Tegyd Foël, Tegid Voel
[Welsh teg, beautiful; foel, bald]
Giant of Pennllyn, husband of Ceridwen in the folkloric Hanes Taliesin [Tale of Taliesin], and eponym of Llyn Tegid. His name is also cited in early Welsh genealogies and pedigrees.
| Celtic Mythology: Tegid Foel |
Giant of Pennllyn, husband of Ceridwen in the folkloric Hanes Taliesin [Tale of Taliesin], and eponym of Llyn Tegid. His name is also cited in early Welsh genealogies and pedigrees.
| Wikipedia: Tegid Foel |
Tegid Foel is the husband of Ceridwen in Welsh mythology. His name rendered into English would be "Tacitus the Bald". In folklore, Tegid Foel is associated with Llyn Tegid (Bala Lake) in Gwynedd and may have been the tutelary deity of that lake.
Tegid Foel is known chiefly from the story of Taliesin's birth, first recorded in full in the 16th century but dating to a much earlier period. According to the story, he lived by Llyn Tegid in the region of Penllyn with his wife, the sorceress Ceridwen. Together they had two children, a beautiful daughter named Creirwy and a son Morfran, called Afagddu ("utter darkness") because of his dark skin and hideous looks. Tegid's name is mentioned several times in Welsh literature in the patronymic of his more famous son Mofran; it appears in the Mabinogion tales Culhwch and Olwen[1] and The Dream of Rhonabwy,[2] and in Welsh Triads 24 and 41.[3] Apart from Creirwy and Morfran the Welsh genealogies also name other children of Tegid. The Vitae Sanctorum Britanniae et Genealogiae gives the following lineage: "Afan Buellt son of Cedig son of Ceredig son of Cunedda Wledig by Degfed ["Tenth"] daughter of Tegid Foel"; Rawlins MS B gives another genealogy naming another daughter, Dwywai.[4]
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| Llyn Tegid | |
| Morfran | |
| Bala Lake |
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