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628 An Account of St. David.
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
A Sketch Of The State Of Christianity In...
where their opponents could not engage them but at great odds and manifest disadvantage * Pelagianisrsi was , at last , borne down , or rather _^ its adherents became an obscure _^ private , and as it were an invisible sect , existing chiefly among the bards or druids of Siluria .
The new or catholic faith , in the mean time . Icent _ranirllv 1 he new or catholic faith ,, in the mean time , kept rapidly gaining ground , and soon became firmly established by means of increasing numbers of active and zealous teachers , educated at the numerous seminaries that existed in different parts of the country . Of those seminaries some of the chief were those of Henllan and Mochros _, situated somewhere about the banks of the Wye , and under the direction of Dyfrig _, or Dubricius _^ who had sometimes no less than a thousand scholars . At
Caerworgorn also , or _Llan-Illtyd-Vawr _, in Glamorgan , was another very notable college , where Illtyd , or _Iltutus presided . [ Here indeed is said to have been a still more ancient college , called Cor Tezvdws _, or the choir of Theodosius _, from the Roman emperor of that name , its reputed founder _^ and whom the Bri tons , it seems , called _Tewdws _* . ] 'At Llancarvafi also / not far from _Caertoorgorn , was established another college , which acquired _# o small celebrity under the care of Catwg , or Cadog the Wise ,
as he is sometimes called . At Tygwyn _^ or _lr _hitland on the T _& _v , in Dyved , was another celebrated college , founded by Pawl H _£ n , or Paulinus , who placed at the head of it two learned brothers , ViewynandGredivel , the sons of _. Itbelhael , or Tthel the generous . Here David and Teilo are said to have studied many years . To these colleges maybe added those of Bangor in Flintshire , and Banger in Caernarvonshire . Also that of
? The college of _Caerworgorn , or Cor Tewdws was founded , it seems , by Cystennyn JLlydaw , or Cystennyn ab Cynvor , ( surnamed the bhsudj king of Siluria , and grandfather of king Arthur , under the auspices and direction of the emperor Th « odo ius , in whose time Britain was still a part of the Roman empire . We arc told that the new college was regulated by a Roman , of the name of Balerus , appointed perhaps by the emperor for that purpose , and that _Fadrigab Mawon , or , Padrig Maenioyn of _Gewcrland , was the president or principal of it . The Irish
invading Wales in the meantime , and over-running Glamorgan * earned Padng off - with them to their own country , where _fye exerted himself in the _conversion of the inhabitants , and has been ever since greatly celebrated under the name of Saint Vatt _ick ' _^ the apostle of Ireland Being himself a learned man , he is . supposed to have been an eminent instrument in enlightening and civilizing the Irish , as well as in _laying the foundation of that ancient character of that island , as the seat of
learning , which it is known long to have borne . Hi & captivation by those Irish invaders is mentioned in an ancient British record , calkd the _Gintal _^ y tft _ht British Sa ints , smd the truth of it is corroborated by the remarkable fact in the history of Wales , _th « it the _Irif-h succeeded in settling ; themselves along nearly the whole extent of its _coa-t in the beginning of the 5 th century , and continued there till nearly the middle of the same era , when _theyvverc entirely expelled by the natives under the conduct of _Uxieijj _Cvedig _, and x _> thcr able _leader * . Vid . Owen ' s Cambrian _Biag . art . _Piidii _^ . ...
628 An Account Of St. David.
628 An Account of St . David .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1807, page 628, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/mrp_02121807/page/8/
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