Feature The 616-year-old letter that still inspires dreams of an independent Wales
The Pennal letter was written in Latin by Owain Glyndŵr on the 31st March 1406 to the French king, Charles VI, requesting a Welsh military alliance with France.
Contributor
Dylan Moore writes for The National Wales on culture and the arts. He is editor of the Welsh Agenda, the magazine of the Institute of Welsh Affairs. Dylan's books include Driving Home Both Ways and Many Rivers to Cross. He is a Hay Festival International Fellow.
Dylan Moore writes for The National Wales on culture and the arts. He is editor of the Welsh Agenda, the magazine of the Institute of Welsh Affairs. Dylan's books include Driving Home Both Ways and Many Rivers to Cross. He is a Hay Festival International Fellow.
The Pennal letter was written in Latin by Owain Glyndŵr on the 31st March 1406 to the French king, Charles VI, requesting a Welsh military alliance with France.
‘These days, in many villages, and in most towns in Wales, children play and read in English. They forget that they are Welsh.’
While the revival of raucous ‘pwnco’ singing rituals and the reemergence of the macabre spectacle of the Mari Lwyd in villages and towns across Wales has understandably stolen the limelight in recent years, the simpler New Year’s Day custom of Calennig has perhaps passed below the radar.
While the revival of raucous ‘pwnco’ singing rituals and the reemergence of the macabre spectacle of the Mari Lwyd in villages and towns across Wales has understandably stolen the limelight in recent years, the simpler New Year’s Day custom of Calennig has perhaps passed below the radar.
‘Ah, TJs!’ says Bobby Gillespie, remembering his band Primal Scream playing at the legendary Newport music venue.
For 1,500 years, Wales and Cornwall have shared remarkable parallels
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