For other versions of this work, see The Annals of Wales.
The Annals of Wales (c. 1100)
Unknown, translated by James Ingram
Text A, "Harleian MS" 3859
Unknown57084The Annals of Wales — Text A, "Harleian MS" 3859c/1100James Ingram

The primary text of this translation is from the Harleian manuscript 3859, the earliest copy of the Annales Cambriae which has survived. The text enclosed within the "‡" symbols are entries which are not found in the Harleian MS, but which appear in a later version.

The A Text did not include any dates at all, but merely noted a string of Years.[1] The dates given here are conjectural and disputed within a range of about five years. The B Text includes year entries as far back as the birth of Jesus, includes entries very similar to these, and includes dates in entries after 1097: however, the list of years disagrees with the list of dates and both disagree with the correct dates for known events.

5th century edit

447 edit

  • ‡ Days as dark as night.[2]

453 edit

454 edit

457 edit

458 edit

468 edit

6th century edit

501 edit

  • Bishop Ebur rests in Christ, he was 350 years old.[7]

516 edit

521 edit

537 edit

544 edit

  • The sleep[11] of Ciaran.

547 edit

  • The great death[12] in which Maelgwn, king of Gwynedd died. ‡ Thus they say 'The long sleep of Maelgwn in the court of Rhos'. Then was the yellow plague. ‡

558 edit

562 edit

  • Columba went to Britain.

565 edit

  • ‡ The voyage of Gildas to Ireland. ‡

569 edit

570 edit

  • Gildas ‡ wisest of Britons ‡ died.

573 edit

574 edit

580 edit

584 edit

589 edit

594 edit

595 edit

  • The death of Columba.
  • The death of king Dunod ‡son of Pabo.‡
  • Augustine and Mellitus converted the English to Christ.

7th century edit

601 edit

606 edit

  • The burial of bishop Cynog.

607 edit

  • The death of Aidan son of Gabrán

612 edit

  • The death of Kentigern and bishop Dyfrig.

613 edit

  • The battle of Caer Legion [Chester]. And there died Selyf son of Cynan. And Iago son of Beli slept [died].

616 edit

  • Ceredig died.

617 edit

  • Edwin begins his reign.

624 edit

  • The sun is covered [eclipsed].

626 edit

  • Edwin is baptized, and Rhun son of Urien baptized him.

627 edit

  • Belin dies.

629 edit

  • The beseiging of king Cadwallon in the island of Glannauc.

630 edit

  • Gwyddgar comes and does not return. On the Kalends of January the battle of Meigen; and there Edwin was killed with his two sons; but Cadwallon was the victor.

631 edit

  • The battle of Cantscaul in which Cadwallon fell.

632 edit

  • The slaughter of the [river] Severn and the death of Idris.

644 edit

  • The battle of Cogfry in which Oswald king of the Northmen and Eawa king of the Mercians fell.

645 edit

  • The hammering of the region of Dyfed, when the monastery of David was burnt.

649 edit

  • ‡Slaughter in Gwent.‡

650 edit

  • The rising of a star.

656 edit

  • The slaughter of Campus Gaius.

657 edit

  • Penda killed.

658 edit

  • Oswy came and took plunder.

661 edit

  • Cummine the tall died.

662 edit

  • Brocmail ‡ the Tusked ‡ dies.

665 edit

  • The first celebration of Easter among the Saxons.[16] The second battle of Badon. Morgan dies.

669 edit

  • Oswy, king of the Saxons, dies.

676 edit

  • A star of marvelous brightness was seen shining throughout the whole world.

682 edit

  • A great plague in Britain, in which Cadwaladr son of Cadwallon dies.

683 edit

  • A plague ‡was‡ in Ireland.

684 edit

  • A great earthquake in the Isle of Man.

689 edit

  • The rain turned to blood in Britain, and ‡in Ireland‡ milk and butter turned to blood.

8th century edit

704 edit

  • Aldfrith king of the Saxons died. The sleep of Adomnán.

714 edit

  • Night was as bright as day. Pepin the elder [actually Pepin II, of Heristal], king of the Franks, died in Christ.

717 edit

  • Osred king of the Saxons dies.

718 edit

  • The consecration of the church of the archangel Michael ‡on mount Gargano.‡

721 edit

  • A hot summer.

721 edit

  • Beli son of Elffin dies. And the battle of Hehil among the Cornish, the battle of Garth Maelog, the battle of Pencon among the south Britons, and the Britons were the victors in those three battles.

728 edit

  • The battle of mount Carno.

735 edit

  • Bede the priest sleeps.

736 edit

  • Owen king of the Picts died.

750 edit

  • Battle between the Picts and the Briton, that is the battle of Mocetauc. And their king Talorgan is killed by the Britions.

754 edit

  • Rhodri king of the Britons dies.

757 edit

  • Ethelbald king of the Saxons dies.

760 edit

  • A battle between the Britons and the Saxons, that is the battle of Hereford and Dyfnwal son of Tewdwr dies.

768 edit

  • Easter is changed among the Britons ‡on the Lord's day ‡, Elfoddw, servant of God, emending it.

775 edit

  • Ffernfael son of Ithael dies.

776 edit

  • Cinaed king of the Picts dies.

777 edit

  • Abbot Cuthbert dies.

778 edit

  • The devastation of the South Britons by Offa.

784 edit

  • The devastation of Britain by Offa in the summer.

796 edit

  • ‡Devastation of Rheinwg by Offa[17].‡ The first coming of the gentiles [Norsemen] among the southern Irish.

797 edit

  • Offa king of the Mercians and Maredudd king of the Demetians die, and the battle of Rhuddlan.

798 edit

  • Caradog king of Gwynedd is killed by the Saxons.

9th century edit

807 edit

  • Arthen king of Ceredigion dies. ‡Solar eclipse‡

808 edit

  • Rhain king of the Demetians and Cadell ‡king‡ of Powys die.

809 edit

  • Elfoddw archbishop in the Gwynedd region went to the Lord.

810 edit

  • ‡The moon covered ‡. Mynyw burnt. ‡Death of cattle in Britain.‡

811 edit

  • Owain son of Maredudd dies.

812 edit

  • The fortress of Degannwy is struck by lightning and burnt.

813 edit

  • Battle between Hywel ‡and Cynan. Hywel‡ was the victor.

814 edit

  • There was great thunder and it caused many fires. Tryffin son of Rhain died. And Gruffydd son of Cyngen is killed by treachery by his brother Elisedd after an interval of two months. Hywel triumphed over the island of Mona and he drove Cynan from there with a great loss of his own army.

816 edit

  • Hywel was again expelled from Mona. Cynan the king dies. ‡Saxons invaded the mountains of Eryri and the kingdom of Rhufoniog‡.

817 edit

  • The battle of Llan-faes.

818 edit

  • ‡Cenwulf devastated the Dyfed region.‡

822 edit

  • The fortress of Degannwy is destroyed by the Saxons and they took the kingdom of Powys into their own control.

825 edit

  • Hywel dies.

831 edit

  • ‡Lunar eclipse.‡ Laudent died and Sadyrnfyw Hael of Mynyw died.

840 edit

  • Nobis the bishop ruled Mynyw.

842 edit

  • Idwallon dies.

844 edit

  • Merfyn dies. The battle of Cetill.

848 edit

  • The battle of Ffinnant. Ithael king of Gwent was killed by the men of Brycheiniog.

849 edit

  • Meurig was killed by Saxons.

850 edit

  • Cynin is killed by the gentiles.

853 edit

  • Mona laid waste by black gentiles.

856 edit

  • Kenneth king of the Picts died. And Jonathan prince of Abergele dies.

860 edit

  • Catgueithen was expelled.

864 edit

  • Duda laid Glywysing waste.

865 edit

  • Cian of Nanhyfer died.

866 edit

  • The city of York was laid waste, that is the battle with the black gentiles.

869 edit

  • The battle of Bryn Onnen.

870 edit

  • The fortress of Alt Clud was broken by the gentiles.

871 edit

  • Gwgon king of Ceredigion was drowned.

873 edit

  • Nobis ‡the bishop‡ and Meurig die. The battle of Bannguolou.

874 edit

  • ‡Llunferth the bishop consecrated.‡

875 edit

  • Dungarth king of Cernyw ‡that is of the Cornish‡ was drowned.

876 edit

  • The battle of Sunday in Mona.

877 edit

  • Rhodri and his son Gwriad is killed by the Saxons.

878 edit

  • Aed son of Neill dies.

880 edit

  • The battle of Conwy. Vengeance for Rhodri at God's hand. ‡The battle of Cynan.‡

882 edit

  • Catgueithen died.

885 edit

  • Hywel died in Rome.

887 edit

889 edit

  • Suibne the wisest of the Irish died.

892 edit

  • Hyfaidd dies.

894 edit

  • Anarawd came with the Angles and laid waste Ceredigion and Ystrad Tywi.

895 edit

  • The Northmen came and laid waste Lloegr and Bycheiniog and Gwent and Gwynllywiog.

896 edit

  • ‡Bread failed in Ireland. Vermin like moles with two teeth fell from the air and ate everything up; they were driven out by fasting and prayer.‡

898 edit

  • ‡Athelstan king of the Saxons died.‡

900 edit

  • Alfred king of the Gewissi dies.

10th century edit

902 edit

  • Igmund came to Mona and took Maes Osfeilion.

903 edit

904 edit

906 edit

  • The battle of Dinmeir and Mynyw was broken.

907 edit

  • ‡ Bishop ‡ Gorchywyl dies ‡ and king Cormac ‡.

908 edit

  • ‡ Bishop ‡ Asser died.

909 edit

913 edit

  • Ohter comes ‡ to Britain ‡.

915 edit

917 edit

  • Queen Aethelflaed died.

919 edit

  • King Clydog was killed.

921 edit

  • The battle of Dinas Newydd.

928 edit

  • Hywel journeyed to Rome. ‡ Helen died. ‡

935 edit

  • ‡ Gruffydd son of Owain died. ‡

938 edit

  • The battle of Brune.

939 edit

  • Hyfaidd son of Clydog, and Meurig, died.

941 edit

  • Aethelstan ‡ king of the Saxons ‡ died.

942 edit

  • King Afloeg dies.

943 edit

  • Cadell son of Arthfael was poisoned. And Idwal ‡ son of Rhodri ‡ and his son Elisedd are killed by the Saxons.

944 edit

  • Llunferth bishop in Mynyw died.

945 edit

  • ‡ Bishop Morlais died. ‡

946 edit

  • Cyngen son of Elisedd was poisoned. And Eneuris bishop in Mynyw died. And Strathclyde was laid wasted by the Saxons.

947 edit

950 edit

  • Hywel king of the Britons ‡ called the Good ‡ died.

951 edit

  • And Cadwgan son of Owain is killed by the Saxons. And the battle of Carno ‡ between the sons of Hywel and the sons of Idwal. ‡

952 edit

954 edit

Notes edit

  1. Written in poor or uneducated Latin as anus rather than annus.
  2. Some sources record a similar event in Constantinople in 450.
  3. This refers to the adoption by Rome of a new method for computing Easter established by Victorius of Aquitaine. It actually occurred in 457.
  4. Other annals place her birth in 451.
  5. Other annals place St. Patrick's death in 493. Early modern scholarship placed it in 420. More recent work dates it to 460.
  6. Also placed in 467.
  7. The entry seems to concern Ibar, although it may conflate him with earlier figures such as the "Bishop Eborius" from York listed among those attending a council in Arles in 314. However, the entry may simply be an error caused by confusion of the place name York (Latin: Eboracum) with a personal name. If the Welsh records included references to the legendary King Lucius, they may have conflated it with the establishment of the diocese of York; the archdiocese was destroyed by the Saxons around this time.
  8. Although this is the plain meaning of the Latin text, note that in the Old Welsh originally used to retell the story that "shoulder" and "shield" were homophones — iscuit. Geoffrey of Monmouth even combined the two and described Arthur carrying an icon of the Virgin Mary "upon shoulders on a shield". Jones, W. Lewis. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes, Vol. I, XII, §2. Putnam, 1921. Accessed 30 Jan 2013.
  9. Mentioned in other sources as dying in 523 or 525.
  10. More often known as Mordred in English.
  11. I.e., death.
  12. Probably plague
  13. Against the Pelagian heresy.
  14. Actually 604.
  15. Saint David is now generally thought to have died in 589.
  16. "Saxon" is used here and throughout the text to refer to the English generally.
  17. Ingram translates Vastatio Reinuch ab Offa "Devastation by Rheinwg son of Offa"; however, such a son is otherwise unrecorded and "Rheinwg" was a period name for Dyfed in south Wales.
  18. Actually 900.
  19. Actually 916.
  20. Actually 946
  21. Actually 953.