In the parlour sit the chairs, six of them in all, from the simple four-square seat won in Bala in 1907 to the "black chair" of the 1917 National Eisteddfod. This throne of darkened oak has grown ...
Gerald Williams grew up at Yr Ysgwrn - the home of World War One poet Hedd Wyn Gerald Williams, who was at the forefront of keeping alive the memory of his uncle and World War One poet Hedd Wyn, has ...
Conservationists reveal some of the £3m work to restore the home of WW1 poet Hedd Wyn Conservationists have been showing some of the restoration work under way to safeguard the historical home of ...
(MENAFN- The Conversation) The names Passchendaele, the Somme and Mametz Wood stand as grim sentinels, forever bound to the unimaginable carnage of the first world war. Almost 500,000 men were killed ...
Hedd Wyn is the bardic name of Ellis Evans, eldest of 11 children of a north Wales hill farmer. I take his description of the beauty of France, and his foreboding of fields red with blood, from a ...
Hedd Wyn won international acclaim as one of Wales’ greatest poets. And today – in time for the St David’s Day celebrations – it has been announced that his family farm and bardic chairs have been ...
A famous Eisteddfod chair won by a poet killed in the fields of Flanders which came to symbolise the devastating impact of the First World War has been recreated using a 3D printer. Hedd Wyn was ...
The Somme, Amiens, Mametz Wood - names synonymous with the tragic loss of World War One. Another is Passchendaele - the Third Battle of Ypres - with nearly half-a-million men on both sides killed in ...
A CAMPAIGN to honour Welshmen and women who served in World War I has won the backing of the nephew of Bardic poet Hedd Wyn. The Welsh Memorial In Flanders campaign is already supported by the Daily ...
Gerald Williams grew up at Yr Ysgwrn - the home of World War One poet Hedd Wyn Gerald Williams, who was at the forefront of keeping alive the memory of his uncle and World War One poet Hedd Wyn, has ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The names Passchendaele, the Somme and Mametz Wood stand as grim sentinels, forever bound to the unimaginable carnage of the first ...