Généalogie and Heritage

Source: Robert Sewell's Genealogy Site: Coel Hen

Description

Type Valeur
Titre Robert Sewell's Genealogy Site: Coel Hen

Entrées associées à cette source

Personnes
King COEL Hen ap Tegfan King of Northern Britain

Texte

Sources
Sewell Vincent Sample (1928 – 2005): Letters (perhaps based on John Edward Lloyd: A history of Wales: from the earliest times to the Edwardian Conquest, Longmans, Green & Co.,1911.)
John Davies: A History of Wales, London, 1993 (published in Welsh as Hames Cymru in 1990)

Médias

URL

Notes

Old King Coel
Old King Coel was a merry old soul,
And a merry old soul was he;
He called for his pipe, and he called for his bowl,
And he called for his fiddlers three.

Every fiddler, he had a fine fiddle,
And a very fine fiddle had he;
Oh, there's none so rare as can compare
With King Coel and his fiddlers three.

Coel Hen or Coel the Old is best remembered by the nursery rhyme, but the pipe would have been of the musical kind, and the bowl a drinking bowl. The fiddlers would have been harpists and not violinists as pictured above. Roman writings comment on the hospitality of Britons who would invite a visitor in for a feast and music before talking business.

Coel Hen was most likely the last of the Roman Duces Brittanniarum with his headquarters at York, and he did his best to carry on as the first King of Northern Britain when the Roman officials returned to Italy, leaving Britain and her people to fend for themselves. King Coel soon found himself fighting with a coalition of Picts and Scots who overran his forces about 420. Coel himself wandered in the unknown countryside until he eventually got caught in a bog at Coilsfield (in Tarbolton, Ayrshire) and drowned. After his death, Coel's Northern Kingdom was divided between two of his sons, Ceneu and Gorbanian.

Coel Hen mentioned here is not to be confused with another “Old King Cole” who is said to have lived in Colchester, Essex during the third century. According to legend, King Cole of Colchester’s daughter Helen married the Roman senator Contantius wholater became the Emperor of Rome. Their son was Constantine the Great . . . or so the story goes.

To learn more about Coel Hen, click on Britannia: Gateway to the British Isles

Genealogy

Most Celtic British monarchs claimed descent from Old King Coel because he was the first post-Roman King of Northern Britain. Coel Hen himself was an historical figure. However, there is a good possibility that later monarchs set up the line shown next inmuch the same manner as some overly enthusiatic modern genealogists piece together a line while attempting to find a link to a famous ancestor. The genealogy shown next must be considered at least partly legendary.

Generation One
Coel Hen who was also known by the Latinized name of Caelius Votepacus, was a son of Tehvant and a grandson of Urban. Coel Hen was King of North Britain.
Born circa 350
Died circa 420
Coel Hen married Ystrafael or Ystradwel Ferch Cadfan and they had the following children:

Gwawl, who was associated with Cunedda Wledig, son of Æternus and grandson of Paternus of the Red Robe. For the continuation of this line, click on Cunedda Wledig and Gwawl.
Ceneu, who inherited one half of North Britain
Gorbanian, who inherited one half of North Britain

Generation Two
Ceneu
Born circa 382
Ceneu had two sons:
Gwrst ap Ceneu
Mar ap Ceneu

Generation Three
Gwrst
Born circa 422
Gwrst ap Ceneu had a son:
Meirchion Gul ap Gwrst

Generation Four
Meirchion Gul

Generation Five
Elidir

Generation Six
Llywarch Hen

Generation Seven
Dwywg

Generation Eight
Gwair

Generation Nine
Tegid

Generation Ten
Alcwn

Generation Eleven
Sandde

Generation Twelve
Elidir ap Sandde had a son:

Gwriad of Man, King of Gwynedd

Generation Thirteen
Gwriad of Man, King of Gwynedd
Died: 825
Gwriad married Ethyllt of Gwynedd, Queen of Gwynedd and they had a son:

Merfyn the Freckled, King of Gwynedd
For the continuation of this line, click on Ethyllt and Gwriad