendary battle, but he may have benefitted from the period of relative peace and prosperity throughout Britain that it procured. The most momentous military achievement of Cadwallon's reign was the final expulsion of Irish settlers on Anglesey, and the re-absorption of that island, which would later become the cultural and political base of the kingdom, into Gwynedd.

 

Cadwallon's epithet, Lawhir, may possibly refer to him having longer than usual arms or might also be a metaphor, referring to the extent of his authority. The late medieval poet Iolo Goch claims that he could "reach a stone from the ground to kill a raven, without bending his back, because his arm was as long as his side to the ground."[citation needed]

 

According to Gildas, Cadwallon's son, Maelgwn Gwynedd, murdered his uncle to ascend to the throne, which suggests that someone other than Maelgwn himself inherited the kingdom upon Cadwallon's death. No clear evidence exists as to who this "lost king" might be (assuming, of course, that Gildas's account is reliable), but some have suggested the name of Owain Ddantgwyn as the unfortunate heir/victim