See also

Family of Anawawd + AP RHODRI

Partner: Anawawd + AP RHODRI (857-916)
Partner: (unknown)
Children: Idwal + ap ANARAWD (883-942)
Elise + ap ANARAWD (885-942)

Partner: Anawawd + AP RHODRI

Name: Anawawd + AP RHODRI
Sex: Male
Father: Rhodri + ap MERFYN (820-878)
Mother: Angharad + verch MEURIG (825- )
Birth 0857 Caer Seiont, Carnaervonshire, Wales
Occupation King of Gwynedd
Title frm 0878 to 0916 (age 20-59) King of Gwynned
Death 0916 (age 58-59)

Child 1: Idwal + ap ANARAWD

Name: Idwal + ap ANARAWD
Sex: Male
Nickname: The Bald
Spouse: Mereddon + verch CADWR (887- )
Birth 0883 Aberffro, Malltraeth, Anglesey, Wales
Title frm 0916 to 0942 (age 32-59) Prince of Gwynedd
Occupation Prince of Gwynedd
Death 0942 (age 58-59)

Child 2: Elise + ap ANARAWD

Name: Elise + ap ANARAWD
Sex: Male
Birth 0885 Aberffro, Malltraeth, Anglesey, Wales
Death 0942 (age 56-57) Wales

Note on Husband: Anawawd + AP RHODRI

Anarawd ap Rhodri (died 916) was a King of Gwynedd, also referred to as "King of the Britons" by the Annales Cambriae.

 

Anarawd's father Rhodri the Great had eventually become ruler of most of Wales, but on his death in 878 his kingdom was shared out between his sons, with Anarawd inheriting the throne of Gwynedd. Anarawd and his brothers Cadell and Merfyn are recorded as cooperating closely against the rulers of the remaining lesser kingdoms of Wales. Earl Aethelred of Mercia invaded Gwynedd in 881, but Anarawd was able to defeat him with much slaughter in a battle at the mouth of the River Conwy, hailed in the annals as "God's vengeance for Rhodri", Rhodri having been killed in battle against the Mercians.

 

Anarawd then made an alliance with the Danish king of York in an attempt to guard himself against further Mercian attacks. When this alliance proved unsatisfactory, he came to an agreement with Alfred the Great of Wessex, visiting Alfred at his court. In exchange for Alfred's protection Anarawd recognised the supremacy of Alfred. This was the first time a ruler of Gwynedd had accepted the supremacy of an English king, and formed the basis for the homage which was demanded by the English crown from then on.

 

In 894 Anarawd was able to repel a raid by a Danish host on North Wales, and the following year raided Ceredigion and Ystrad Tywi in southern Wales. He is reported as having some English troops under his command for these raids. In 902 an attack on Ynys Môn (Anglesey) by some of the Danes of Dublin under Ingimund was repulsed. Anarawd died in 916 and was succeeded by his son Idwal Foel (Idwal the Bald).

 

Anarawd would establish the princely House of Aberffraw, taking the name from his principal seat of government on Ynys Môn. His descendants would rule Gwynedd until the Edwardian conquest of the late 13th century.1

Sources

1John Edward Llyod, "A History of Wales: from the Earliest Times to the Edwardian Conquest" (Longmans, Green and Co, 1911).