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Keyword: dyfed

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  • Remains of Hundreds (280) of Human Bodies Found at Former Department Store Site in Wales

    10/11/2022 5:39:55 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 28 replies
    Wales Online ^ | 11 OCT 2022 | Matt Gibson, Max Channon
    The burials could be linked to an attack by Welsh rebel leader Owain Glyndwr in 1405Archaeologists have discovered the remains of hundreds of human bodies at a site in Haverfordwest. Dyfed Archaeological Trust uncovered the skeletal remains while exploring a medieval friary on the former site of Ocky White department store in the town’s centre. Earlier this year archaeologists said they had found the remains of 17 bodies - but believed “many more” were waiting to be unearthed. Now they say they have found the remains of more than 240 people - including those of children. Many of the remains...
  • New study identifies the likely burials of up to 65 British Kings

    03/27/2022 8:09:56 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 34 replies
    Heritage Daily ^ | March 16, 2022 | unattributed
    A new study published in the Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland has identified the likely burials of up to 65 British Kings and senior royals... Prior to the study, only one post-Roman burial of an indigenous British monarch from the Dark Ages has been identified (although nine Anglo-Saxon royal graves have been found on previous excavations).Archaeologists now suggest that 20 probable royal burial complexes each containing up to five graves (with a further 11 burial complexes under consideration) have been identified that appear to date from the fifth and sixth centuries AD.During this period, the east...
  • Ogham and the Irish in Britain

    04/13/2021 2:21:32 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 39 replies
    IslandGuide.co.uk ^ | 2009-2021 | Alan Price and IslandGuide.co.uk contributors
    "... both Irish and Welsh sources portrayed it as a tribal migration of the Irish Dessi or Deisi headed by their own king and, from the Irish viewpoint, a suitable 'expulsion' saga was adduced. The direct line of Irish rulers of Welsh Dyfed went on into the 7th and 8th centuries. An interesting mix arose; by 400 Irish and British were fully differing languages, and additionally Christians from both nations used different scripts (Latin and Ogham) for their memorials. Irish never replaced British in Wales the way it did in Scotland, but relative numerical strengths do not necessarily explain why;...