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Rhys ap Gruffydd
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==Genealogy and early life== Rhys was the fourth son of [[Gruffydd ap Rhys]], ruler of part of [[Deheubarth]], by his wife [[Gwenllian ferch Gruffydd]], daughter of [[Gruffudd ap Cynan]], [[Kingdom of Gwynedd|king of Gwynedd]]. His next older brother was [[Maredudd ap Gruffydd]], and there were older brothers, Morgan and Maelgwn, who were killed in battle with their mother in 1136.<ref>Cadw, Welsh Government (Crown Copyright), 2013. Heroes and Heroines of Wales: Gwenllian</ref> He also had two older half-brothers, [[Anarawd ap Gruffydd|Anarawd]] and [[Cadell ap Gruffydd|Cadell]], from his father's first marriage.<ref>Tout.</ref> Rhys married [[Gwenllian ferch Madog]], daughter of [[Madog ap Maredudd]], the last Prince of all Powys.<ref>Pryce (2004).</ref> [[File:Map of Mediaeval kingdoms of Wales c.1093.svg|thumb|upright|Deheubarth was one of the traditional kingdoms of Wales,<ref>Walker, p. 3</ref> shown here as they were in 1093 when Rhys ap Tewdwr died.]] His grandfather, [[Rhys ap Tewdwr]], had been king of all Deheubarth until his death in 1093. Rhys ap Tewdwr was killed in [[Brycheiniog]], and most of his kingdom was taken over by Norman lords. Gruffydd ap Rhys was forced to flee to [[Ireland]].{{sfn|Lloyd|1911|pp=400-402}} He later returned to Deheubarth and ruled a portion of the kingdom, but was forced to flee to Ireland again in 1127. When Rhys was born in 1132, his father held only the [[commote]] of Caeo in [[Cantref Mawr]].<ref>Turvey pp. 28β29.</ref> The death of King [[Henry I of England]], and [[the Anarchy|the ensuing Anarchy]] arising from the rival claims of [[Stephen of Blois|Stephen]] and [[Empress Maud|Matilda]] to the English throne, gave the Welsh the opportunity to rise against the Normans. A revolt spread through south Wales in 1136, and Gruffydd ap Rhys, aided by his two eldest sons, Anarawd and Cadell, defeated the Normans in a battle near [[Loughor]], killing over five hundred. After driving [[Walter de Clifford (died 1190)|Walter de Clifford]] out of [[Cantref Bychan]], Gruffydd set off to Gwynedd to enlist the help of his father-in-law, Gruffudd ap Cynan.<ref>Turvey p. 31.</ref> In the absence of her husband, Gwenllian led an army against the Norman lordship of Cydweli ([[Kidwelly]]), taking along her two oldest sons, Morgan and Maelgwn. She was defeated and killed by an army commanded by Maurice de Londres of [[Oystermouth Castle]]. Morgan was also killed and Maelgwn captured.{{sfn|Lloyd|1911|p=470}} Gruffydd formed an alliance with Gwynedd, and later in 1136 the sons of Gruffudd ap Cynan, Owain Gwynedd and [[Cadwaladr ap Gruffydd]], led an army to Ceredigion. Their combined forces won a decisive victory over the Normans at the [[Battle of Crug Mawr]]. Ceredigion was reclaimed from the Normans, but was annexed by Gwynedd as the senior partner in the alliance. Gruffydd ap Rhys continued his campaign against the Normans in 1137, but died later that year. The leadership of the family now passed to Rhys' half-brother Anarawd ap Gruffydd. In 1143, when Rhys was eleven, Anarawd was murdered, a death arranged for by Cadwaladr ap Gruffydd, brother of Owain Gwynedd, king of [[Kingdom of Gwynedd|Gwynedd]]. Owain punished Cadwaladr by depriving him of his lands in Ceredigion.{{sfn|Lloyd|1911|p=489}}
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