The Celtic tribes in ancient Wales

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The actuality of the work is subject to the growing interest to Celtic culture. But the Welsh celts are shown not so much attention because they are not known so much about as Irish or Scottish Celts.
The research done in this work shows the diversity of cultures of Celts in different countries and describes Celtic way if life.
The method used in course paper is comparison with other Celtic cultures.
The subject of the study is Celtic history and culture, the difference between Welsh Celts and the Celts in other countries.

Содержание

Introduction 4
Part I. Life of the Celts 5
1.1. The first Celts in Wales 6
1.2. Farmling 7
1.3. Celtic family life 7
1.4. Housing 8
1.5. Welsh gold 8
1.6. Fortification 8
1.7. Language 10
1.8. Religion 11
1.9. Society 12
1.10. Women 15
1.11. Druids 15
1.12 The celts at war 16
1.13. Celtic appearance and art 17
Summary 19
Part II. Welsh mythology 22
Part III. Modern Celts 25
Summary 34
Conclusion 335
Appendix I 36
APPENDIX II 50
LITERATURE 51

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These claims to Celticity are rooted in the historical existence of Celts in these regions. [http://www.uwm.edu/Dept/celtic/ekeltoi/volumes/vol6/6_5/alvarez_sanchis_6_5.pdf] [[http://www.uwm.edu/Dept/celtic/ekeltoi/volumes/vol6/6_15/garcia_alonso_6_15.pdf PaleoHispania ] ] (see Celtiberians and Castro culture).

Elements of Celtic music, dance, and folklore can be found within England (eg. Yan Tan Tethera), and the Cumbric language survived until the collapse of the Kingdom of Strathclyde in about 1018. [Fischer, S. R., "History of Language", Reaktion Books, 2004, p. 118] England as a whole comprises many distinct regions, and some of these regions, such as Cumbria, [ [http://www.celticcumbria.co.uk Page Title ] ]Lancashire, and Devon Fact|date=August 2007, claim more Celtic heritage than others. Notably, although modern Cumbria has similar borders to the older kingdom of Rheged, it is an amalgation of Cumberland, Westmorland, Lancashire and part of the West Riding of Yorkshire, and many Cumbrians still identify first with these older countiesFact|date=August 2008.

Migration from Celtic countries

No treatment of modern Celticity would be complete without mentioning the migrations of people from Celtic countries. A very large portion of the populations of the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand is composed of people from Ireland, Britain, Brittany and the Isle of Man; and Jamaica, Barbados, Montserrat, Saint-Barthélemy, Venezuela, Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, and Chile have also experienced large-scale migration from these lands at various times.

There are three areas outside Europe with communities of traditional Celtic language speakers: the province of Chubut in Patagonia with Welsh-speaking Argentinians (known as "Y Wladfa"), Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia with Scottish Gaelic-speaking Canadians, and southeast Newfoundland with Irish-speaking Canadians.

While no Celtic-identified immigrant group is currently pursuing independence or other nationalist goals, Celtic-identified people have played critical roles in each societies' movements for independence from the larger empires to which they were formerly attached – for example, the most common mother-tongue amongst the Fathers of Confederation which saw the formation of Canada was Gaelic. Gaelic most common mother-tongue among Fathers of Confederation. Today, Celticity throughout the world is generally presented as a culturalidentity (as opposed to nationalist, but with a racial or ethnic base), and is experiencing a major revival. There is a movement in Cape Breton for a separate province in Canada, as espoused by the Cape Breton Labour Party and others.

Since the 1960s, there has been a very considerable growth of interest and enthusiasm in their Celtic heritage on the part of such people. Certain areas outside of the identified Celtic nations have particularly strong associations with these various identities: the Yorke Peninsula, South Australia, with Cornish Australians; Liverpool and Manchester with the Welsh and Irish people in England; Jesus College, Oxford with Welsh students; South Boston or the South Side of Chicago with Irish Americans; and certain arrondissements ofParis with Breton Parisians.

Simultaneously, in some former British colonies, or particular regions within them, the term Anglo-Celtic has emerged as a descriptor of an ethnic grouping. In particular, Anglo-Celtic Australian is a term commonly used in academic circles in Australia; it refers to at least 80% of the population. "Anglo-Celtic" can be interpreted as either an affirmation of both Celtic and Anglo-Saxon cultures, or a rejection of the notion that they are separate and distinct. It is not necessarily accepted by all of the people to which it is applied.

Criticism of modern Celticism

John Collis of the University of Sheffield has argued that the idea of a 'Celtic' culture in the British Isles was invented entirely by early modern authors, primarily by Edward Lhuyd, and then re-born by modern day nationalists. In Ireland, it has been shown that only around a quarter of the island contains significant archaeological evidence of the Iron Age culture typically identified as 'Celtic'.

Among Insular Celtic groups, while there is strong evidence for linkages between Insular and Continental Celts, earlier assumptions that the Atlantic Celts must be the descendants of an "invasion" of Continental Celts have largely been proven false. This finding has led some, including Richard Wagner of the Irish Institute, to assert that the Atlantic Celts are "not Celts at all Wagner associates Celticity with a "gene pool" when he claims that "the Celts" were "warrior-adventurers whose influence and effect far outweighed their numbers, but who are most unlikely to have a significant or measurable effect on the Irish gene pool".

Religion

Modern Celts are divided fairly evenly between Protestants and Roman Catholics. About 75% of the population of the island of Ireland isRoman Catholic, as are nearly all Bretons, but the majority of the Scots, Welsh, Cornish and Manx are Protestant. In Scotland, there is a substantial Roman Catholic minority, estimated as 16% in the 2001 Census, mainly in areas with recent Irish immigration, but also in some Gaelic speaking areas such as South Uist and Barra. The Archbishop of Canterbury (and Primate of All England), Dr Rowan Williams, is a Welsh speaking Welshman, whilst the Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster, Cormac Murphy O'Connor, is of Irish parentage.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Summary

 

 

The development of Celtic culture in Wales was formerly identified with the arrival in the country of Celtic colonists, who brought with them not only a language and customs which had developed in continental Europe, but also the secret of ironworking. Their possession of this latest step in human technology enabled them to achieve dominance over the already established inhabitants. Since the abandonment of the invasion theory, this rather neat explanation has had to be reconsidered and a somewhat more complex picture emerges.

The language, or languages, that they spoke belonged to the Indo-European family, as did Greek, Latin and the later Germanic tongues. There were a number of resemblances between it and the Italic group, though whether these were caused by two sets of language speakers living in contiguity with each other, rather than any kind of joint descent from a single ancestral Indo-European language, is a matter for speculation. By around 1000 BC early forms of the Celtic speech had evolved, and by 600 BC were being spoken in the Iberian Peninsula, in Ireland, and in North Italy.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Conclusion

 

The undertaken research resulted in the following conclusions:

 

  1. The development of Celtic culture in Wales was formerly identified with the arrival in the country of Celtic colonists.

 

  1. The language, or languages, that they spoke belonged to the Indo-European family, as did Greek, Latin and the later Germanic tongues.

 

  1. The Welsh of today are more likely to owe their physiognomy, if not their culture, to the Beaker People rather than the later Celts.

 

The possible prospects of further research include deeper  studying of modern Celtic culture and the language differences between the Celts of Wales and other countries.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Appendix I

 

Nowadays we can find the Celtic female names. They are:

.Aberfa — "from the mouth of the river".  
Abertha — from a word meaning "sacrifice".  
Adain — from a Welsh word meaning "winged".  
Adara — "catches birds".  
Addfwyn — from a word meaning "meek".  
Addiena — "beautiful". Addien.  
Adyna — "wretched".  
Aelwyd — from words meaning "from the hearth".  
Aeron — Welsh name borne in early Celtic mythology by the goddess of battle and slaughter, Agrona. Probably a derivative of modern Welsh aer "battle". Also possibly selected for vocabulary word aeron "fruit, berries". Aeronwy, Aeronwen are also common.  
Amser — "time".  
Angharad — (ahng-HAHR-ahd) "greatly loved one"; from Welsh/Old Celtic prefix an- + the root car "love" + the noun suffix -ad. Popular in the Middle Ages. Anghard.  
Anna — name of one of King Arthur's sisters.  
Annwyl — Welsh, from the vocabulary work annwyl "beloved". Anwyl.  
Argel — "refuge".  
Arglwyddes — from a word meaning "lady".  
Argoel — "omen".  
Argraff — from a word meaning "impression".  
Arial — "vigorous".  
Ariana — "silvery"; variant of Arionrhod. Arian.  
Arianell — (ah-ree-AHN-elh) from Welsh arian "silver".  
Ariene — "silvery".  
Aranrhod — possibly composed of Old Celtic elements meaning "huge, round, humped" + "wheel". Arianrhod, Arionrhod.  
Arianrhod — (ah-ree-AHN-rhod) from Welsh arian "silver" + rhod "wheel, circle, orbit". In the Mabinogi*, Arianrhod verch* Don was the mother of Dylan eil Ton and Llew Llaw Gyffes. Arionrhod, Aranrhod (ah-RAHN-rhod).  
Arianwen — (ah-RAHN-wen) Fr. Welsh arian "silver" + (g)wen "white, fair, blessed, shining, holy". Aranwen (ah-ree-AHN-wen).  
Arlais — "from the temple". Artaith.  
Armes — from a word meaning "prophetess".  
Arthes — "she-bear"; feminine form of Artur.  
Arwydd — "sign".  
Asgre — from a word meaning "heart".  
Auron — (AYR-on) Fr. Welsh aur "gold" + -on, "a divine ending". Euron.  
Avenable — a girl in the Merlin legends, she took the covering name of Grisandole and disguised herself as a squire to find work in the Emperor of Rome's court. She was sent to Merlin, who lived in the woods, to discover the meaning of a dream the Emperor had. Merlin interpreted the dream, and also revealed the squire was a woman; she later married the Emperor.

Banon — from a word meaning "queen".  
Berth — "beautiful".  
Berthog — "wealthy".  
Bethan — (BETH-ahn) "consecrated to God"'; Welsh version of Elizabeth. Bet, Beti, Betsan, Betsi.  
Blanchfleur — name of Perceval's sister, who was a healer.  
Blodeuwedd — (BLOD-eh-weth or blod-AY-weth) from Welsh blodau "flowers" + gwedd "appearance, form". In Mabinogi, she was the wife of Llew Llaw Gyffes. Magicians Gwydion an Math made her out of the flowers of oak, broom and meadow-sweet, and changed her into an owl when she refused to do their bidding. Blanceflor.  
Blodwen — (BLOD-wen) from blodyn "flower" + gwen "shining, holy". Blodwen is a classic girl's name. Blodwyn, Blodwin.  
Braith — "freckled"; related to Celtic word brec.  
Brandgaine — maid to Isolde (sometimes called Iseult); she administered the love potion that bound Tristan and Isolde together forever.  
Branwen — (BRAN-wen or BRAN-oo-wen) "white bosomed," or "a girl with black hair and white skin"; from Welsh bran "crow" + gwen "shining, holy". In Mabinogi, Branwen is Bran's sister. They are male and female aspects of the Celtic war deity. Popular name in Wales. Brangwen, Bronwen (BRON-wen or BRON-oo-wen).  
Bregus — "frail".  
Briallen — (bree-AHL-en) from Welsh briallu "primrose".  
Brisen — a great enchantress who brought about the birth of Galahad by drugging Sir Lancelot and told him that Elaine was actually Guinevere.  
Bronwen — (BRON-wen) from Welsh bron "breast" + gwen "shining, holy"; also a variant of Branwen. Bronwyn.  
Buddug — "victory"; Welsh version of Victoria.  
Brynn — (BRIN) "hill".

Cadwyn — "bright chain".  
Caethes — from a word meaning "slave".  
Cafell — "oracle".  
Canaid — from a word meaning "song".  
Cari — (KAHR-ee) Fr. Welsh caru "to love"; possibly also "friend" or a form of Caroline. Caryl (KAHR-il); Carys (KAHR-ees).  
Caron — "loving or kind-hearted".  
Carys — variant of Cari. Caris, Cerys.  
Cate — short form of Catrin; form of C/Katherine; also used as an alternative to Kate.  
Cath — "cat".  
Catrin — (KAHT-reen) "pure"; Welsh form of C/Katherine. Catrin of Berain (1534-1591) was called Mother of Wales because she had so many important descendants. Nicknames: Cati (KAHT-ee); Cadi (KAHD-ee).  
Celemon — name of the daughter of Kei in Welsh tales. Kelemon.  
Ceri — (KER-ee) Name of two rivers, one in Dyfed and on in Glamorgan. May come from Welsh caru "to love".  
Ceridwen — (ker-ID-wen) Poss. from Welsh cerdd "song" + gwen "shining, holy"; or cariad "beloved" + gwen "shining, holy". Ceridwen was a powerful sorceress in the tale of Taliesin. Caridwen, Cerridwen, Cierdwyn.  
Cerwen — (KER-wen) possibly means "black" or "white".  
Cigfa — daughter of Gwyn Gohoyw and the royal line of Casnar Wledig; and married to Pryderi. Kigva is the legendary name of the wife of Partholon's son.  
Clarisant — a name mentioned in the Arthurian legends as the name of Gawain's sister. Clarisse.  
Cordelia — variant of Creiddylad.  
Corsen — "reed".  
Cragen — from a word meaning "shell".  
Creiddylad — daughter of Lludd Llaw Ereint; eloped with Gwythyr ap Greidawl, but was kidnapped by Gwynn ap Nudd and takend to the Underworld. Creudylad, Cordelia.  
Creirwy — daughter of the goddess Ceridwen; Welsh Triads call her one of the three beautiful maids of Britain.  
Cymreiges — "a woman of Wales".

Daron — (DAHR-on) from Welsh dar "oak" + -on, "divine ending". Name of an oak goddess and a river in Caernarvonshire.  
Dee — "dark or black sorrow". Dea, Deea, Du, Delia.  
Del — (DEL, DEL-ith) from Welsh del "pretty". Delyth (DEL-ith).  
Dera — from words meaning "wild spirit" or "fiend". Daere.  
Derwen — "from the oak tree"; may be related to the Celtic word druid.  
Deryn — "bird". Derrine, Derren, Deryne.  
Deverell — "from the riverbank".  
Dicra — from a word meaning "slow".  
Dierdre — Welsh spelling of Deirdre, "sorrow".  
Difyr — "amusing".  
Dilys — (DIL-ees) from Welsh dilys "genuine" or "true". Popular name originated in 19th C.  
Don — (DOHN-ah) Name of a mother goddess in Welsh mythology, similar to Irish Danu. Celtic root of her name shows up in river names across Europe, including the Danube and the Don. Donn, Dona (DOHN-ah).  
Druantia — a Celtic goddess known as Mother of the Tree Calendar and Queen of the Druids.  
Drysi — "thorn".  
Dwyn — from Welsh dwyn "pleasant, agreeable" + gwen "shining, holy". St. Dwynwen of the 5th C. was prayed to either for help finding sweethearts or help in becoming indifferent to them afterwards. Dwynwen(DWIN-wen).  
Dylis — from a word meaning "sincere". Dyllis.

Ebrill — "April" or "one born in April".  
Efa — Welsh version of Eve, "life".  
Eheubryd — a legendary name belonging to the daughter of Kyvwich.  
Eira — (AY-rah) from Welsh eira "snow". Eiry (AY-ree).  
Eirianwen — (ayr-YAHN-wen) from Welsh eirian "splendid, bright, fair" + gwen "shining, holy".  
Eiriol — (AYR-yol) from Welsh eira "snow". Eirlys (AYR-lees). Both are names or the flower "snowdrop".  
Elaine — known as the Lady of Shallot in literature; and Elaine of Corbenic and Elaine de Astolat in Arthurian legend. Elaine de Astolat, "The White", fell in love with Lancelot and died when he did not return her love.  
Elen — Welsh form of Helen, "light".  
Eleri — (el-AYR-ee) Poss. derived from Welsh el- "greatly, much" + geri "bitter". Name of a river in Ceredigion and a 5th C. saint.  
Ellylw — legendary name belonging to the daughter of Neol Hang Cock.  
Eluned — (el-EEN-ed) from Welsh -el "greatly, much" + (i)uned "wish, desire". Luned was a handmaiden of the Lady of the Fountain in the Welsh Arthurian romance Owein. She had a magic ring that made the wearer invisible-one of the Thirteen Treasures of the Island of Britain. Eluned's beauty and intelligence were legendary. Luned (LEEN-ed).  
Eneuawy — legendary name, and the name of the daughter of Bedwyr.  
Enfys — (EN-vees) Welsh word for "rainbow", and currently popular.  
Enid — (EE-nid) from a word meaning "sould, life, or spirit". From Breton Bro Wened, a territory corresponding to the are around modern-day Vannes in Brittany. Enid cerch Niwl Iarll (Daughter of the Earl of the Mist) is the heroine of a Welsh Arthurian romance, Geraint mab Erbin. May have originally been a Celtic goddess of sovereignty, an embodiment of the land, to whom the true king must be symbolically married. Enit.  
Enrhydreg — daughter of Tuduathar of Welsh legends.  
Epona — known to all Celts as the Divine Horse and Great Mare, she was a goddess associated with horses, their breeding, adn all warriors who used horses.  
Erdudvyl — daughter of Tryffin of Welsh tales.  
Eres — "wonderful".  
Essyllt — (ES-ilht) possibly from British adsiltia "she who is gazed at". Another form of Isolde, the tragic heroine of the Tristan saga. Esyld, Esyllt.  
Eurneid — daughter of Clydno in Welsh tales.  
Eurolwyn — daughter of Gwydolwyn in Welsh legends.  
Eyslk — "fair".

Ffanci — Welsh version of Fancy.  
Ffion — (FEE-on) from ffion "foxglove". Ffiona (fee-OH-nah).  
Fflur — (FLEER) from the Welsh word for "flower". In legend, Julius Caesar kidnapped her from Britain and took her to Rome. Her beloved Caswallon, disguised as a shoemaker, followed and won her back.  
Ffraid — (FRAYD) Welsh form of Brigid, the Irish saint.

Gaenor — (GAY-nor) form of Gwenhwyfar or Guinevere; popular in 19th and 20th C.'s. Gaynor.  
Ganieda — sometimes called Gwenddydd, said to live in the forest and give prophecies; possibly the sister of Merlin.  
Garan — "stork".  
Genevieve — (prob. fr. Celt) possibly a variant of Guinevere.  
Gladys — (GLAH-dis) from Welsh gwlad "land, nation, sovereignty". Gwladys (goo-LAH-dis).  
Glenna — "from the valley or glen".  
Glenys — (GLEN-is) from Welsh glan "riverbank, shore". Glan, Ghleanna (Irish Gaelic).  
Glynis — (GLIN-is) "one who lives in the glen or valley"; from Welsh glyn "valley"; feminine form of Glyn. Glynys.  
Goewin — fabled name of the daughter of Pebin; she was the virgin footholder for King Math until she was raped by Gilfaethwy. Math married her to erase her disgrace.  
Goleuddydd — "bright day"; listed as the mother of Culhwch in Welsh stories.  
Gorawen — "joy".  
Guinevere — "fair one"; a variant spelling of Gwenhwyfar; in Arthurian legend, the daughter of Leodegrance of Cameliard, and the wife of King Arthur. She was found guilty of adultery and banished to the Amesbury monastery in Malory's story. Modern variants Guenevere, Gwenevere.  
Gwaeddan — name of the daughter of Kynvelyn in Welsh tales.  
Gwanwyn — "spring".  
Gwawr — (GWOWR) Welsh word for "dawn". Popular in recent years.  
Gwen — (GWEN) "perception or discovery of the meaning of the light of the Otherworld"; from Welsh gwen, gwyn "white, shining, holy". Also a shortened form of Guinivere. Gwyn (GWIN).  
Gwenda — (GWEN-dah) from Welsh gwen "shining, holy" + da "good"; "fair and good".  
Gwendolyn — (gwen-DOHL-en) variant of Guinevere meaning "white brow"; from the Welsh gwen "shining, holy" + dolen "link". Gwendolen.  
Gwener — Welsh version of Venus, goddess of love.  
Gweneth — from the Welsh words meaning "white, blessed one"; another sources says "wheat". Gwynedd, Gwyneth, Gwenith (GWEN-ith).  
Gwenhwyfar — (gwen-HWIV-ahr) Welsh original of Guinevere, from gwen "shining, holy" + hwyfer "phantom, spirit, fairy". One of the most common names among Welsh women fr. Middle Ages until the 19th C., esp. in N. Wales.  
Gwenledyr — legendary name of the daughter of Gwawrddur Hunchback.  
Gwenith — (GWEN-ith) Welsh word for "wheat".  
Gwenllian — (gwen-LHEE-ahn) from Welsh gwen "shining, holy" + lliant "stream". Gwenllian has been popular since the Middle Ages. Gwenlliant (gwen-LHEE-ahnt)  
Gwenn Alarch — legendary name of the daughter of Kynwal.  
Gwenno — (GWEN-oh) Nickname for Gwen names.  
Gwerfyl — (GWAYR-vil) Gwerful Mechain was a poet of 15th C. Powys, one of the few early Welsh women poets whose work has been preserved. Gwerful (GWAYR-vil).  
Gwladys — (goo-LAH-dis) from the Welsh gwlad "land, nation, or sovereignty"; some sources say "a small sword"; while others say it derives from the gladiolus flower. Gladys.  
Gwyneira — Welsh in origin meaning "white snow"; from gwyn "white" + eira "snow". Originating from Penclawwd on the Gower Peninsular.  
Gwyneth — (GWIN-eth) from Welsh gwen "shining, holy" + geneth "girl", or from gwynaeth "happiness, bliss". Gwyn.

Hafgan — (HAHV-gahn) from Welsh haf "summer" + can "song"; male or female name.  
Hafren — (HAHV-ren) from Celtic Sabrina, goddess of the river Severn.  
Heledd — (HEL-eth) from Welsh hy-, a particle inidicating "goodness" + ledd "wound".  
Hellawes — an enchantress said to live in the Castle Nigramours (Necromancy); she died when she failed to win Lancelot's love.  
Heuldys — (HIL-dis) "sun setting (or rising?) on the hill".  
Heulwen — (HIL-wen) from Welsh heul "sun" + gwen "shining, holy". Heulyn.  
Heulyn — (HIL-een) "ray of sunshine".  
Hywela — (huh-WEL-ah) feminine form of Hywel, from hywel "eminent".

Idelle — Welsh version of Ida.  
Igerna — wife of Gorlois of Cornwall who was loved by Uther Pendragon; she became the mother of Arthur through shapeshifting deception of Merlin's making.  
Iola — (YOH-lah) feminine form of Iolo, which comes from Iowerth. All three derive from the Norse ior "lord", and Welsh gwerth "worth, value".  
Isolde — "fair one"; name of the herione in the Tristan saga and the name of a princess in Arthurian sagas. Isolda, Isolt, Iseult, Essyllt, Esyld, Esyllt.

Jenifer — from Welsh meaning "friend of peace"; Old Welsh "white phantom, white spirit"; and a variant of Guinevere. The spelling with one 'n' is traditional. Jennifer.

Lilybet — "God's promise".  
Linette — from a Welsh word meaning "idol".  
Llinos — (LHEE-nos) Welsh word for "linnet", which is a bird.  
Llio — (LHEE-oh) Originally a nickname for Gwenllian, but now a name of its own.  
Lowri — (LOW-ree) "crown of laurels"; from Latin laura "laurel"; Welsh version of Laurel or Laura. Popular in N. Wales.  
Lysanor — mother of one of Arthur's illegitimate sons.

Mab — means "baby" in Welsh. Mab was the queen of Faery in Welsh tales.  
Mabli — Welsh version of Mabel, "loveable".  
Maelona (may-LOH-nah) "divine princess"; nickname Lona (LOH-nah).  
Mair — (MIR) Mair + gwen "shining, holy"; Welsh form of Mary, "bitter". Meira (MAYR-ah), Mairwen (MIR-wen).  
Maledisant — "ill speech"; wife of the knight Bruno le Noir.  
Mali — Welsh form of Molly, which is a form of Mary, "bitter".  
Marged — (MAHR-ged) Welsh form of Margaret. Marared (mahr-AHR-ed), Mared (MAHR-ed), Margaid (MAHR-gyahd); nickname Megan (MEG-ahn).  
Meghan — nickname and form of Margaret; meaning either "pearl" or "mighty one"; possibly from the novel "The Thorn Birds". Megan.  
Melangell — (mel-AHNG-elh) Melangell, Welsh patron saint of animals, was a 6th C. Irish princess who hid a hare from the hounds, and given land for a convent in Wales. There, the hare is called "Melangell's little lamb", and until recently not hunted.  
Meleri — (mel-AYR-ee) from Welsh my "my" + Eleri, name of a 5th C. saint, the grandmother of St. David.  
Meredith — either "magnificent" or "protector or guardian from the sea".  
Meriel — (MER-yel) Welsh adaption of a name derived from Old Irish muir "sea" + gel "bright". Meryl (MER-eel).  
Modlen — Welsh version of Magdalene, "tower".  
Modron — "mother". Modron was the mother of Mabon, whose father came from the Otherworld.  
Mon — (MOAN) Mon Mam Cymru is a Welsh saying that means "Mon, the mother of Wales". Mon is also the name for the island of Angelsey. Mona (MOH-nah).  
Morfudd — (MOHR-vith) poss. from Welsh mawr "great, big" + either budd "benefit, victory" or gwyd "sight, knowledge". Name of a woman immortalized by the 14th C. poet Dafydd ap Gwilym. Morfyd (MOH-vith).  
Morgan — (MOHR-gahn) from Welsh mor "sea" or mawr "great, big" + can "bright" or cant "circle" or geni "born". Could mean anything from "big circle" to "sea-born". Most famous Morgan is probably Morgan la Fee, King Arthur's half-sister and famed sorceress. Morgaine, Morgainne, Morgana, Morgant (MOHR-gahnt).  
Morgana — "edge of the sea".  
Morgause — daughter of Gorlois of Cornwall and Igerna, a half-sister of Arthur by whom she bore Mordred. Margawse, Morgose.  
Morvudd — legendary name of the daughter of Uryen.  
Morwen — (MOHR-wen) from Welsh morwyn "maiden". Morwenna (mohr-WEN-ah).  
Myfanwy — (muh-VAHN-wee or mih-FAN-uh-wee) from Welsh my "my" + manwy "fine, rare". Myfanawy; nicknames Myfi (MUH-vee), Myfina (muh-VEE-nah).

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