yganolfangeltaidd.bsky.social
Mae'r Ganolfan yn sefydliad ymchwil wedi’i leoli gerllaw Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru yn Aberystwyth.
The Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies is a dedicated research institute of the University of Wales, located alongside the National Library.
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saints.wales/theedition/
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saints.wales/ygolygiad/
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Arddangosfa’r cerddi diweddaraf sy’n cloi’r prynhawn.
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To close, Jenny Day highlights the website’s uniqueness in demonstrating version of poems, stemmas and manuscript functionality.
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Cafwyd cyflwyniad ar y cerddi cynnar gan @llewelynhopwood.bsky.social gan arddangos holl driciau’r wefan.
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“How to read a poem?” was Llewelyn Hopwood’s question as he displayed the website’s functionality in relation to the seven early poems.
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Mae ein diolch yn fawr i Alexander Roberts @jangley.bsky.social, arweinydd digidol y Prosiect.
The excellent Alexander has been responsible for designing all aspects of the Project’s website and for driving our accessibiltiy priorities throughout.
Diolch yn fawr Alexander!
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…and we’re off!
Diolch i’r Athro Ann Parry Owen @collen105.bsky.social am agor y prynhawn!
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This is a collaboration between CAWCS (@yganolfangeltaidd.bsky.social), the Natural History Museum (@nhmlibraryarchives.bsky.social), Glasgow University (@uofglasgow.bsky.social), and Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru / The National Library of Wales, funded by the AHRC.
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Abdul-Azim's also worked with us on the Bywgraffiadur/Dictionary of Welsh Biography, where he's contributed two articles on Welsh Muslim leaders, e.g. this one on Sheikh Abdul-Hamid (d. 1944) of Rajputna, Rhyl, and Cardiff
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Project is on the modern history of Islam as a religion in Wales (i.e. not Welsh thinking about Islam more generally
Finds include the first recorded (though surely not the first!) Muslim grave in Wales, Carmarthenshire convert Amelia Kadija Baksh (d.1893)
blogs.cardiff.ac.uk/islamukcentr...
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Jenny Day (@yganolfangeltaidd.bsky.social) o’r Prosiect sy’n ein tywys yn awr trwy gerddi Myrddinaidd cyfnod y Tuduriaid a’r Stiwartiaid.
We now move on to learn how Myrddin and Gwenddydd, his sister, were commentators on the Tudor period and the Civil War in later poetry.
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Celtic Seminar
🗓️ Thursdays 5pm
🗺️ Oxford / @yganolfangeltaidd.bsky.social / Zoom