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The last revision (as of 21:20, 26 June 2006) is not Neutral Point of View (and not wikified either). If there is a debate concerning the definition of the Northern/Cumbric Brythons/Welsh, this is not the place for it. Walgamanus 22:13, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
As there is debate regarding these issues then surely it is legitimate to include such refferences within the article. I beleive it is the above author who represents a non Neutral Point of View as to omit even the possibility of dissent from his own view seems excessive and to omit my whole edit was unfair as it did not only deal with the issue he highlights. As I am new here I am willing to hear others views, but surely an encyclopedia explicitly deals with issues of definitions and categorisations. I do not beleive I, nor anyone else has a monopoly on the truth. However,I will replace my contribution until a more responsible edit occur. Elidir 02:53, 27 June 2006
We do include references within the article. This is the beauty of wikilinks. They're all in the first sentence. The
Brython link takes you to a page which could perhaps do with some expansion, but which explains what Brython means in this context; the
bard link surprises me in its relevance (I was expecting a page all about modern interpretations of the word) and mentions being employed to praise one's lord; the
Cymric link is actually a redirect to
Wales; and the
Hen Ogledd page is about a term which is Welsh but which describes an area of northern England and southern Scotland. If people want to know more, they can read those pages. Unless it has a major impact on our understanding of Aneirin, I really don't think there is any need to spend half the article asserting a specific identity for him.
As to the content you added, we need some references from known authorities in the field. "Some consider"; "often"; tons of use of the passive voice; "is believed"; are, I am afraid, all on the list of examples to avoid on the weasel words page: "words or phrases that smuggle bias into seemingly supported statements by attributing opinions to anonymous sources". In line with WP:CITE (a very important policy), we need to say who these "some" are, how often the claim (whatever it is) is made, and who believes what.
Also, it really could be trimmed. Your changes pretty much double the size of the article. But as I understand it, your argument is that (a) Aneirin wrote in Old Welsh; (b) this makes him Welsh; (c) some people say it doesn't and he wasn't; (d) but they're wrong; (e) and this is cultural appropriation. That's only a couple of sentences. (I'd lose the claims of cultural appropriation, btw. Even with a reference.)
Living close to a Welsh university with a large Celtic studies section in its library, I will happily chase up references (I have plenty for (a) already). But I can't just go and look for "people who say Aneirin was some nationality other than Welsh". The search facility is not that good! With which authors/journals/fields would I start?
Sort of a crash course in Wikipedia policies, this: sorry about this. But I hope it helps explain why the revert.
Telsa (talk) 07:56, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
In "A pocket guide - The literature of Wales, by Dafydd Johnston, Cardiff University of Wales Press 1994"
… Only one of Taliesin’s surviving poems relates to the area known as Wales. The rest of his work and all that of Aneirin belongs to the Brythonic kingdoms of what is now northern England and southern Scotland… After the collapse of the kingdoms of Rheged and Gododdin in the seventh century and the subsequent political isolation of Wales, the tradition and stories of the North may have been presented in Strathclyde before being transmitted to Wales.
The author seems to forget mentioning Brittany. Shelley Konk 08:38, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
The article cites one of the Welsh Triads as describing Aneirin as "prince of bards", and uses male pronouns. The triad in question, though, describes Aneirin as somebody's daughter. The untranslated phrase is "aneirin gwawtryt verch teyrnbeird" - and "verch" is "daughter".
Cythraul ( talk) 10:39, 16 March 2012 (UTC)
There is just a lot of unsourced, unverified information in the article, and although there is a lengthy list of sources at the bottom of the page, none of them seem to be worked into the text in any way at all.
One assertion that I have a particular problem with is that Aneirin was not the son of Caw. It's all well and good to say that he isn't and that this is a later invention, so long as you have the sources to back it up. I have a reputable source that says that he was, in fact, the son of Caw, so I included the information, and that there is disagreement over his parentage. I hope that it is now more neutral, and reflects both sides. Until there is some sort of sources demonstrating he isn't Caw's son, I think it should stay that way. -- Florimell1919 ( talk) 22:38, 21 January 2013 (UTC) florimell1919
You don't need sources if the numbers don't stack up. If Aneirin was the brother of Gildas he would have been over 100 years old at the battle of Catraeth - so in practice he could not have written the poem or been there. There is no problem with Caw having a son Aneirin - just that such a son is a person different from the bard of Y Gododdin Freuchie ( talk) 18:28, 25 April 2019 (UTC)
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The section says:
"Aneirin's patrons were the noble Urien and his son, Owain. Owain was slain at the Battle of Catraeth, in which Brythonic warriors of Gododdin went up against the Angles of Deira and Bernicia. Nearly all of the Brythonic warriors were slain and their lands were absorbed into the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. Aneirin wrote Y Gododdin after this battle, in remembrance of his fallen patrons and lords, in which he hints that he is likely the sole survivor. After the fall of Owain, he is said to have been murdered at the hands of an unnamed Cymric lord, whom the poet had offended by reproaching him in his poem Y Gododdin for not coming to the aid of Owain."
This is fatuous.
1. Urien was born c475 and was killed at Lindisfarne <450.
2. Owain was born c 503 (how else could he have fathered Kentigern???) so would have been over 95 at Catterick - preposterous.
3. Not only that, but the poem itself, Stanza 1, says that the Owain mentioned there was the son of "Marro".
4. So too it is ridiculous to propose that Aneirin was a brother of St Gildas bc493, implying Aneirin well over 100 when composing.
5. As Caw was only king of Strathclude 495-500, if Aneirin was born at Dumbarton taht would have made Aneirin at least 100 when he wrote Y Gododdin. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Freuchie ( talk • contribs) 23:24, 28 December 2023 (UTC)
Fact: Urien's bard was Taliesin, NOT Aneirin.
Fact: For Aneurin to have been able to write Y Gododdin he must have been born AFTER 530 - more likely after 550, especially if the last sentence is true.
Who was the sophomore who wrote this nonsense??? Freuchie ( talk) 15:38, 28 December 2023 (UTC)