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Ceredig
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{{Short description|King of Ceredigion (died 453)}} {{About|the king of Ceredigion|other similarly named figures|Ceretic (disambiguation){{!}}Ceretic}} {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}} {{Unreliable sources|date=April 2019}} {{Infobox royalty | type = Britain | consort = | name = Ceredig ap Cunedda | title = Ruler, [[Kingdom of Ceredigion]] | titletext = | more = | image = History of the Kings (f.96.v) Ceredig.jpg | alt = | caption = | succession = | moretext = | reign = | reign-type = | coronation = | cor-type = | predecessor = | pre-type = | regent = | reg-type = | successor = | suc-type = | succession1 = | moretext1 = | reign1 = | reign-type1 = | coronation1 = | cor-type1 = | predecessor1 = | pre-type1 = | regent1 = | reg-type1 = | successor1 = | suc-type1 = | succession2 = | moretext2 = | reign2 = | reign-type2 = | coronation2 = | cor-type2 = | predecessor2 = | pre-type2 = | regent2 = | reg-type2 = | successor2 = | suc-type2 = | succession3 = | moretext3 = | reign3 = | reign-type3 = | coronation3 = | cor-type3 = | predecessor3 = | pre-type3 = | regent3 = | reg-type3 = | successor3 = | suc-type3 = | spouse = | spouse-type = | issue = | issue-link = | issue-pipe = | full name = | era name = | era dates = | posthumous name = | temple name = | house = | house-type = | father = [[Cunedda]] | mother = | birth_date = c. 420 | birth_place = | death_date = 453 | death_place = | date of burial = | place of burial = | occupation = | signature = | religion = }} '''Ceredig ap Cunedda''' (died 453), was a possibly fictional or at least not well attested in reliable sources king of [[Kingdom of Ceredigion|Ceredigion]] in Wales.<ref name=Cambro>[https://archive.org/details/cu31924029417924 <!-- quote=ceredig. --> "Lives of the Cambro British saints"], p. 396, 1853, Rev. William Jenkins Rees</ref> He may have been born c. 420 in the [[Brython]]ic kingdom of [[Manaw Gododdin]] (modern [[Lothian]] in [[Scotland]]), centred on the [[Firth of Forth]] in the area known as [[Hen Ogledd|Yr Hen Ogledd]]. Little is known of him. One of the sons of [[Cunedda]], grandfather of [[Saint David]],<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=NnAlAAAAMAAJ&dq=ceredig+ap+cunedda&pg=PA238 The Cambrian, A Bi-Monthly Published in the interest of the Welsh people and their descendants in the United States, 1881, Vol. 1, 1881]</ref> according to [[Nennius]]' [[Historia Brittonum]], he arrived in what is now modern [[Wales]] from Gododdin with his father's family when they were invited to help ward off [[Ireland|Irish]] invaders. As a reward for his bravery, his father gave him the southernmost part of the territories in north-west Wales<ref>{{cite book|last=Baring-Gould|first=Sabine|authorlink=Sabine Baring-Gould|title=A Book of North Wales|url=https://archive.org/details/bookofnorthwales00bari|year=1903|publisher=Methuen & Company|oclc=559701019}}</ref> reconquered from the Irish. The realm is traditionally supposed to have been called ''Ceredigion'' after him, which led to the name of modern [[Ceredigion]], one of the [[principal areas of Wales]]. He married [[Meleri]], one of the many daughters of King [[Brychan|Brychan Brycheiniog]] of Brycheiniog (now Brecknockshire).<ref name=EBK>{{cite web |url=http://www.earlybritishkingdoms.com/bios/ceredccn.html |title=King Ceredig Ceredigion of Ceredigion |last=Ford |first=David Nash |date=2001 |website=Early British Kingdoms |publisher=Nash Ford Publishing |access-date=25 July 2021}}</ref> Amongst their children was a daughter named Ina who is thought to be the [[Ina (Welsh saint)|Saint Ina]] to whom St Ina's Church in [[Llanina]] near [[New Quay]], Ceredigion is dedicated, and a son named Sanctus who in legend sexually assaulted [[Saint Non]] and is the father of [[Saint David]].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Baring-Gould|first1=Sabine|last2=Fisher|first2=John|title=Lives of the British Saints|date=1911|publisher=[[Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion]]|page=318|url=https://archive.org/stream/livesofbritishsa03bariuoft#page/350/mode/1up}}</ref>
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