annwfn การใช้
- "Preiddeu Annwfn " is one of the best known of mediaeval British poems.
- He is imprisoned in chains, apparently until Judgment Day, singing before the spoils of Annwfn.
- The speaker relates how he journeyed with Arthur and three boatloads of men into Annwfn, but only seven returned.
- The text recounts an expedition with King Arthur to Annwfn or Annwn, the Welsh name for the Celtic Otherworld.
- An obscure reference is also made of Pryderi and his father in the cryptic early medieval poem " Preiddeu Annwfn ":
- "The Spoils of Annwfn " is a cryptic early medieval poem of sixty lines found in the Book of Taliesin.
- They held annual tree planting festivals on the land at Annwfn; since then tens of thousands of trees such as Redwood have been planted all over Northern California.
- Higley affirms that Annwfn is " popularly associated with the land of the old gods who can bestow gifts, including the gift of poetry ( awen ) ".
- The third and fourth allude to difficulties with the forces of Annwfn while the fifth and sixth describe a great ox, also richly decorated, that may also form part of Arthur's spoils.
- Annwfn is apparently referred to by several names, including " Mound Fortress, " " Four-Peaked Fortress, " and " Glass Fortress ", though it is possible the poet intended these to be distinct places.
- Annwfn is apparently referred to by several names, including " Mound or Fairy Fortress, " " Four Peaked or Cornered Fortress, " and " Glass Fortress ", though it is possible these are intended to be distinct.
- The first stanza has already mentioned Pwyll, the legendary prince of Dyfed who in the first branch of the Mabinogi becomes the Chief of Annwfn after helping its king, Arawn, and was credited with ownership of a cauldron.
- One year later the day of the feast arrives and now it is Pwyll Pen Annwfn who comes to the wedding feast, in disguise and with an enchanted bag given to him by Rhiannon, to ask for a request.
- In the last couplet of each stanza except the last the speaker mentions a dangerous journey into Annwfn with Arthur and three boat-loads of men, of whom only seven returned, presumably with the " spoils " from Annwfn.
- In the last couplet of each stanza except the last the speaker mentions a dangerous journey into Annwfn with Arthur and three boat-loads of men, of whom only seven returned, presumably with the " spoils " from Annwfn.
- She cites another poem in the same collection, called " Angar Kyfyndawt ", which states that Annwfn is in the deeps below the earth, and that " It is Awen I sing, / from the deep I bring it ".
- Song is heard in the fourfold fort, which therefore seems also to be Annwfn : Gweir was imprisoned in perpetual song before a cauldron that first gave out poetry when breathed upon by nine maidens, reminiscent of the nine muses of classical thought.
- Whereas early 20th-century Celtic enthusiast Jessie Weston unequivocally declared that an earlier form of the Grail narrative could be found in " Preiddeu Annwfn ", modern researcher Richard Barber denies Celtic myth had much influence on the legend's development at all.
- "Preiddeu Annwfn ", an early medieval poem found in the Book of Taliesin, describes a voyage led by King Arthur to the numerous otherworldy kingdoms within Annwn, either to rescue the prisoner Gweir or to retrieve the cauldron of the Head of Annwn.
- However, the earlier poem " Preiddeu Annwfn " ( " The Spoils of Annwfn " ), refers to an adventure by Arthur and his men to obtain a cauldron with magical properties equivalent to the one in the lists of the thirteen treasures.
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