Kingdom Of Powys

The Kingdom of Powys was one of several kingdoms that ruled a part of modern Wales. In its earliest periods, its boundaries extended to the east and south to include parts of modern Shropshire and Worcestershire that are part of the valleys of the Severn and Tern rivers. This region is referred to in later Welsh literature as "the Paradise of Powys". At some point in the 6th or 7th centuries, the Mercian kings conquered the easternmost parts of Powys. King Offa made this conquest permanent by ordering the construction of Offa's Dyke. Powys suffered from repeated Anglo-Saxon raids in the following centuries. The kingdom of Powys came to an end when Merfyn Frych, king of Gwynedd married Nest, the sister of king Cyngen; on the death of Cyngen in 855, their son Rhodri inherited the title to the kingdom, and it was thenceforth ruled as part of Gwynedd. Powys was recreated as a kingdom in 1075 to provide a domain and title for a junior branch of the kings of Gwynedd, who sometimes held both lands themselves. Powys, Kingdom of Powys

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
yatesboro, pennsylvania
baker international
christchurch international airport
the vicar of wakefield
meridian (astronomy)
meridian (geography)
list of german rulers in 1878
hughes tool company
axel mller
the three sisters (play)
louise d'epinay
brad davis (basketball player)
flatcat
zhao mausoleum
brad davis
allan donald
european parliament election, 1984 (uk)
mummy's boy
henri rochefort
pygmy projects
lake aschersleben
polynomially reflexive space
saint paul pioneer press
hard eight
sorosuub
milchem
fort greene park
upminster station
james oliver curwood
western atlas
pierre fatou
curwood castle
dresser atlas
john rutter
plans and interiors of mentmore
jonathan wells
evelyn lincoln
vietnam syndrome
nicholas browne wilkinson
bigfoot (truck)
carnosine
itb
city of canterbury
ras syndrome