- NLW MS 14883C.
- File
- 1825.
Letters re. the Myddfai 'S. Paul inscription' by H. T. Payne, John Jenkins, Kerry, Thomas Beynon, etc. English, Welsh. Donated by W. Isaac Williams, London, 1948.
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Letters re. the Myddfai 'S. Paul inscription' by H. T. Payne, John Jenkins, Kerry, Thomas Beynon, etc. English, Welsh. Donated by W. Isaac Williams, London, 1948.
The murder of William Powell, Glanareth,
A volume relating to the murder in 1770 of William Powell, Glanareth, Llangadog, co. Carmarthen, compiled, ca. 1850, by Charles John Bird (1777-1854), rector of Mordiford, co. Hereford. It comprises copies of An Authentic Trial of William Spiggot [and others] ... for the Inhuman Murder of William Powell ... (Hereford, 1770) (wanting final leaf, the deficiency supplied in manuscript) (pp. 7-46), and The Trial of William Spiggot [and others] ... (Glocester, [1770]) (pp. 75-90); and memoranda, notes, and extracts from printed sources concerning the case in the hand of C. J. Bird, including a transcript of an account published in the Hereford Journal, 31 March 1771, of the trial and acquittal of Powell's brother-in-law, Marmaduke Bowen, Cil-y-cwm, co. Carmarthen, and others as being accessories before and after the fact [in which trial C. J. Bird's father, William Bird, defended the accused] (pp. 49-73).
Bird, Charles John, 1777-1854
The murder of William Powell of Glanareth,
A volume of transcripts and extracts relating to the murder, 8 January 1770, of William Powell of Glanareth, co. Carmarthen. The greater part of the volume (100 pp.) consists of a transcript of the account of the trial published under the title An Authentic Trial of William Spiggot . . ., John Spiggot . . ., William Morris, William Thomas . . ., David Morgan . . ., William Walter Evan, Charles David Morgan, William Charles, and David Llewellin, who were tried on Wednesday, the 28th of March, 1770, at Hereford. . . for the inhuman murder of William Powell . . . [(Hereford, 1770)]. Included also are a further account of the episode (? transcribed from a printed source), entitled 'A Narrative of the unexampled cases of William Spiggott, William Morris, David Morgan, William Walter Evan, Charles David Morgan, and David Llewellin, who were executed at Hereford . . . for murdering William Powell . . .'; a transcript of a broadsheet offering an award for the apprehension of two of the murderers, viz. William Williams and William Morris; and extracts from printed sources, including T[homas] Rees: The Beauties of [England and Wales . . .], South Wales, The Merthyr Guardian, 9 Sept. 1848, etc.
An abstract of documents relating to William Powell, Glanareth, Carmarthenshire (d. 1769), with a copy of An Authentic Trial of William Spiggott [and others] ... for the inhuman murder of William Powell ... (Hereford, 1770).
'The Morgans of Glamorgan-Down to Miles Morgan-the Emigrant of 1635', by J. Edward Lane, being an account of the ancestry and some of the progeny of Miles Morgan, a native of Llandaff, who emigrated to North America.
Lane, J. Edward Pedigree of Miles Morgan by, NLW MS 5252A
The Montgomeryshire Society in London,
Programmes of meetings and social events held by the Montgomeryshire Society/Cymdeithas Maldwyn between 1979 and 2014, including a leaflet promoting the society's activities, a short history and membership details.
The Montgomery Boroughs election, 1832
The third of three volumes containing papers relating to the House of Commons Inquiry, 1833, into the Montgomery Boroughs Parliamentary election, 1832.
The Montgomery Boroughs election, 1832
The second of three volumes containing papers relating to the House of Commons Inquiry, 1833, into the Montgomery Boroughs Parliamentary election, 1832.
The Montgomery Boroughs election, 1832
The first of three volumes containing papers relating to the House of Commons Inquiry, 1833, into the Montgomery Borough Parliamentary election, 1832.
The Monmouth and Brecon militia
Returns relating to the Monmouth and Brecon militia, 6 May 1804 - 10 September 1810.
A manuscript containing a history of the jubilee tower on Moel Fammau, North Wales, compiled by R. J. Edwards, Ruthin.
Edwards, R. J., of Ruthin Moel Fammau jubilee tower, history of, NLW MS 2108B
The military career and affinity of Henry, Prince of Wales, 1399-1413.
Griffiths, Rhidian
The Messiah: main choruses adaptation for male voices by T. O. Thomas (facsimile.) Musical notation, English. Boards. Donated by T. O. Thomas, L.R.A.M., Blaenau Ffestiniog, May 1970.
Three surviving folia of a lost manuscript in Middle English, written by a professional scribe during the first quarter of the fifteenth century, containing parts of the ‘Nun’s Priest’s Link' and 'Nun's Priest's Tale’ from Geoffrey Chaucer’s 'Canterbury Tales'. Textual contents: f. l recto, VII2784-2820 (B2, 3974-4010) and 'Here endeth the p(ro)loge and bygynneth the tale'; f. 1 verso, VII2822-2860 (B2, 4012-4050); f. 2 recto, VII3021-3058 (B2, 4211-4248); f. 2 verso, VII3060-3098 (B2, 4250-4288); f. 3 recto, VII3184-3222 (B2, 4374-4412); f. 3 verso, VII3223-3262 (B2, 4413-4452).
The folia were formerly tipped in at the back of a copy of Dr John Davies’s Antiquae Linguae Britannicae Dictionarium Duplex (1632). Linne R. Mooney has suggested that the Merthyr Fragment may be in the hand of Adam Pinkhurst; see Alexandra Gillespie and Daniel Wakelin (eds.), The Production of Books in England 1350-1500 (Cambridge, 2011), p. 199n.
Chaucer, Geoffrey, -1400
The memories of Mr Francis Gordon Baker,
A typescript copy of the memories of Francis Gordon Baker (1920-2007), Barry, as an RAF aircraft maintenance fitter in the UK and Ceylon [Sri Lanka], during the Second World War, recorded by David S. Wellings, November 2007.
Baker, Francis Gordon.
The memories of a young soldier.
A typescript copy of a diary belonging to a soldier in the Second World War.
Howells, Nesta.
The memorial of the women of Wales to the women of the U.S.A. (replica of the original memorial). English. Morocco. Donated by The Welsh Council League of Nations Union, per D. Samways, February 1942.
The medical pocket-book, 1784,
An interleaved copy of John Elliot, M.D., The Medical Pocket-Book, The second edition, with additions and corrections (London: printed for J. Johnson, 1784) containing manuscript entries, 1800, by G[riffith] Roberts, junior, surgeon, son of Dr. Griffith Roberts, Dolgelley. It appears that Griffith Roberts was aboard the frigate H.M.S. 'Syren' when it arrived at Spithead with a convoy from the Leeward Islands, 12 January 1800, and the entries relate mainly to his illness in the first quarter of that year. There are brief references to writing to, and hearing from, his father, his brother W[illia]m, and his uncle, W[illia]m Roberts, Oakland [near Llanrwst], and there are copies of three letters written by him from the Royal Hospital, Haslar [Gosport], one addressed to T[homas] Le M[archan]t Gosselin, who was in command of the 'Syren'. Other individuals mentioned are W[illia]m Smith, late surgeon of the 'Syren', Mr. Lara, appointed surgeon to the 'Syren', and Dr. Lind. A note in pencil at the beginning reads 'The Gift of Miss Roberts Lawnt Dolgelley to R. I. Jones, 1847' [i.e. Robert Isaac Jones ('Alltud Eifion')], and another note, also in pencil, facing p. 100, gives the year of birth of H[enry] I[saac] Jones (1844).
Elliot, John, 1747-1787