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Boreades

In: finity and beyond
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| Mick Harper wrote: | My current position on Welsh history is
Year Dot to 400 AD Unknown |
What about the bit where there was a Welsh Roman Emperor?
Magnus Maximus.
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Mick Harper
Site Admin

In: London
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When I say 'my position' I mean what I accept, not whether there actually is. There is plenty of 'Welsh history' in, say, Geoffrey of Monmouth's The History of the Kings of Britain.
PS Talking of which, Monmouth was flooded yesterday leading me to discover there actually is a River Mon. Actually 'Monnow' (Welsh: Afon Mynwy).
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Wile E. Coyote
In: Arizona
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| Boreades wrote: | | Mick Harper wrote: | My current position on Welsh history is
Year Dot to 400 AD Unknown |
What about the bit where there was a Welsh Roman Emperor?
Magnus Maximus. |
The Magnus legend is based on that of an Emperor of Rome (Magnus) dreaming of a beautiful maiden in a far-off land. He sends his men across the world to find her, they eventually locate her in a castle at Segontium in Wales, the daughter of a chieftain named Eudaf Hen (Octavian)..... Her name is Helen (Elen)
They married and the Emperor as a wedding gift built roads across Britain. Elen's causeway, Sarn Helen, are examples and of course multiple holy wells.
"Welsh King" lineages got traced back to this unlikely Roman - Welsh union.
Functionally she serves as the Helen of Constantinople type figure.
Or, as Wiki says, helpfully putting Wiley right.
| Elen was mother of five, including a boy named Custennin or Cystennin (Constantine). She lived about sixty years later than Helena of Constantinople, the mother of Constantine the Great, with whom she has often been confused. |
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Pete Jones
Site Admin

In: Virginia
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Boreades

In: finity and beyond
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| Pete Jones wrote: | | "The field has been plowed hundreds of times, so it's incredible that neither coin has a mark on it from farm machinery," Hyde told Newsweek. |
It does seem incredible. A double-find (world record?) of individual coins.
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Perhaps rare, but not unknown. A neighbouring farm (plowed hundred of times) just turned up a complete Bronze Age axe head. Even older and larger than a few coins.
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Mick Harper
Site Admin

In: London
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| a complete Bronze Age axe head |
This wouldn't count as an example. The chances of fakery are too great. Though having 'a neighbour' involved does mean you get a chance to join in the investigation. Unless you are involved etc etc.
In fact, now I come to think of it, i.e. remember visiting it, you may well live in an entire Potemkin village. You can generally identify these because the local B & B will be run by a mysterious couple with 'antiquarian interests'.
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