Posted on 12/04/2023 3:09:37 PM PST by CheshireTheCat
On this date in 1531, a Welsh nobleman whose grandfather had been instrumental in raising the Tudor dynasty up caught the downswing of the Tudor dynasty’s axe.
Gruffydd ap Rhys ap Thomas (“son of Rhys, son of Thomas”) was the Welsh patriarch of an illustrious house who had taken the Lancastrian side during the English Wars of the Roses.
When the Lancastrians lost, he took the necessary oaths to the likes of Richard III but his reputed promise to defend Wales for his king with such ferocity that an invader must needs “make his entrance and irruption over my belly” was discharged in a ceremony equally literary and lawyerly — when he stood under a bridge while his invading ally, the Welsh-descended Henry Tudor, marched over it.....
(Excerpt) Read more at executedtoday.com ...
Rhys ap Gruffydd
paraphrasing Howard Stern: Why not just call him Welshy Welshman?
A couple of yrs ago I learned my maternal great-grandparents were most likely 100% Welsh. My Ancestry report says I have 19% Welsh DNA, so I’ve since become interested in exploring Welsh history. It’s such a unique and mysterious country. Thanks for this post.
Thanks CheshireTheCat.
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