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Cantre gwelod
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Does anyone remeber the story of Cantre Gwelod? where the gate man got drunk and didn't shut the gate and the water came in and flooded the town? is this the one to be seen from Borth / Ynyslas in mid wales?
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Legend has it that Cantre Gwaelod, or the Bottom Hundred, lies beneath Cardigan Bay.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/legacies/myths_legends/wales/w_mid/article_1.shtml
http://www.dbaugh.dircon.co.uk/floodedland.html
Legend has it that Cantre Gwaelod, or the Bottom Hundred, lies beneath Cardigan Bay.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/legacies/myths_legends/wales/w_mid/article_1.shtml
http://www.dbaugh.dircon.co.uk/floodedland.html
I was brought up on the Lleyn Peninsula in the 1950s / 60s and was taught a poem at school called Clychau Cantre Gwaelod (the bells of the hundred on the bottom). It was, as I recall, about a lock keeper called Seithenhin who lived in low lying land in Cardigan Bay. He fell in love with a beautiful princess and left his post to be with her. I think she spurned his advances and he got drunk. He left the sea gates open on a night when there was an on-shore wind and high tide. The sea inundated the walled village. He and the princess drowned and it is said that the bells of the submerged church can be heard under the sea, proclaiming the loss of the princess and the community. There is a similar legend concerning Caer Arianrhod, in Caernarfon Bay, between Dinas Dinlle and Pontllyfni but the poem almost certainly relates to Cardigan Bay. Hope this sparks more debate!
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