Coel Hen
Coel Hen
Coel Hen
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Coel Hen
Coel Hen or Coel the Old, the son of Tegfan, was a celtic ruler who lived around the turn of the fourth and fifth centuries at the time of the dep
Roman legions from Britain.
He imposed his power over a large area of the country, Coel's territory extended over the whole of the north of England from a line joining Che
Wash and up into what is today southern Scotland. Coel's association with the north of Britain has led to the suggestion that he may actually h
last of the Roman Duces Brittanniarum with his headquarters at York.
Geoffrey of Monmouth's 'Historia Regum Britanniae' (History of the Kings of Britain) cites Coel as a King of the Britons following the reign of K
Asclepiodotus. According to Geoffrey, Coel, annoyed by Asclepiodotus's handling of the Diocletianic Persecution, the last and most severe pe
Christians in the Roman empire, started a rebellion in Caer Colun (most likely Colchester). He clashed with Asclepiodotus in battle and killing
his title of high-king of Britain.
According to the Harleian genealogies and the later genealogies known as the Bonedd Gwyr y Gogledd (The Descent of the Men of the North
married to Ystradwal, the daughter of Cadfan,and was the ancestor of several lines of kings in the Hen Ogledd or "Old North", the Brythonic C
part of northern England and southern Scotland. His descendants, known as the Coeling, included Urien of Rheged son of Cynfarch Oer, Urie
century warrior king of North Rheged, of whom the Welsh Triads list as as one of the "Three Great Battle-leaders of Britain". Other descendan
include Gwallog, possibly king of Elmet; the brothers Gwrgi and Peredur; and Clydno Eiddin, king of Eidyn or Edinburgh. He was also thought
in-law of Cunedda, founder of the kingdom of Gwynedd in North Wales, by his daughter Gwawl. The genealogies bestow the epithet Godebog
meaning the "Protector".
In the fourth century AD, the predominant race in northern Scotland were the Picts, the name was coined by the Romans who referred to them
meaning 'painted ones', which referred to the Pictish custom of either tattooing their bodies or covering themselves with warpaint. The Irish re
Cruithni, meaning "the people of the designs". What they called themselves has gone unrecorded. During Coel's time the Scotti, Gaelic Celts
under the leadership of Fergus, king of the Dalriada, began to settle the west coast of Scotland around Argyle.
Coel Hen, fearing if the Picts and Scots united they would represent a dangerous threat to the Celts of Britain, dispatched raiding parties acro
border to cause discord between the two, they stole the cattle of the Scotti and promptly blamed the Picts for the theft. The plan did not, howe
desired effect, as the Picts and Scots saw through the deception and Coel's efforts seem to have succeeded in uniting them, leading to an inv
British Kingdom of Strathclyde (Ystradclud).
Coel marched north to expel the Picts and Scots from Strathclyde, who fled before his advance to the hills of lowland Scotland. He set up a ca
later to become Coylton in Ayrshire.
Before long, the starving Picts and Scots made a desperate attack on Coel's camp. Coel was taken by complete surprise, and the British force
Wandering through remote territory after the attack, Coel became trapped in a bog at Coilsfield, in Tarbolton, Ayrshire, and drowned. Coel's de
by Anglo-Saxon chroniclers.
He was first buried in a mound there before his body was translated to the church at Coylton. Following his death, Coel's Northern Kingdom w
between two of his sons, Ceneu inherited the kingdoms of north-eastern and midland Britain and Gorbanian, became king of Bryneich, which
conqured by the Angles, who called it Bernicia. Another son was thought to be Meirchawn whose uncle Mor and cousin Morydd were thought
brother of Merlin. By about 616, the Cole dynasty were eventually wiped out by the Vikings and Saxons.
Later medieval legend tells of a Coel, who was the father of Saint Helena and the grandfather of Roman Emperor Constantine the Great. Othe
named characters may be confused or with the Welsh Coel. Coel Hen may be the 'the merry old soul' for the children's nursery rhyme "Old Ki
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