Bryn Twrw
Bryn Twrw — being in celtic tradition.
2 citations1 sources1 traditions6 relationships
Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx
- relationship: But one day as they went to one of the fields of Bryn Twrw in the direction of Pennard Gron, to catch a pony, the fairy wife, being so much nimbler than her husband, ran before him and had her hand in (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter I: Undine's Kymric Sisters)
"But one day as they went to one of the fields of Bryn Twrw in the direction of Pennard Gron, to catch a pony, the fairy wife, being so much nimbler than her husband, ran before him and had her hand in the pony's mane in no time."
- relationship: sighing and weeping towards Bryn Twrw, "Noise Hill," and when he had reached it, the twrw, " noise," there was greater than had ever been heard before, namely that of weeping after "Belene"; and it wa (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter I: Undine's Kymric Sisters)
"sighing and weeping towards Bryn Twrw, "Noise Hill," and when he had reached it, the twrw, " noise," there was greater than had ever been heard before, namely that of weeping after "Belene"; and it was then, after he had struck her with iron, that he first learnt what his wife's name was."