- NLW MS 14877F.
- File
- 1948.
Pedigree of the family of O'Brien. English. A blue print facsimile by the O'Brien [?family], donated May 1948.
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Pedigree of the family of O'Brien. English. A blue print facsimile by the O'Brien [?family], donated May 1948.
Pedigree of the Dyer family, Aberglasney and Kidwelly
A photocopy of a pedigree of the 'Dyer [family] of Kidwelly, Aberglasney' compiled in 1853 by William Hylton Dyer Longstaffe, and privately printed by Mrs C. Jackson (née S. M. Dyer), with additions up to 1893.
Longstaffe, W. Hylton (William Hylton)
Pedigree of the Canadian descendants of Eliza Maria Decima,
Pedigree of the Canadian descendants of Eliza Maria Decima, daughter of Sir George Griffies-Williams of Llwyn-y-wermwd, parish of Myddfai, county of Carmarthen.
Pedigree of Richard Herbert, Dolforgan
Pedigree, dated 1687, of Richard Herbert of Dolforgan, Kerry, Montgomeryshire, containing nineteen coats of arms, all painted, tracing Herbert's lineage, in the male line only, through fifteen generations, [?spuriously] from King Henry I and his son Herbert [?recte Henry] fitz Roy.
Husbands and wives are recorded in roundels beneath their impaled coats of arms; additional coats have been included to represent Herbert's wife's parents and maternal grandparents, and his daughter. Three generations have been added to the pedigree in a different hand (without heraldry), while further additions have been roughly sketched in pencil, [18 cent., last ¼]. Eight roundels have been left empty. The compilers of the pedigree are not named, however the Rev. John Jenkins (Ifor Ceri) ascribes it to Morris Evans of Llanfyllin, antiquary, and 'John Richardson, Herald Painter' (see NLW MS 1655B, f. 8; the repetition of this attribution alongside other pedigrees in the same volume (f. 13 verso) may cast doubt on its accuracy however). A dedication at the foot of the pedigree lists the authorities consulted (in NLW MS 1655B, f. 9 verso, Ifor Ceri appends the same list to a different pedigree altogether).
Evans, Morris, active 1667-1693
A late seventeenth century manuscript, the first page inscribed 'The Pedigree of Rice Vaughan, Esq., one of the Auncients of Grayes Inne, . . . since his death completed . . . and drawn down to Henry, his eldest son, . . . being a Curious peice of Antiquitye Collected out of many Ancient manuscripts by . . Robert Vaughan of Hengwrt . . . with severall Collections since made by Henry Va[ugha]n'. Pp. 19-214 contain descriptions and illustrations, some emblazoned, of the coats of arms of the ancestors of the aforesaid Rice Vaughan [of Gelli-goch, co. Montgomery, and later of Gray's Inn, lawyer and author of, inter alia, Practica Walliae or the Proceedings in the Great Sessions of Wales (London, 1672)]. The descent of the said Rice Vaughan and of Henry, his son, in direct line from each of these ancestors is shown, and historical notes have been added in some instances. The Rice Vaughan pedigree had been compiled in the first instance by the Welsh antiquary Robert Vaughan of Hengwrt, the work being completed circa October 1652, and this material was utilised and presented in book form in the present manuscript by Rice Vaughan's son Henry who added his own name to each line of descent (see the inscription quoted above, a transcript of a letter from Robert Vaughan from Hengwyrt (sic), to Meredith Lloyd in London, 25 October 1652 (pp. 11-15), a copy of an inscription at the end of the original pedigree by Robert Vaughan (p. 223), and notes by Henry Vaughan on pp. 17 and 222-3). According to the notes on pp. 17 and 222-3 it would appear that the material to be found at the beginning of the volume (i.e. up to the end of p. 10) and at the end (p. 224 et seq.) was compiled by Henry Vaughan. This includes, inter alia, genealogical and heraldic data relating to the Vaughans of Corsygedol [co. Merioneth], the Vaughans of Macchenlleth (sic) [co. Montgomery], the Hydes of Cheshire (to which family Henry Vaughan's wife belonged), and Henry Vaughan himself and his connection with 'seuerall eminent familyes in Wales'. Tipped in at the end of the volume is an undated letter from George Agar Hansard to a Mrs. Edwardes relating to the contents of the volume.
Vaughan, Henry, fl. 1675
Pedigree of John Bowen of Bath
Pedigree roll, [1810x1819], of, and probably in the hand of, the Rev. John Bowen of Bath, incorporating seventy-five coats of arms, nearly all impaled and most fully painted by an unnamed artist, some surmounted with crests or crowns and all set within canopies, tracing Bowen's ancestors primarily from Caradog Fraichvras and Brychan [Brycheiniog] (f. 5), as well as Bleddyn ap Maenarch (f. 20).
The pedigree is based on 'the pedigree and achievements of Robert Bowen of Bally Adams' [in Queen's County (now Co. Laois), Ireland], a roll (now lost) of 1608 by Thomas Jones of Fountain Gate, Tregaron, together with a continuation of Robert Bowen's line to 1720 by William Hawkins, Ulster King of Arms (f. 32 verso). Three main lines of descent are depicted, originating with Caradog Fraichvras (f. 5), Brychan (f. 5) and Cadwaladr (f. 9) and ending with John Bowen (f. 34), with a single generation on each panel. Preceding these are the ancestors, some spurious, of Caradog and Brychan (ff. 2-4), together with a 'Regal Line' (ff. 2-8). Some collateral lines are also shown alongside the main lines of descent (ff. 29-30, 32-35); however in nine instances (ff. 4 verso-5 verso, 21 verso-23 verso, 27 verso-33 verso (versos only)), for reasons of space, the collateral lines extend onto the versos, most significantly to show the Bowens of Ballyadams (ff. 30 verso-32 verso). The early lineages (ff. 2-4), 'Regal Line' (ff. 2-8) and collateral lines are depicted without heraldry, other than occasional blazoning. Various notes have been added in the same hand, including lists of the children of Brychan Brycheiniog (ff. 6 verso-9 verso), a description of a monument to the Bowen family in Ballyadams (f. 30 verso) and notes on the original pedigree (f. 32 verso) and Thomas Jones (f. 36 verso). A few later annotations, to 1832, are on f. 34. A painted figure of a woman holding in her left hand a shield displaying the Bowen arms and in her right hand a pedigree roll is on f. 1. The matches shown in the line of Roger ap John of Llanfrynach (see f. 27) differ significantly from those in P. C. Bartrum, Welsh Genealogies A.D. 300-1400 (Cardiff, 1974), pp. 863, 865. For the Bowens of Ballyadams see Lord Walter FitzGerald, 'Ballyadams in the Queen's County, and the Bowen Family', in Journal of the Archaeological Society of the County of Kildare and Surrounding Districts, 7 (1912-1914), 3-32, and Rhys Morgan, The Welsh and the Shaping of Early Modern Ireland 1558-1641 (Woodbridge, 2014), pp. 76, 146, 193, 197.
Bowen, John, 1747-1835
Pedigree of Gwyddelod Bro Gwenog,
Photocopies of a pedigree compiled by John Davies, Lampeter, 1900, of the descendants of Thomas David of Crygwhyl, Llanwenog (original is NLW MS 8719F), with emendations, together with digitised copies produced by the donor in 2013.
Davies, John.
Pedigree of Gawen Goodman of Ruthin
Pedigree and achievement, 1584, of Gawen Goodman of Ruthin, compiled by Simwnt Fychan and drawn by Richard Thomlyns of Denbigh, with eighty-eight other coats of arms, nearly all fully painted.
The pedigree shows Goodman's descent, through the female line, from twenty-five prominent ancestors, mostly Welsh, represented by twenty-five shields in two rows at the top of the pedigree; the arms of royal houses are surmounted by gold crowns. The remaining sixty-three coats of arms, the majority of which are impaled, are scattered throughout the pedigree. Personal names are enclosed in roundels. The pedigree includes Gawen's younger brother Gabriel (Dean of Westminster, 1561-1601) and other siblings, as well as Gawen's children and those of his other brother Godfrey. The achievement is placed at the lower right-hand base.
Thomlyns, Richard
Pedigree of Francis Vaughan of Yorkshire
Pedigree and achievement, 1591, of Francis Vaughan (Vychan or Vichan, d. 1597), of [Sutton-upon-Derwent], Yorkshire, compiled by Thomas Jones (Twm Siôn Cati) of Fountain Gate, Cardiganshire, and probably executed by Richard Adams 'paynter of Ludlow' (c.f. NLW Roll 226), with fifty-three fully painted coats of arms, mostly impaled and many quartered.
The pedigree is traced from 'Kradog Vraychvras, Earle off Herefourde', 'Iustyn ap Gurgan, K[ing] of Glamorgan & Morganog', 'Ryes Tewder [Rhys ap Tewdwr], King off Southwales', 'Griffith ap Kynan, King off Northwales', and 'Bleddyn ap Kynvin, Prynce off Powys', as well as from Edward I. Additional information is enclosed in twelve cartouches, mostly scattered throughout the top third of the pedigree, with one each in the bottom corners. The pedigree most closely resembles 'Style 1' in Michael Powell Siddons, Welsh Pedigree Rolls (Aberystwyth, 1996), p. 11. Vaughan's grandfather was Thomas Vaughan of Porthaml, Talgarth, Breconshire; the family's association with Yorkshire began only with Francis's father, John, who settled there early in the reign of Elizabeth I. Francis Vaughan was chief steward of crown lands in the East Riding from 1580, High Sheriff of Yorkshire, 1594-95, and was killed in Ulster, in service to the crown, in July 1597.
Jones, Thomas, approximately 1530-approximately 1620
Pedigree of family of R. Idloes Owen in parish of Llansantffraed Glan Conway,
Pedigree of descendants of William Prichard, pioneer of nonconformity in Anglesey,
Pedigree notes from sources in NLW compiled by Capt. Edward Routledge.
A copy of the pedigree of the Morgan-Jones family of the Cothi Valley (Llanfihangel Rhos-y-corn and surrounding areas), first compiled by Anthony T. Morgan-Jones in December 1994, updated in November 1999 and August 2004.
Morgan-Jones, Anthony T.
Pedigree chart: Richard Thomas and Mary Charles
Pedigree charts and explanation notes showing the descendants in the United States of Richard Thomas and Mary Charles, originally from Bryncroes, Botwnnog, Caernarfonshire, who emigrated to New York in 1795.
Pedigree chart of the Cotes family,
A photostat facsimile of the genealogy of the family of Cotes of Cotes, Staffordshire, from the twelfth century to 1866.
Peasant Languages and Celtic Nations
A copy of a study 'Peasant Languages and Celtic Nations: the Englishes of J. M. Synge and Caradoc Evans' by Chris Hopkins, submitted for the Legonna Celtic Research Prize, 1998.
Hopkins, Chris