Dafydd Penmachno Goch or
Dafydd ap Dafydd
ap Gruffudd is said in some
genealogical sources to be the illegitimate and
only surviving son of
Dafydd III the last
free
Welsh Prince of Wales (December
1282 - June
1283).
Dafydd ap Gruffudd was married to
Elizabeth Ferrers and is known to have had
two legitimate sons (
Llywelyn and
Owain) and one legitimate daughter,
Gwladys.
The two sons died
imprisoned at Bristol
Castle
while Gwladys spent her days as a prisoner in all
but name at Sixhills Convent in Lincolnshire
. Dafydd is also reported to have had seven
illegitimate daughters whose fates are unknown.
Little is known of the life of Dafydd Goch. It could be presumed
from his epithet
Goch - meaning "red" in
Welsh - that he was either born with red hair
or that his life was associated with blood or violence. His mother
is in genealogical sources said to be Tangwystl ferch Owain Fflam,
an unknown Welsh woman. He took a wife called Angharad ferch
Heilyn.
His son,
Gruffudd ap Dafydd Goch, who
died c.1365 is buried at the church of Betws-y-Coed
where there is a stone effigy in his honour that
details his genealogy. He also had a daughter, Gwenllian, who
married Gruffudd ap Iorwerth, hereditary baron of Edeirnion and an
ancestor of the Hughes of Gwerclas family (see: Powys Fadog
).
Gruffudd ap Dafydd Goch is reported to have had a son called
Gruffudd Fychan ap
Gruffudd who had a son himself called
Gruffudd Leiaf who was a poet and an
englyn written by him is found in
Cwrtmawr. This Gruffudd is recorded in the sources
as having a son called
Ieuan ap
Gruffudd Leiaf who was also a poet. Some examples of his work
remain in manuscript, including
cywyddau and
awdlau to members of the
Penrhyn and
Nanconwy families, vaticinatory and religious
poems, a poem on
Aberconwy, a
satire on the
Llugwy river for hindering the
poet while journeying to Penrhyn, and a short bardic controversy,
or
ymryson, composed between the poet
Guto'r Glyn and himself.
"Syr"
SiƓn Leiaf is recorded as
being one of the sons, alongside
Robert
Leiaf, of Gruffudd Leiaf (ap Gruffudd Fychan ap Gruffudd ap
Dafydd Goch ap Dafydd ap Gruffudd ap
Llywelyn Fawr). Nothing is known of his life
apart from him being a cleric and another poet. A number of his
poems remain in manuscript. These include two religious poems, one
being a confession and the other a poem on the vernicle, a poem in
praise of
Richard Kyffin, dean of
Bangor, a love poem, and another to the owl. He died c.
1480.
It is
possible that his descendants and those of his male relatives - if
they survive - represent a direct surviving branch of the House of Aberffraw and would therefore be
claimants to the long dormant throne of Gwynedd
. It would also make them rivals to the claims
(now extinct) made by John Wynn and the
Lords of Gwydyr
.
However, under Welsh Law an illegitimate son must first be
acknowledged by his father to have any claim of inheritance, and of
this there is no known record.
References
- J. Beverley Smith, Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, 1998, p.
578
- Chronicles Edward I and Edward II, i, 90
- [274866]
- [274867]
- [274868]
- Mostyn MS. 129 (220)
- Gwysaney MS. 25 (196)
- Cardiff MSS. 7 (766), 47 (197)
- Llanst. MS. 125 (151)
- Pen. MS. 76 (136)