Aneurin – Aneirin (Goddodin)

Material from W.H. Burnett’s Old Cleveland – Local Writers and Local Worthies.

William Hall Burnett in Middlesbrough 1886 says “We may fairly claim that hereabouts English Literature had its first beginning.” He begins with Aneirin and Y Gododdin (spellings vary in different texts)

This is Robin Williamson’s reading of Y Gododdin, from his album, Five Legendary Histories of Britain.
600AD

“Aneirin [aˈnɛirɪn] or Neirin was an early Medieval Brythonic poet. He is believed to have been a bard or court poet in one of the Cumbric kingdoms of the Old North or Hen Ogledd, probably that of Gododdin at Edinburgh, in modern Scotland. From the 17th century, his name was often incorrectly spelled “Aneurin”.” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aneirin William Hall Burnett spells it the incorrect way here.

William Hall Burnettpoet and editor of the Middlesbrough Daily Exchange – wrote, in his book Old Cleveland – Local Writers and Local Worthies in 1886 on the subject of the Celtic bard Aneurin – (Alternatively spelt Ane


The warrior bard, Aneurin, must, in the old Celtic days have been resident within this immediate district, so that we may fairly claim that hereabouts English Literature had its first beginning. It is a least a fair conjecture that the first of English epic poems were strung together, line by line and verse by verse by a bard who, wandering amongst the valleys of the Swale, might now and again visit the fair plain of Cleveland in the golden east. To Aneurin is ascribed the important fragment of celtic literature, The Gododin, being a lament for the dead who fell in the battle of Cattraeth, identified with Catterick in Yorkshire, where Cymry met the advancing and invading Teutons at the ‘confluence of rivers’ and fought with them unsuccessfully for seven days….

Also from W H Burnett

This is where the Cymry met the advancing and invading Teutons at the ‘confluence of rivers’ and fought with them unsuccessfully for seven days, being at length worsted with fearful slaughter. Of this battle The Gododin tells us –

“The warriors marched to Cattraeth with the day;
In the stillness of night they had quaffed the white mead;
They were wretched, though prophesied glory and sway
Had winged ambition. Were none there to lead
To Cattreath with loftier hope in their speed?
Secure in their boast, they would scatter the host
Bold standard in hand; no other such band
Went from Eiddin as this, that would rescue the land
From the troops of the ravagers. Far from the sight
of home that was dear to them, ere they too perished,
Tudvwlch Hir Slew the Saxons in seven days fight,
He owed not the freedom of life to his might,
but dear is his memory where he was cherished,
When Tudvwlch amain came to that post to maintain,
By the son of Kilydd, the blood covered the plain.”


The pdf contains excerpts from the Y Gododdin but below is a link to the full text online.

PDF Click the arrow to enlarge and read or download free.

Read the poem here http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/9842?msg=welcome_stranger

Wiki https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Y_Gododdin

I’m not sure where I sourced this from in 2005 when I did the original post but it’s interesting –
Gododin

The vulgar opinion is
that the Britons lost the battle in consequence of having marched to
the field in a state of intoxication; and it must be admitted that
there are many passages in the Poem, which, simply considered, would
seem to favour that view.  Nevertheless, granting that the 363
chieftains had indulged too freely in their favourite beverage, it is
hardly credible that the bulk of the army, on which mainly depended
the destiny of the battle, had the same opportunity of rendering
themselves equally incapacitated, or, if we suppose that all had
become so, that they did not recover their sobriety in seven days! 
The fact appears to be, that Aneurin in the instances alluded to,
intends merely to contrast the social and festive habits of his
countrymen at home with their lives of toil and privation in war,
after a practise common to the Bards, not only of that age, but
subsequently.  Or it may be that the banquet, at which the
British leaders were undoubtedly entertained in the hall of Eiddin,
was looked upon as the sure prelude to war, and that in that sense
the mead and wine were to them as poison.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *