George Owen (c1552-1613), Lord of Cemais, undoubtedly was one of the most interesting characters of Elizabethan Pembrokeshire. As well as being a local squire, Owen spent a great deal of his time and efforts gathering and recording diverse information about his locality and further afield. According to his biographer, Dr Bertie Charles, Owen “had his books and a zest for delving in them. His reading, though perhaps not remarkable even by the standards of his times, ranged widely…”[1] He corresponded with others, swapping books and sharing information of mutual interest. The fruits of his labours led to widespread recognition as an antiquarian, cartographer, genealogist and topographer; Owen has even been hailed as the father of English geol...
Los Angeles is an unusual place to search for Welsh books and manuscripts. And yet, in the L.A. subu...
“Coed-y-Ffynnon is one of the best built in the district; its roof is of huge oak beams and decorate...
Bachellery Édouard. P. C. Bartrum. Early Welsh Genealogical Tracts. Cardiff, Presses universitaires ...
George Owen (c1552-1613), Lord of Cemais, undoubtedly was one of the most interesting characters of ...
William Scott Owen figured prominently in Montgomeryshire history by being deeply involved with the ...
Translator of the *Welsh Bible and bp. Almost all of the scholars involved in the translation of the...
From the defeat of Llewelyn by Mortimer in 1284 until the union with England in 1536 the Welsh had c...
My dissertation is a palaeographical study of the manuscripts of the works of Gerald of Wales (c. 1...
John Gwenogvryn Evans was an important figure in late nineteenth and early twentieth century Welsh C...
"Transcript of the register book of the barony of Kemeys, Pembrokeshire," p. 47-124.Issued as a supp...
A la fin du Moyen Âge, un nombre croissant de Gallois s'est rendu à l'université d'Oxford. En effet,...
George Perry (c.1718–1771) is known for his involvement in the development of the iron and engineeri...
George Talbot, sixth Earl of Shrewsbury, is infamous among historians and paleographers of sixteenth...
Rylands Irish MS 22 is a copy of Geoffrey Keating’s Trí Biorgaoithe an Bháis (1631), made by the wel...
Abstract: Annie Greenly (née Barnard) is the great woman standing behind Edward Greenly. During his...
Los Angeles is an unusual place to search for Welsh books and manuscripts. And yet, in the L.A. subu...
“Coed-y-Ffynnon is one of the best built in the district; its roof is of huge oak beams and decorate...
Bachellery Édouard. P. C. Bartrum. Early Welsh Genealogical Tracts. Cardiff, Presses universitaires ...
George Owen (c1552-1613), Lord of Cemais, undoubtedly was one of the most interesting characters of ...
William Scott Owen figured prominently in Montgomeryshire history by being deeply involved with the ...
Translator of the *Welsh Bible and bp. Almost all of the scholars involved in the translation of the...
From the defeat of Llewelyn by Mortimer in 1284 until the union with England in 1536 the Welsh had c...
My dissertation is a palaeographical study of the manuscripts of the works of Gerald of Wales (c. 1...
John Gwenogvryn Evans was an important figure in late nineteenth and early twentieth century Welsh C...
"Transcript of the register book of the barony of Kemeys, Pembrokeshire," p. 47-124.Issued as a supp...
A la fin du Moyen Âge, un nombre croissant de Gallois s'est rendu à l'université d'Oxford. En effet,...
George Perry (c.1718–1771) is known for his involvement in the development of the iron and engineeri...
George Talbot, sixth Earl of Shrewsbury, is infamous among historians and paleographers of sixteenth...
Rylands Irish MS 22 is a copy of Geoffrey Keating’s Trí Biorgaoithe an Bháis (1631), made by the wel...
Abstract: Annie Greenly (née Barnard) is the great woman standing behind Edward Greenly. During his...
Los Angeles is an unusual place to search for Welsh books and manuscripts. And yet, in the L.A. subu...
“Coed-y-Ffynnon is one of the best built in the district; its roof is of huge oak beams and decorate...
Bachellery Édouard. P. C. Bartrum. Early Welsh Genealogical Tracts. Cardiff, Presses universitaires ...