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Hugh Derfel Hughes

Hugh Derfel Hughes, of Pendinas, ILandegai^ who has been kind enough to give me the version, of which I here give the substance in English, premising that Mr

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Hugh Derfel Hughes, of Pendinas, ILandegai^ who has been kind enough to give me the version, of which I here give the substance in English, premising that Mr (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter I: Undine's Kymric Sisters)

Derfel Hughes in his Antiquilies of ILandegai and ILanitechid, pp (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter VIII: Welsh Cave Legends)

That is the tradition which Derfel Hughes found in the vale of the Ogwen, and he draws from it the inference which it seems to warrant, in words to the following effect:— Perhaps this shows us that th (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter VIII: Welsh Cave Legends)

Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx

  • attestation: Hugh Derfel Hughes, of Pendinas, ILandegai^ who has been kind enough to give me the version, of which I here give the substance in English, premising that Mr (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter I: Undine's Kymric Sisters)

    "Hugh Derfel Hughes, of Pendinas, ILandegai^ who has been kind enough to give me the version, of which I here give the substance in English, premising that Mr."

  • attestation: Derfel Hughes in his Antiquilies of ILandegai and ILanitechid, pp (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter VIII: Welsh Cave Legends)

    "Derfel Hughes in his Antiquilies of ILandegai and ILanitechid, pp. 35-6, to the effect that a servant man, somewhere up among the mountains near Ogwen Lake, chanced to come across the mouth of a cave with abundance of vessels of brass {pres) of every shape and description within it."

  • attestation: That is the tradition which Derfel Hughes found in the vale of the Ogwen, and he draws from it the inference which it seems to warrant, in words to the following effect:— Perhaps this shows us that th (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter VIII: Welsh Cave Legends)

    "That is the tradition which Derfel Hughes found in the vale of the Ogwen, and he draws from it the inference which it seems to warrant, in words to the following effect:— Perhaps this shows us that the Gwydyl had some time or other something to do with these parts, and that we are not to regard as stories without foundations all that is said of that nation; and the sayings of old people to this day show that there is always some spite between our nation and the Gwydyl."