• The Gododdin (. Welsh pronunciation: [ɡɔˈdɔðɪn]) were a Brittonic people of north-eastern Britannia, the area known as the Hen Ogledd or Old North...
  • Y Gododdin is an Early Welsh Poem on the Battle of Catraeth. It is the earliest surviving Welsh/Brythonic/Brittonic poem.
  • While song lasts, Hyfaidd Hir will be praised. VI Men went to Gododdin, laughter-loving, Bitter in battle, each blade in line. A brief year they were quiet, in peace.
  • Y Gododdin is composed of a series of elegies, lamenting the fallen heroes who fought valiantly but were ultimately overwhelmed by the opposing forces.
  • 600 civarında Gododdin , Açılı kalesi Catraeth'e , belki de Catterick, Kuzey Yorkshire'a saldırmak için yaklaşık 300 kişilik bir kuvvet topladı .
  • It is a series of elegies for the men of the Gododdin, who died at a battle in Catraeth — now thought to be Catterick in Yorkshire — around the year 600.
  • Y Gododdin is a medieval poem in Welsh. It consists of a series of elegies to the men of the kingdom of Gododdin and their allies who died fighting...
  • Scottish piper Jimi McRae recites a passage in 'Old Welsh' from the Gododdin, ''the oldest Scottish poem'' according to one distinguished academic and possib...
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  • The Gododdin was actually composed as a memorial to the tribe of the same name that was based in what is now the south east of Scotland.
  • The Gododdin does not relate, in the land of Mordai, Before the tents of Madawg, when he returned, Of but one man in a hundred that came back.