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Introduction
The Mabinogion (Y Mabinogi) are a series
of tales that are built from the myths and pseudo-historical accounts
of Celtic Britain. These tales were passed on from storyteller to
storyteller and the oldest written versions date from circa 1325
('The White Book of Rhydderch') to the early 1400s in the case of
the 'Red Book of Hergest'.
The four main tales 'Pwyll', 'Branwen', 'Manawyddan',
and 'Math' are refered to as the Four Branches of the Mabinogion.
Translated by Lady Charlotte Guest and published
in 1849, there has been much speculation over its name. The word
'mab' means 'son', so Lady Guest concluded that Mabinogion meant
'tales for boys'.
Another theory states that it is the title
for the repertoire of the trainee Bard, who would have travelled
the county visiting the great houses, holding the Princes, Lords
and Ladies, spellbound with these tales.
The Mabinogion provides us with an interesting,
if dreamlike, glance into how the ruling classes of late Iron Age/Dark
Age/Early Medieval Britons saw themselves, reflected in the lives
of their heroes and their Gods. The characters are heroic, the tales
mythic and sometimes surreal.
J. Craig Melia - November
2000
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