See also

Family of Cynan + AP IAGO and Rhanullt + O'OLAF

Husband: Cynan + AP IAGO (1014-1063)
Wife: Rhanullt + O'OLAF (1031-1055)
Children: Gruffydd + ap CYNAN (1055-1137)

Husband: Cynan + AP IAGO

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Cynan + AP IAGO

Name: Cynan + AP IAGO
Sex: Male
Father: Iago + AP IDWAL (974-1039)
Mother: Afangreg + VERCH GWAIR (1020- )
Birth 1014 Aberffro, Malltraeth, Anglesey, Wales
Occupation Welsh Prince
Title Welsh Prince
Death 1063 (age 48-49) Dublin, Leinster, Ireland

Wife: Rhanullt + O'OLAF

Name: Rhanullt + O'OLAF
Sex: Female
Father: Amlaib + MAC SITRIUC (1000-1034)
Mother: Maelcorce + of LEINSTER (1000-1034)
Birth 1031 Dublin, Leinster, Ireland
Death 1055 (age 23-24) Dublin, Conan, Wales

Child 1: Gruffydd + ap CYNAN

Name: Gruffydd + ap CYNAN
Sex: Male
Spouse: Angharad + verch OWAIN (1065-1162)
Birth 1055 Caernarvonshire, Wales
Occupation King of Gwynedd
Title frm 1081 to 1137 (age 25-82) King of Gwynedd
Death 1137 (age 81-82) Caernarvonshire, Wales

Note on Husband: Cynan + AP IAGO

Cynan ab Iago (1014–1063) was a Welsh Prince, the son of Iago ab Idwal, King of Gwynedd and father of Gruffydd ap Cynan who also became king of Gwynedd.

 

Iago ab Idwal was king of Gwynedd from 1023 to 1039, but in the latter year he was killed by one of his own men and the throne was seized by Gruffydd ap Llywelyn. Cynan was forced to flee to Ireland and took refuge at the Danish settlement of Dublin. He married Ragnaillt daughter of Olaf of Dublin, son of King Sigtrygg Silkbeard and a member of the Hiberno-Norse dynasty. Ragnaillt, who appears in the list of the fair women of Ireland in the Book of Leinster, was also a descendant of Brian Boru.

 

Cynan may have died fairly soon after the birth of their son Gruffydd ap Cynan, for the near-contemporary biography of Gruffydd details Cynan's ancestry but does not refer to him in its account of Gruffydd's youth; describing Gruffydd's mother telling him who his father was and what patrimony he could claim. Gruffydd ap Llywelyn was killed in 1063, by his own men according to Brut y Tywysogion. The Ulster Chronicle however states that it was Cynan ap Iago who killed him.

 

As his son Gruffydd was supposedly born c. 1055, the date of death "1039" is doubtful (Gruffydd died 1137).

 

Cynan's claim to the throne of Gwynedd was passed on to his son. When Gruffydd first appeared on the scene in Wales the Welsh annals several times refer to him as "grandson of Iago" rather than the more usual "son of Cynan", indicating that his father was little known in Wales.