Branwen, Daughter of Llŷr is a major character in the
Second Branch of the ''Mabinogi'', which is sometimes called the "Mabinogi of Branwen" after her.
Branwen is a daughter of
Llŷr and
Penarddun. She is married to
Matholwch, King of Ireland, but the marriage does not bring peace.
Her story
The story opens with Branwen's brother,
Brân the Blessed,
giant and King of
Britain, sitting on a rock by the sea at
Harlech and seeing the vessels of Matholwch, King of
Ireland, approaching. Matholwch has come to ask for the hand of Branwen in marriage. Brân agrees to this, and a feast is held to celebrate the betrothal. During the feast,
Efnysien, a half-brother of Branwen and Brân, arrives at the stables and asks of the nature of the celebration. On being told, he is furious that his half sister has been given in marriage without his consent, and flying into a rage he mutilates the horses belonging to the Irish. Matholwch is deeply offended, but conciliated by Brân, who gives him a magical cauldron which can bring the dead to life; he does not know that when the dead are brought back, they will be mute and deaf.
When Matholwch returns to Ireland with his new bride, he consults with his nobles about the occurrences in the Isle of the Mighty. They are outraged and believe that Matholwch was not compensated enough for the mutilation of his horses. In order to redeem his honor, Matholwch banishes Branwen to work in the kitchens.
Branwen is treated cruelly by her husband Matholwch as punishment for Efnysien's mutilation of the horses, though not before she gives birth to an heir,
Gwern. She tames a
starling and sends it across the
Irish Sea with a message to her brother and Brân brings a force from
Wales to Ireland to rescue her.
Some
swineherd
A swineherd is a person who raises and herds pigs as livestock.
Swineherds in literature
* In the New Testament are mentioned shepherd of pigs, mentioned in the Pig (Gadarene) the story shows Jesus exorcising a demon or demons from a man and a ...
s see the giant Brân wading the sea and report this to Matholwch, who retreats beyond a river and destroys the bridges. However, Brân lays himself down over the river to serve as a bridge for his men, he said ("He would be a leader, let him be a bridge").
Matholwch, fearing war, tries to reconcile with Brân by building a house big enough for him to fit into in order to do him honour. Matholwch agrees to give the kingdom to
Gwern, his son by Branwen, to pacify Brân. The Irish lords do not like the idea, and many hide themselves in flour bags tied to the pillars of the huge, newly built house to attack the Welsh.
Efnysien, inspecting the house prior to the arrival of Brân and his men, uncovers the men hidden in the bags and kills them all by crushing their heads one by one. At the subsequent feast to celebrate Gwern's investiture as King of Ireland, Efnysien, in an unprovoked moment of rage, throws his nephew Gwern into the fire. This causes chaos between the two countries, and they start fighting each other. The Irish forces at first appear to be losing, but by resurrecting their dead soldiers using the magical cauldron begin to win the battle. However, Efnisien sees what he has done, and regrets it. Disguised as a dead Irish soldier he is thrown into the magical cauldron, and pushes against its walls so that it breaks into four pieces. Efnisien dies in the attempt. The war is still extremely bloody, and leaves no survivors except for Branwen, Bran, and seven Welsh soldiers. They sail home to Wales.
Upon reaching Wales, they realize that Bran has been hit by a
poisoned arrow to his leg, and he dies. Branwen, overwhelmed with grief for everyone she has lost, dies of a broken heart.
War against Ireland
In the ensuing war, all the Irish are killed save for five pregnant women who lived in Wales who repopulate the island, while only seven of the Welsh survive to return home with Branwen, taking with them the severed head of Bendigeidfran. On landing in Wales at
Aber Alaw in
Anglesey, Branwen dies of grief
that so much destruction had been caused on her account, crying, , "Oh Son of God, woe to me that I was born! Two fair islands have been laid waste because of me!" She was buried beside the
Afon Alaw.
Brân had commanded his men to cut off his head and to "bear it even unto the White Mount, in London, and bury it there, with the face towards France." And so for seven years, his men spent feasting in Harlech, accompanied by three singing birds and Brân's head. After the seven years they go to Gwales in Penfro, where they remain for eighty years. Eventually, they go to London and bury the head of Brân in the White Mount. Legend said that as long as the head was there, no invasion would come over the sea to Britain.
Branwen's Grave
At
Llanddeusant, Anglesey
Llanddeusant (; ''the church of two saints'') is a small linear village, on Anglesey, North Wales about north east of Holyhead. The village takes its name from its parish church which is dedicated to St. Marcellus and Saint Marcellina.
Llan ...
on the banks of the Alaw can be found the cairn called , her supposed grave. Now in ruins, it still has one
standing stone
A menhir (from Brittonic languages: ''maen'' or ''men'', "stone" and ''hir'' or ''hîr'', "long"), standing stone, orthostat, or lith is a large human-made upright rock (geology), stone, typically dating from the European middle Bronze Age. T ...
. It was dug up in 1800, and again in the 1960s by
Frances Lynch, who found several
urns with human ashes. It is believed that if the story of Branwen is based on real events, these must have taken place during the
Bedd Branwen Period
The Bedd Branwen Period is the name given by Colin Burgess to a division of the early Bronze Age in Britain covering the period between 1650 BC and 1400 BC. It follows his Overton Period and is superseded by his Knighton Heath Period.
It covers t ...
of
Bronze Age British history.
See also
*
Mabinogion
The ''Mabinogion'' () are the earliest Welsh prose stories, and belong to the Matter of Britain. The stories were compiled in Middle Welsh in the 12th–13th centuries from earlier oral traditions. There are two main source manuscripts, create ...
*
The Children of Llyr
''The Children of Llyr'' is a fantasy novel by American writer Evangeline Walton, the second in a series of four based on the Welsh ''Mabinogion.'' It was first published in paperback by Ballantine Books as the thirty-third volume of the Ballan ...
*
Medieval Welsh literature
*
A Swiftly Tilting Planet, the third sequel after ''
A Wrinkle in Time''
*
Christopher Williams painted three paintings from the Mabinogion. ''Brânwen'' (1915) can be viewed at the
Glynn Vivian Art Gallery, Swansea.
Bibliography
Welsh text and editions
*. Ed. Derick S. Thomson. Medieval and Modern Welsh Series Vol. II. Dublin: Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1976.
Secondary sources
*Ford, Patrick K. "Branwen: A Study of the Celtic Affinities," ''Studia Celtica'' 22/23 (1987/1988): 29–35.
Adaptations
In 1994 a feature film was released called ''Branwen''.
IMDb entry
/ref>
References
External links
Translated by Lady Charlotte Guest
* Branwen uerch Lyr The original Welsh text
Goddess Branwen
Who was Branwen?
{{Celtic mythology (Welsh)
Love and lust goddesses
Mabinogion
Welsh feminine given names
Welsh goddesses
Welsh mythology
Mythological queens
Celtic mythology