Germanus
I have not succeeded in finding the story in any of the lives of St, Germanus, but Nennius, § 32, mentions a certain BenH, whom he describes as rex iniquus atque fyramtus valde, who, after refusing to
I have not succeeded in finding the story in any of the lives of St, Germanus, but Nennius, § 32, mentions a certain BenH, whom he describes as rex iniquus atque fyramtus valde, who, after refusing to (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter VII: Triumphs of the Water-world)
Germanus and his following into his city, was destroyed with all his courtiers, not by water, however, but by fire from heaven (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter VII: Triumphs of the Water-world)
Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx
- attestation: I have not succeeded in finding the story in any of the lives of St, Germanus, but Nennius, § 32, mentions a certain BenH, whom he describes as rex iniquus atque fyramtus valde, who, after refusing to (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter VII: Triumphs of the Water-world)
"I have not succeeded in finding the story in any of the lives of St, Germanus, but Nennius, § 32, mentions a certain BenH, whom he describes as rex iniquus atque fyramtus valde, who, after refusing to admit St."
- attestation: Germanus and his following into his city, was destroyed with all his courtiers, not by water, however, but by fire from heaven (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter VII: Triumphs of the Water-world)
"Germanus and his following into his city, was destroyed with all his courtiers, not by water, however, but by fire from heaven."