Introduction
31 years of a pub/bar in Brittany gone up in smoke opening the door to a photographic expedition of Brittany. Here we have mementoes of a socio-cultural icon, plus a taste of my life pre-Brittany, the continuation of a bridge between BreizhBrittany & Cymru/Wales, a Brythonic link, with Kernow/Cornwall in the middle that goes back continuously for more than 1600 years. The pub/bar is rising out of the ashes, but in the meantime I have opportunities to go out visiting, observing and capturing pieces of Breton heritage. You can see here in diaporama/slideshow form: religious establishments, mainly chapels, interesting because they encompass both history & art; waterways & bridges, mainly rivers, but also streams and a long arterial canal built by Napoleon Boneparte with its ingenious linking of the rivers with each in succession handing on the baton in, running all the way from Nantes to Brest; each chapel had its holy well some of which are marvels to behold, some have disappeared and others need half a day to be discovered hidden among the weeds and thorns; the many megalithic standing stones in their different forms; wells that are only now being blocked up; each hamlet had its communal bread-oven and communal pool for the washing of clothes, only the ovens are on their way back; last and definitely not least, the calvaires, some most intricately sculpted, that proliferate throughout the land. If you would like more information contact me by e-mail: bynwalters@libertysurf.fr/
Byn's Highways & Byways, Breizh/Llydaw/Bretagne/Brittany
Byn's Highways & Byways, Breizh (2)
Byn's Highways & Byways, Breizh (3)
Byn's Highways & Byways, Breizh (4)
Byn's Highways & Byways, Breizh (5)
Byn's Highways & Byways, Breizh (6)
Byn's Highways & Byways, Breizh (7)
Byn's Highways & Byways, Breizh (8)
Byn's Highways & Byways, Breizh (9)
Byn's Highways & Byways, Breizh (10)
Byn's Highways & Byways (11) Breizh
Byn's Highways & Byways, Cymru/Bro Gembre/Wales
Byn's Highways & Byways, The Algarve, Portugal
Tavarn Ty Elise
Tavarn Ty Elise 2
Tavarn Ty Elise 3
Pub Mementos
Jean-Claude Dreyfus, & Merzhin au bar Ty Elise
Music & Dance
Music & Dance (2)
Plouie/Plouye
An Uhelgoad/Le Huelgoat
Berrien
Brest
Briec
Cleguerec
Dinan
Daoulas
Le Faouet
Felger/Foujerr/Fougeres
Ar Folgoad/Le Folgoet
Glomel
Gouarec
Gwerliskin/Guerlesquin
Gwitreg/Vitré
Josilin/Josselin
Karaez (Ker-Ahes)/Carhaix-Plouguer
Kastellin/Chateaulin
Kemper/Quimper
Kemperle/Quimperle
Landelo/Landeleau
Landerne(au
Langoelan
Lanrivain
Locmaria-Berrien
Locronan
Loqueffret
Malguenac
Montroulez/Morlaix et ses environs
An Oriant/Lorient
Pempont (B)/Penpont (G)/Paimpont (F)
Pleiben/Pleyben
Plestin les Greves
Plonevez ar/du Faou
Plougrescant
Plouigneau
Plounevezel
Pondi/Pontivy
Rostrenn/Rostrenen
Saint Méen le Grand
Distinctive Buildings (secular)
Distinctive Buildings (secular 2)
Fontaines Sacrées/Holy Wells, Oratoires & Natural Springs/Sources
Rivers, Streams & Canals
Megalithic
Calvaires
Statues, Statuettes, Sculptures, Carvings & Figurines
Stained Glass
Religious Buildings and artefacts (exterior)
Religious (Exterior) 2
Religious Buildings & Artefacts (exterior) 3
Chapels, Churches, etc. (Interior)
Natural ( & cultivated) History
Natural (& cultivated) History (2)
Paysage/Landscape/Skyline
Weirs, Locks, Bridges & Tunnels
Wells
Amazon
Tuesday, 5 February 2013
'The King's Grey Mare'
In Rosemary Hawley Jarman's book mentioned earlier it was Lord Stanley, and not as I was taught, Rhys ap Thomas who placed the crown "...with great drama and reverence..." on the head of Henry Tudor, the Earl of Richmond, in the field after Henry had finished wetting himself and had turned to vomit that "none saw", "...; not through any squeamishness..." mind you; although she has it both ways - "Let it be over quickly, and let none see my fear.", and it was Henry and not Richard III who had the 'princes in the tower' murdered, but gradually the Tudors come into their own:
"Jasper will breed for us a Dragon,
Of the fortunate blood of Brutus is he,
A Bull of Anglesey to achieve,
He is the hope of our race..."
There is one little slip up that's hardly worth mentioning, but I will anyway, where the proof reader couldn't cope with the Welsh, for just after writing 'Maredudd' correctly we get 'Marredud! He/she could have conferred; but fair play to her the end of the book mainly belongs to Henry VII. "He knew himself the offspring of gods and princes...,"The Dragon was so powerful, with its rippling body and serpentine tail, its fierce gory colour. "He sat still calling up his ancestors. The great Uther Pendragon and his greater son, Arthur, not dead but sleeping under green banners and silence. Down through a female line, past Owen, the dreamers and warriors of Wales; through Llewellyn, Rhys, Gruffydd, Owain, Maredudd, Hywell (sic), to the misted splendour of Cadell, Rhodri, Merfyn, and last, the Lady Ethil, of the Isle of Man." "That Tudor must destroy Plantagenet,... One by one , until , as the dying Cadwallader prophesied, we are supreme in England, ..." "Arthur had come again. The token of greatness fleshed; the prophesy fulfilled." "...he had received the blessing of God,...and possibly Cadwallader, for whom he was very nearly named." "He (Henry)leaned over the swaddled, grizzling infant and whispered in Welsh; whispered of Llewellyn, of Gladis, of Merfyn and Rhodri, of Iorwerth and Gruffydd, of Iago and Cynan; of Noah." "I will have a realm that my son can rule with the grace of Uther Pendragon, of Llewelyn the Great."
The king's grey mare died yesterday, long live His Majesty King Henry VII and Prince Arthur. For the sake of God, the catholic church and Cymru/Wales don't have a second son.
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