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[[Image:Wales.post-Roman.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Post-Roman Welsh kingdoms or tribes. Ergyng is in the southeast (lower right). The modern Anglo-Welsh border is also shown.]]
{{Infobox Saint
[[Image:Ergyng.040.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Southern Wales and Southwestern England prior to the Roman invasion. The [[Herefordshire Beacon]], or [[British Camp]], is shown at or beyond the presumptive northeastern tip of Silurian territory.]]
|name=Saint Tewdrig
'''Ergyng''' ([[Welsh language|Welsh]]: '''Erging''') was a Welsh kingdom located in present-day southern [[Herefordshire]], southwestern [[Gloucestershire]], and northern [[Monmouthshire]]. It flourished from the time of the [[Roman Empire|Roman]] departure from [[Roman Britain|Britain]] until the end of the eighth century. Along with the Welsh kingdoms of [[Glywysing]] and [[Kingdom of Gwent|Gwent]], Ergyng emerged from the territory of the pre-Roman [[Silures]], and those three kingdoms acted cooperatively and in concert in all matters of any consequence, with histories that are very amicably intertwined.
|birth_date=sixth century
|death_date=
|feast_day=April 1
|venerated_in=[[Roman Catholicism]]
|image=Death.of.Tewdric.jpg
|imagesize=200px
|caption=''Death of Tewdric''<br><small>after a sculpture by J. Evan Thomas</small>
|birth_place=
|death_place=near [[Tintern]], [[Wales]]
|titles=
|beatified_date=
|beatified_place=
|beatified_by=
|canonized_date=
|canonized_place=
|canonized_by=
|attributes=
|patronage=
|major_shrine=Church of St Tewdrig, [[Mathern]]
|suppressed_date=
|issues=
}}
'''Tewdrig''' or '''Tewdrig ap Teithfallt''' (fl. sixth century) was a king of the [[Sub-Roman Britain|post-Roman]] [[Glywysing|Kingdom of Glywysing]]. He abdicated in favour of his son [[Meurig ap Tewdrig|Meurig]] and retired to live a [[hermit|hermitical]] life, but was recalled to lead his son's army against an intruding [[Anglo-Saxons|Saxon]] force. He won the battle, but was mortally wounded.


As a border kingdom facing the [[Anglo-Saxons|Anglo-Saxon]] advances of the sixth and seventh centuries, its territories were steadily eroded, and by the ninth century its remainder was absorbed into the lands that would become the southern Herefordshire area of [[Archenfield]]. Unlike some other areas where [[Britons (historic)|Britons]] were supplanted by Anglo-Saxons, the region that was once Ergyng has retained the heritage of both peoples, including the survival of Welsh place-names, and the Welsh language into the eighteenth century. By a quirk of history, relics of the ancient [[Welsh law]] survived in Archenfield into the twentieth century.
The context of the battle is one of [[Britons (historic)|Britons]] versus invading Saxons, without explicit religious overtones. However, since '''Tewdrig''' held to a religious lifestyle and was killed while defending a [[Christian]] kingdom against pagans (ie, the Saxons), by the standards of that day Tewdrig is considered to be a [[martyr]] and a [[saint]]. The [[Latin]] form of his name is given as '''Theodoric'''<ref>{{Citation
{{TOCleft}}
|last=Löffler
{{clear}}
|first=Klemens
|year=1912
|date=1912
|editor-last=Herbermann
|editor-first=Charles George
|editor-link=Charles George Herbermann
|contribution=Tewdrig
|contribution-url=http://books.google.com/books?id=D5MRxHehuL4C&pg=PA542
|title=The Catholic Encyclopedia
|volume=XIV
|publisher=The Encyclopedia Press
|publication-date=1913
|publication-place=New York
|page=542
|url=
}}</ref> and his feast day is April 1.<ref>{{Citation
|last=Owen
|first=Robert
|year=1880
|date=1880
|contribution=April 1
|contribution-url=http://books.google.com/books?id=JIcXAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA169
|title=Sanctorale Catholicum or Book of Saints
|publisher=C. Kegan Paul & Co
|publication-date=1880
|publication-place=London
|page=169
|url=
}}</ref> Tewdrig's name occurs frequently in the genealogies of [[South Wales]], but the only substantive information about the person comes from the twelfth century ''[[Book of Llandaff]]''.


== Tewdrig's story ==
== History ==
The name ''Ergyng'' first emerges onto the historical stage in the wake of the [[Roman empire|Roman]] departure from [[Roman Britain|Britain]], when it appears as a kingdom in the former territory of the pre-Roman [[Silures]], along with the kingdoms of [[Glywysing]] and [[Gwent]]. The similarity of its name to that of the former Roman town of ''[[Ariconium]]'' (Welsh: ''Din Aricon'') suggests (without solid foundation) that the town was in the former Silurian territory.
[[Image:Tewdrig.Book.of.Llandaff.jpg|thumb|right|150px|Places related to '''Tewdrig''' mentioned in the ''[[Book of Llandaff]]''. The modern Anglo-Welsh border is also shown.]]
While king of [[Glywysing]], '''Tewdrig ap Teithfallt''' had been a patron of the Church at Llandaff, with a history of success in battle. At some point in his reign, he abdicated in favour of his son [[Meurig ap Tewdrig|Meurig]] in order to live a [[hermit|hermitical]] life at [[Tintern]], a rocky place near the ford across the [[River Wye]]. However, when a [[Anglo-Saxon|Saxon]] threat to the kingdom emerged, he returned to lead a defence. He was successful, but at a battle or skirmish at the ford (called ''Rhyd Tintern''), he was mortally wounded. He asked to be taken to Ynys Echni (called [[Flat Holm]] in [[English language|English]]) for burial, but got no further than [[Mathern]], where he languished briefly and died. King Meurig built a church on the spot and buried his father's body there, giving the surrounding land to the Bishops of Llandaff. The place became known as ''Merthyr Tewdrig'' ("the burial-place of Tewdrig"), which evolved into the name Mathern. Tewdrig's defence of his homeland was said to be sufficiently decisive that the Saxons would not dare to invade again for thirty years.
[[Image:Tintern village and River Wye 2004-07-25.jpg|thumb|150px|left|Tintern village, with the [[River Wye]] in the foreground.]]
There is a minor [[hagiography|hagiographic]] element in this story from the ''Book of Llandaff''. On returning to secular service due to military necessity, '''Tewdrig''' is given the prophesy that he will be successful but will be mortally wounded; that a vehicle pulled by two [[deer|stag]]s, yoked, will appear and carry him towards his destination of Ynys Echni, but that he will die in peace three days after the battle. The mention of stags is a recurring theme in [[Wales|Welsh]] tradition.


The spelling of the name has varied in historical references, to include ''Ercing'', ''Ergic'', and ''Ercic''. It is spelled a variety of ways in the ''[[Book of Llandaff]]'', including ''Ergin'' and ''Ercicg''.<ref>{{Harvcolnb|Rees|1840}} ''The Book of Llandaff''</ref> The ''[[Historia Brittonum]]'' of [[Nennius]] spells it ''Erging''<ref>{{Harvcolnb|Nennius|1819|pp=146, 170}} ''Historia Britonnum'' [http://books.google.com/books?id=CbosAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA146 page 146]</ref> and [[Geoffrey of Monmouth]] refers to it as ''Hergin''.<ref>
'''Tewdrig's''' father, Teithfallt, had also been a king, and the ''Book of Llandaff'' notes that during his reign the Saxons had devastated the border regions, chiefly to the northwest near [[Hereford]] (ie, in the historical [[Ergyng|Kingdom of Ergyng]]), and also along the [[River Wye]]. Tewdrig's battle was a continuation of the ongoing warfare between the Britons and the intruding Saxons.
{{Harvcolnb|Geoffrey of Monmouth|1842|p=147}} ''History of the Britons'', [http://books.google.com/books?id=3HQDAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA147 Chapter II] &ndash; a passing reference in the story of Aurelius Ambrosius' pursuit of Vortegirn.</ref>
{{clear}}
[[Image:Ergyng.500.jpg|thumb|300px|right|The kingdoms that emerged from Silurian territory following the Roman withdrawal were Glywysing, Gwent, and Ergyng. The site of Roman ''Ariconium'' is shown, as is ''[[Madley]]'', the birthplace of [[Dubricius|Saint Dyfrig]].]]
=== To c. 500 ===
{{clear}}
[[Image:Ergyng.600.jpg|thumb|300px|right|Ergyng at the opening of the seventh century.]]
=== To c. 600 ===


A number of sources, such as [[James Ussher|Ussher]]'s ''Brittanicarum Ecclesiarum Antiquitates''<ref>{{Citation
|last=Ussher
|first=James
|author-link=James Ussher
|editor-last=Elrington
|editor-first=Charles Richard
|year=1847
|date=1639
|contribution=
|title=The Whole Works of the Most Rev. James Ussher, D.D.
|volume=VI
|publisher=Hodges and Smith
|publication-date=1847
|publication-place=Dublin
|page=82
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=solLAAAAMAAJ
}}</ref> (1639), cite Bishop [[Francis Godwin|Godwin]]'s 1615 account of the medieval church at Mathern. Godwin said that he discovered a stone coffin by the altar in the church, containing the saint's bones, and that the skull was badly fractured. This is not inconsistent with the ''Book of Llandaff's'' account of '''Tewdrig's''' mortal wound and burial at Mathern. Ussher also repeats the account of the ''Book of Llandaff''.
{{clear}}
{{clear}}
[[Image:Ergyng.700.jpg|thumb|300px|right|Ergyng at the opening of the eighth century.]]
=== To c. 700 ===
After the withdrawal of the Roman legions from Britain in 410 AD, new smaller political entities took the place of the centralised structure. The area was originally part of the Kingdom of [[Glywysing]] (modern [[Glamorgan]]) and [[Kingdom of Gwent|Gwent]], but seems to have become independent for a period under [[Gwrfoddw|Gwrfoddw Hen]] in the late [[5th century]]<ref>[http://www.historyfiles.co.uk/KingListsBritain/CymruErgyng.htm Ergyng at The History Files]</ref>, and again under [[Peibio Clafrog|King Peibio Clafrog]] in the mid-[[6th century]]. Peibio was the grandfather of Saint [[Dubricius]] or Dyfrig, the first Bishop of Ergyng and an important figure in the establishment of [[celtic Christianity|Christianity]] in [[South Wales]]. He founded large teaching monasteries at Llanfrother near [[Hoarwithy]] and at Moccas, and a bishopric seems to have been based at St Constantine's Church at [[Goodrich, Herefordshire|Goodrich]].<ref name=hereford>[http://www.hereford.uk.com/history/6thand7th.asp Hereford.uk.com - Herefordshire History<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


Dubricius' cousin, [[Gwrgan Fawr]] (the Great) was one of its most important monarchs and may have obtained sway over Glamorgan as far as the [[River Neath]]. In the middle of the 7th century, Onbraust of Ergyng married Meurig of [[Gwent]], and their son [[Athrwys ap Meurig|Athrwys]] became king of both kingdoms. Ergyng eventually became a mere [[cantref]], the Welsh equivalent of a [[Hundred (country subdivision)|hundred]].<ref name=hereford>[http://www.hereford.uk.com/history/6thand7th.asp Hereford.uk.com - Herefordshire History<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
== Sources of information ==
{{clear}}
'''Preliminary notice'''


=== Epilogue ===
[[Welsh law|Ancient custom and law]] held that property was divided among the surviving heirs of a decedent, and this applied no less to royalty than to everyone else. Consequently, on the death of a king, the land of the kingdom would be divided among the king's heirs, and new kingdoms would emerge. This continual rearrangement makes the determination of the scope and borders of ancient kingdoms a speculative effort at best. The ''Book of Llandaff'' places '''Tewdrig's''' story in the territory of the historical [[Kingdom of Gwent]] (the southeastern part of modern [[Monmouthshire]]). That kingdom's ancient history is intertwined with the history of the adjacent [[Glywysing|Kingdom of Glywysing]].
:''See also [[Archenfield]]''
By the 8th century, the expanding power of [[Mercia]] led to conflict with the native British, and by the 9th century the Mercians had gained control over the area and nearby [[Hereford]]. The sites of old British churches fell to Mercia, and the British became foreigners - or, in the English language, "Welsh" - in what had been their own land.<ref name=archenfield>[http://www.archenfield.com/whoarewe.htm Archenfield Archaeology - Who we are<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The rump of Ergyng then became known to the English as Arcenefelde or [[Archenfield]]. Although its Welsh-speaking inhabitants retained special rights, the area was unequivocally incorporated into England in the [[Laws in Wales Acts 1535–1542|Laws in Wales Acts]] of 1535 and 1542.


As ''Archenfield'' (variously spelled) the region would be often-mentioned in discussions on ancient [[Welsh law]], and as a digression in discussions of [[English law]], due to a quirk of history. The [[Laws in Wales Acts 1535-1542]] abolished Welsh law in [[Wales]]. However, at that time ''Archenfield'' was a part of [[England]], and as these laws applied only within Wales, local law and custom in Archenfield continued as before. This was an unusual survival of ancient Welsh law into the twentieth century, of interest to scholars studying the histories of both Welsh and English law.
'''''The Book of Llandaff'''''


==References==
The ''[[Book of Llandaff]]'' was written c. 1125, at a time when the [[episcopal see|bishopric]] at [[Llandaff]] was struggling against the competing bishoprics at [[St David's|Saint David's]] and [[Hereford]]. The book was written specifically to justify the claims of Llandaff, and '''Tewdrig's''' story provides the reason why his son, [[Meurig ap Tewdrig]], donated the lands near Mathern to the [[episcopal see|see]] of Llandaff.
'''Notes'''

<references group=note />
'''Historical sources'''
'''Citations'''

{{Reflist|2}}
'''Tewdrig''' is not mentioned by [[Nennius]] in the ''[[Historia Brittonum]]'' (c. 850).<ref>{{Citation
'''Bibliography'''
|last=Nennius
{{refbegin}}
|author-link=Nennius
*{{Citation
|year=1819
|last=
|date=c. 850
|first=
|editor-last=Gunn
|author-link=
|editor-first=W.
|year=1871
|date=1871
|editor-last=British Archaeological Association
|editor-first=
|editor-link=British Archaeological Association
|contribution=Proceedings of the Congress, 10 September 1871
|contribution-url=http://books.google.com/books?id=KhIpAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA537
|journal=Journal of the British Archaeological Association
|volume=XXVII
|edition=
|publisher=British Archaeological Association
|publication-date=1871
|publication-place=London
|pages=536-541
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=KhIpAAAAYAAJ&printsec=titlepage
}} &mdash; notes that "all the churches of Ergyng or Archenfield have Welsh names in the ''Book of Llandaff''"; the same page mentions a trip to Ariconium that was written up in the journal previously.
*{{Citation
|last=Caradoc of Llancarfan
|first=
|author-link=Caradoc of Llancarfan
|year=1863
|date=c. 1155
|editor-last=Owen
|editor-first=Aneurin (translator)
|editor-link=
|contribution=Brut y Tywysogion (Chronicle of the Princes)
|contribution-url=http://books.google.com/books?id=osE1AAAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PR3
|journal=Archaeologia Cambrensis
|volume=X
|series=Third Series
|publisher=Cambrian Archaeological Association
|publication-date=1863
|publication-place=London
|pages=1-143
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=osE1AAAAMAAJ&printsec=titlepage
}}
* {{Citation
|last=Geoffrey of Monmouth
|first=
|author-link=Geoffrey of Monmouth
|year=1842
|date=1155
|editor-last=Giles
|editor-first=John Allen
|editor2-last=Thompson
|editor2-first=A. (translator)
|editor-link=
|contribution=
|contribution=
|title=The British History of Geoffrey of Monmouth
|title=Historia Brittonum
|volume=
|publisher=John and Arthur Arch
|edition=New
|publication-date=1819
|publisher=James Bohn
|publication-date=1842
|publication-place=London
|publication-place=London
|pages=
|pages=
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=CbosAAAAMAAJ&printsec=titlepage
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=3HQDAAAAMAAJ&printsec=titlepage
}}
}}</ref> [[John Edward Lloyd|Lloyd]]'s ''History of Wales'' (1911) mentions the ''Book of Llandaff's'' account of Tewdrig's combat at the crossing of the [[River Wye|Wye]], and notes that ''Merthyr Tewdrig'' is now called Mathern, but adds nothing further.<ref>{{Citation
*{{Citation
|last=Gerald of Wales
|first=
|author-link=Gerald of Wales
|year=1908
|date=1194
|editor-last=Rhys
|editor-first=Ernest
|editor-link=
|contribution=
|title=The Itinerary and Description of Wales
|volume=
|edition=
|publisher=J. M. Dent & Co
|publication-date=1908
|publication-place=London
|pages=
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=Ueg0Xm-oivAC&printsec=titlepage
}} - see the TOC's
* {{Citation
|last=
|first=
|author-link=
|year=c. 1100
|date=c. 1100
|editor-last=Ingram
|editor-first=J.
|editor-link=
|contribution=
|contribution-url=
|title=The Saxon Chronicle
|volume=
|series=
|edition=
|publisher=Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown
|publication-date=1823
|publication-place=London
|page=
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=-z0LAAAAYAAJ&printsec=titlepage
}}
*{{Citation
|last=Lloyd
|first=Jacob Youde William
|author-link=
|year=1882
|date=1882
|contribution=
|title=The History of the Princes, the Lords Marcher, and the Ancient Nobility of Powys Fadog
|volume=III
|publisher=T. Richards
|publication-date=1882
|publication-place=London
|pages=
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=jz0LAAAAYAAJ&printsec=titlepage
}} - search for erging; pages 264, 265
*{{Citation
|last=Lloyd
|last=Lloyd
|first=John Edward
|first=John Edward
Line 124: Line 171:
|pages=
|pages=
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=NYwNAAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=NYwNAAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover
}} &mdash; search for erging
}}</ref> Nedelec's ''History of the Early Cambro-British Christians'' (1879) retells the story from the ''Book of Llandaff'', adding a number of unattributed details which are colorful but inconsequential.<ref>{{Citation
*{{Citation
|last=Nedelec
|last=Lloyd
|first=Louis
|first=John Edward
|year=1879
|author-link=John Edward Lloyd
|date=1879
|year=1911
|date=1911
|contribution=
|contribution=
|title=Cambria Sacra, or The History of the Early Cambro-British Christians
|title=A History of Wales from the Earliest Times to the Edwardian Conquest
|volume=II
|publisher=Burns and Oates
|edition=2nd
|publication-date=1879
|publisher=Longmans, Green, and Co
|publication-date=1912
|publication-place=London
|publication-place=London
|pages=
|pages=
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=YapAAAAAIAAJ&printsec=titlepage
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=EYwNAAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover
}} &mdash; search for erging
}}</ref> [[Sharon Turner|Turner]]'s ''History of the Anglo-Saxons'' (1799) repeats the accounts of the ''Book of Llandaff'' and Bishop Godwin (citing Ussher as the source), but then adds that the Saxons in question were those of [[Wessex]], led by [[Ceolwulf]].<ref>{{Citation
*{{Citation
|last=Turner
|last=Nennius
|first=Sharon
|author-link=Sharon Turner
|author-link=Nennius
|year=1852
|year=1819
|date=1799
|date=c. 795
|editor-last=Gunn
|editor-first=W.
|contribution=
|contribution=
|title=Historia Brittonum
|title=The History of the Anglo-Saxons
|publisher=John and Arthur Arch
|volume=I
|publication-date=1819
|edition=Seventh
|publisher=Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans
|publication-date=1852
|publication-place=London
|publication-place=London
|pages=285-86
|pages=
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=iG8QAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=CbosAAAAMAAJ&printsec=titlepage
}}
}}</ref> No authority is provided for this claim.
*{{Citation

|last=Newell
'''The Iolo Manuscripts'''
|first=Ebenezer Josiah

|author-link=
The ''Iolo Manuscripts'' are a collection of manuscripts presented in the early nineteenth century by Edward Williams, who is better known as [[Iolo Morganwg|Iolo Morgannwg]]. Containing elaborate genealogies that connect virtually everyone of note with everyone else of note (and with many connections to "Arthur"), they were at first accepted as genuine, but have since been shown to be an assortment of manuscripts, transcriptions, and fantasies, many invented by Iolo himself. There are many references to '''Tewdrig''' and his genealogy. A list of works tainted by their reliance of the material presented by Iolo (sometimes without attribution) would be quite long.
|year=1895
{{clear}}
|date=1895

|contribution=
==References==
|title=A History of the Welsh Church to the Dissolution of the Monasteries
'''Bibliography'''
|publisher=Elliot Stock
{{refbegin}}
|publication-date=1895
|publication-place=London
|pages=
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=S4YcAAAAMAAJ&printsec=titlepage
}} &mdash; search for ergyng, et al
*{{Citation
|last=Newell
|first=Ebenezer Josiah
|author-link=
|year=1902
|date=1902
|editor-last=
|editor-first=
|editor-link=
|contribution=
|title=Llandaff
|volume=
|edition=
|publisher=Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge
|publication-date=1902
|publication-place=London
|pages=
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=-N9gAAAAMAAJ&printsec=titlepage
}} - search for ergyng, et al
*{{Citation
*{{Citation
|last=Rees
|last=Rees
Line 174: Line 249:
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=cEcLAAAAYAAJ&printsec=titlepage
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=cEcLAAAAYAAJ&printsec=titlepage
}} &mdash; from MSS. in the Libraries of Hengwrt, and of Jesus College (English translation)
}} &mdash; from MSS. in the Libraries of Hengwrt, and of Jesus College (English translation)
*{{Citation
|last=Seebohm
|first=Frederic
|author-link=Frederic Seebohm (historian)
|date=1883
|editor-last=
|editor-first=
|edition=
|title=The English Village Community Examined in its Relations to the Manorial and Tribal Systems and to the Common or Open Field System of Husbandry
|publisher=Longmans, Green, and Co.
|publication-date=1905
|publication-place=London
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=lKMWAAAAIAAJ
}} &mdash; search for ergyng and archenfield; mentions the Domesday Book; and also mentions Gwent as a part of Gloustershire. A number of interesting hits.
*{{Citation
*{{Citation
|last=Williams
|last=Williams
|first=Edward
|first=Edward (Iolo Morgannwg)
|author-link=Iolo Morganwg
|author-link=Iolo Morganwg
|year=1848
|year=1848
Line 191: Line 280:
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=TnBoaWNvArEC&printsec=frontcover
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=TnBoaWNvArEC&printsec=frontcover
}}
}}
*{{Citation
{{refend}}
|year=1860
'''Citations'''
|date=c. 1288
{{Reflist}}
|editor-last=Williams (ab Ithel)
|editor-first=John
|editor-link=John Williams (Ab Ithel)
|contribution=
|title=Annales Cambriae (444 &ndash; 1288)
|publisher=Longman, Green, Longman, and Roberts
|publication-date=1860
|publication-place=London
|pages=
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=SSgJAAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover
}}
*{{Citation
|last=Wright
|first=Thomas
|author-link=Thomas Wright (antiquarian)
|year=1854
|date=1853
|contribution=
|title=Wanderings of an Antiquary
|publisher=J. B. Nichols and Sons
|publication-date=1854
|publication-place=London
|pages=
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=d9oBAAAAMAAJ&printsec=titlepage
}} - search for Ariconium



* Ergyng (or Erging) not mentioned by Ussher (in either vol V or VI)
* Bede ?
* Gildas ?


*[[Wendy Davies]]. (1979). ''The Llandaff Charters''.
*Wendy Davies (1982). ''Wales in the Early Middle Ages''.
*[[Gilbert Hunter Doble|G. H. Doble]]. (1971). ''Lives of the Welsh Saints''.
*[[John Morris (historian)|John Morris]]. (1973). ''The Age of Arthur''.
*Raymond Perry. (2002). ''Anglo-Saxon Herefordshire''.
* A. L. F. Rivet & Colin Smith (1979). ''The Place-Names of Roman Britain''.
{{refend}}
{{Welsh kingdoms|state=collapsed}}
<!-- DONT CAPTURE THESE YET
<!-- DONT CAPTURE THESE YET
[[Category:Former monarchies of Europe|Ergyng]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tewdrig}}
[[category:Monarchs of Morgannwg]]
[[Category:History of Gloucestershire]]
[[category:Monarchs of Gwent]]
[[Category:History of Herefordshire]]
[[Category:Monmouthshire (historic)]]
[[category:Welsh saints]]
[[Category:Kingdoms of Wales]]


[[cy:Tewdrig]]
[[br:Ergyng]]
[[it:San Tewdrig]]
[[cy:Erging]]
[[it:Regno di Ergyng]]
-->
-->

Latest revision as of 02:30, 11 June 2009

Post-Roman Welsh kingdoms or tribes. Ergyng is in the southeast (lower right). The modern Anglo-Welsh border is also shown.
Southern Wales and Southwestern England prior to the Roman invasion. The Herefordshire Beacon, or British Camp, is shown at or beyond the presumptive northeastern tip of Silurian territory.

Ergyng (Welsh: Erging) was a Welsh kingdom located in present-day southern Herefordshire, southwestern Gloucestershire, and northern Monmouthshire. It flourished from the time of the Roman departure from Britain until the end of the eighth century. Along with the Welsh kingdoms of Glywysing and Gwent, Ergyng emerged from the territory of the pre-Roman Silures, and those three kingdoms acted cooperatively and in concert in all matters of any consequence, with histories that are very amicably intertwined.

As a border kingdom facing the Anglo-Saxon advances of the sixth and seventh centuries, its territories were steadily eroded, and by the ninth century its remainder was absorbed into the lands that would become the southern Herefordshire area of Archenfield. Unlike some other areas where Britons were supplanted by Anglo-Saxons, the region that was once Ergyng has retained the heritage of both peoples, including the survival of Welsh place-names, and the Welsh language into the eighteenth century. By a quirk of history, relics of the ancient Welsh law survived in Archenfield into the twentieth century.

History

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The name Ergyng first emerges onto the historical stage in the wake of the Roman departure from Britain, when it appears as a kingdom in the former territory of the pre-Roman Silures, along with the kingdoms of Glywysing and Gwent. The similarity of its name to that of the former Roman town of Ariconium (Welsh: Din Aricon) suggests (without solid foundation) that the town was in the former Silurian territory.

The spelling of the name has varied in historical references, to include Ercing, Ergic, and Ercic. It is spelled a variety of ways in the Book of Llandaff, including Ergin and Ercicg.[1] The Historia Brittonum of Nennius spells it Erging[2] and Geoffrey of Monmouth refers to it as Hergin.[3]

The kingdoms that emerged from Silurian territory following the Roman withdrawal were Glywysing, Gwent, and Ergyng. The site of Roman Ariconium is shown, as is Madley, the birthplace of Saint Dyfrig.

To c. 500

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Ergyng at the opening of the seventh century.

To c. 600

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Ergyng at the opening of the eighth century.

To c. 700

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After the withdrawal of the Roman legions from Britain in 410 AD, new smaller political entities took the place of the centralised structure. The area was originally part of the Kingdom of Glywysing (modern Glamorgan) and Gwent, but seems to have become independent for a period under Gwrfoddw Hen in the late 5th century[4], and again under King Peibio Clafrog in the mid-6th century. Peibio was the grandfather of Saint Dubricius or Dyfrig, the first Bishop of Ergyng and an important figure in the establishment of Christianity in South Wales. He founded large teaching monasteries at Llanfrother near Hoarwithy and at Moccas, and a bishopric seems to have been based at St Constantine's Church at Goodrich.[5]

Dubricius' cousin, Gwrgan Fawr (the Great) was one of its most important monarchs and may have obtained sway over Glamorgan as far as the River Neath. In the middle of the 7th century, Onbraust of Ergyng married Meurig of Gwent, and their son Athrwys became king of both kingdoms. Ergyng eventually became a mere cantref, the Welsh equivalent of a hundred.[5]

Epilogue

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See also Archenfield

By the 8th century, the expanding power of Mercia led to conflict with the native British, and by the 9th century the Mercians had gained control over the area and nearby Hereford. The sites of old British churches fell to Mercia, and the British became foreigners - or, in the English language, "Welsh" - in what had been their own land.[6] The rump of Ergyng then became known to the English as Arcenefelde or Archenfield. Although its Welsh-speaking inhabitants retained special rights, the area was unequivocally incorporated into England in the Laws in Wales Acts of 1535 and 1542.

As Archenfield (variously spelled) the region would be often-mentioned in discussions on ancient Welsh law, and as a digression in discussions of English law, due to a quirk of history. The Laws in Wales Acts 1535-1542 abolished Welsh law in Wales. However, at that time Archenfield was a part of England, and as these laws applied only within Wales, local law and custom in Archenfield continued as before. This was an unusual survival of ancient Welsh law into the twentieth century, of interest to scholars studying the histories of both Welsh and English law.

References

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Notes

Citations

  1. ^ Rees 1840 The Book of Llandaff
  2. ^ Nennius 1819:146, 170 Historia Britonnum page 146
  3. ^ Geoffrey of Monmouth 1842:147 History of the Britons, Chapter II – a passing reference in the story of Aurelius Ambrosius' pursuit of Vortegirn.
  4. ^ Ergyng at The History Files
  5. ^ a b Hereford.uk.com - Herefordshire History
  6. ^ Archenfield Archaeology - Who we are

Bibliography


  • Ergyng (or Erging) not mentioned by Ussher (in either vol V or VI)
  • Bede ?
  • Gildas ?


  • Wendy Davies. (1979). The Llandaff Charters.
  • Wendy Davies (1982). Wales in the Early Middle Ages.
  • G. H. Doble. (1971). Lives of the Welsh Saints.
  • John Morris. (1973). The Age of Arthur.
  • Raymond Perry. (2002). Anglo-Saxon Herefordshire.
  • A. L. F. Rivet & Colin Smith (1979). The Place-Names of Roman Britain.