Enwogion Cymru Author:Robert Williams Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: 54 CADELL. never returned. This is recorded in the Triads, and printed in the Myvyrian Archaiology, ii. 9, 76. CADFJLL, the son of Urien, was a saint who l... more »ived sbout the commencement of the seventh century. According to " Bonedd y Saint," (Myv. Arch. ii. 28.) he was the son of Urien ab Buan ab Ysgwvn ab Llywarch Hen. There was formerly a church dedicated to him in Glamorgan, near Cowbridge, called Llangadell. CADELL (DEYRNLLWG,) was prince of Teyrnllwg, a territory consisting of the Vale Royal, and a part of Powis, extending from Shrewsbury to Chester ; he lived in the fifth century. He is stated in the ancient pedigrees to have been descended from the monarchs of Britain, and to have been the son of Pasgen ab Rheiddwy ab Rhudd- vedel Vrych ab Cyndeyrn ab Gwrtheyrn ; but Nennius relates that he was originally the swineherd of Benlli Gawr, lord of the territories to which he succeeded. When Garmon visited Wales on his second mission in A.D. 447, he was treated with indignity by Beulli, and hospitably entertained by Cadell, whom he converted and baptized. The same day the tyrant Benlli was burnt with his city by fire from heaven, and Cadell became prince in his stead. For the rest of the story, the probable parts of which are not corroborated by historv, see Gunn's Nennius, 21, 15!?. Cadell's descendants continued to be princes of Powis, which included Teyrnllwg, or the Vale Royal, for many generations. He was succeeded by his son Cyngen, the father of Brochwael Ysgythrog. CADELL (DEYRNLLWG,) a lineal descendant of the preceding, was prince of Powis and Vale Royal, during the close of the eighth century. He was the son or grandson of Elisau ab Cynllaw, whom he succeeded in the principality, A. D. 773. A historical difficulty however occurs in his pedigree, which may be h...« less