Cunedda Wledig was a powerful warrior prince from Manau-Gododdin who migrated to Wales in the early fifth century and founded a dynasty from which Welsh nobility would claim ancestry for centuries afterward.
According to tradition, Cunedda
was descended from a line of Votadini chieftains whose Latinised names suggest
they ruled in some sort of official Roman capacity north of Hadrian’s Wall. By
Cunedda’s time, the Manau-Gododdin was a sub-kingdom of Goutodin and it is
likely that Cunedda was some sort of leader or sub-king. Not much is known of
his life in the north. Cunedda must have been a charismatic warrior as he was
able to rally the beleaguered Romano-British to fight off constant Irish and
Pictish raids. Perhaps because of his actions, Cunedda managed to secure a
politically advantageous marriage to Gwawl, a daughter of Coel Hen, and is
claimed to have had nine sons and at least two daughters.
At some point in the early fifth
century, maybe around 430, Cunedda and his warband migrated southwest to Wales.
His wife, Gwawl, appears to have gone with him, as did his younger sons. His
eldest son, Typaun, remained behind in Manau-Gododdin and presumably inherited
whatever role it was that Cunedda relinquished when he left. According to
legend, Cunedda was offered land in return for ousting Irish raiders (named as
the Ui Liathain from Munster) who had invaded and settled along the Welsh
coastline during the last century. Nennius, writing centuries later, wrote that Cunedda and his
warband arrived in Wales “and with great slaughter they drove out from these
regions the Scotti who never returned again to inhabit them”.
Alternatively, it has been
suggested that Cunedda may have sailed down the Irish Sea of his own volition
and invaded North Wales, establishing himself a kingdom during the chaos that
resulted from a plague that swept southern Britain in 446 and the subsequent Saxon
laeti revolt.
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