Bards, went to sea in the house of glass, and there have been no tidings whither they went. Third, Madawg, son of Owain Gwynedd, who, accompanied by three hundred men, went to sea in ten ships, and it is not known to what place they went. Letters on Welsh History - Page 257de Samuel Jenkins - 1852 - 322 pagesAffichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| Jules Michelet - 1844 - 654 pages
...house of glass, and there have been no tidings whither they went. Third — Madawg, son of О wain Gwynedd, who, accompanied by three hundred men, went...ships, and it is not known to what place they went. The three awful events of the Isle of Britain. First — the rupture of the Lake of Floods, and the... | |
| Elijah Waring - 1850 - 274 pages
...The Three Losses, by Disappearance, to the Isle of Britain," and the third is, " Madawg, son of Owen Gwynedd, who, accompanied by three hundred men, went...ships, and it is not known to what place they went." The date of his first voyage is commonly fixed at 1 1 70, and that of the last about two years later.... | |
| Bernard Bolingbroke Woodward - 1859 - 628 pages
...ship of glass went away ; and neither returned ; and " the third, Madog ab Owain Gwynedd, who with three hundred men went to sea in ten ships, and it is not known whither they went." The concluding statement of .the Triad must be borne in mind, because, whether... | |
| John Jones Thomas - 1860 - 258 pages
...Islands of the Floods, and nothing more was heard of them. Second — Merddiu, the bard of Ambrosius, with his nine scientific bards, who went to sea in...ships, and it is not known to what place they went." " The three gold shoemakers of the Isle of Britain : first, Caswallawn ab Beli, when he went as far... | |
| John Jones Thomas - 1866 - 250 pages
...went to sea in the house of glass, and there have been no tidings whither they went. Third—Madawg, son of Owain Gwynedd, who, accompanied by three hundred...ships, and it is not known to what place they went." " The three gold shoemakers of the Isle of Britain : first, Caswallawn ab Beli, when he went as far... | |
| Benjamin Franklin Bowen - 1876 - 210 pages
...were heard of no more. The third loss of this remarkable triad was Madoc ab Owain Gwynedd, who, with three hundred men, went to sea in ten ships, and it is not known whither they went. About 1440 AD, Meredydd ab Rhys, having obtained the loan of a fishing-net by a... | |
| Benjamin Franklin DeCosta - 1891 - 44 pages
...I. 1820, p. 123), which makes the third remarkable Disappearance, that of " Madawg, son of О wain Gwynedd, who, accompanied by three hundred men, went...ships, and it is not known to what place they went." We should not hesitate to consider such testimonies, because they are associated with some things that... | |
| David Erwyd Jenkins - 1899 - 408 pages
...went to sea in the house of glass, and there have been no tidings whither they went. Third, Madog, son of Owain Gwynedd, who, accompanied by three hundred...ships, and it is not known to what place they went." It is said that the first lot of ships numbered thirteen ; it is to the second departure, three years... | |
| David Erwyd Jenkins - 1899 - 408 pages
...in the house of glass, and there have been no tidings whither they went. Third, Madog, son of Ovvain Gwynedd, who, accompanied by three hundred men, went...ships, and it is not known to what place they went." It is said that the first lot of ships numbered thirteen ; it is to the second departure, three years... | |
| Sir John Evans - 1901 - 432 pages
...in one of the Triads in these words, as quoted by Woodward : " Madoc ab Owain Gwynedd, who with 300 men went to sea in ten ships, and it is not known whither they went." Another statement was : " Myrddin Emrys in a ship of glass went away, and neither... | |
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