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Llywelyn ap Gruffudd
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== Annexation == With the loss of Llywelyn, Welsh morale and the will to resist diminished. Dafydd was Llywelyn's named successor. He carried on the struggle for several months, but in June 1283 was captured in the uplands above [[Abergwyngregyn]] at Bera Mountain together with his family. He was brought before Edward, then taken to [[Shrewsbury]] where a special session of [[Parliament of England|Parliament]] condemned him to death. He was dragged through the streets, [[hanged, drawn and quartered]]. After the final defeat of 1283, Gwynedd was stripped of all royal insignia, relics and regalia. [[Edward I of England|Edward Longshanks]] took particular delight in appropriating the royal home of the Gwynedd dynasty. In August 1284, he set up his court at [[Abergwyngregyn]], Gwynedd. With equal deliberateness, he removed all the insignia of majesty from Gwynedd; a coronet was solemnly presented to the shrine of St. Edward at Westminster; the matrices of the seals of Llywelyn, of his wife, and of his brother Dafydd were melted down to make a chalice which was given by the king to [[Vale Royal Abbey]] where it remained until the dissolution of that institution in 1538, after which it came into the possession of the family of the final abbot.<ref>{{cite book |url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=39978 |chapter=Houses of Cistercian monks: The abbey of Vale Royal |title=A History of the County of Chester |volume=3 |pages=156β165 |year=1980 |publisher=Victoria County History |location=London}}</ref> The most precious religious relic in Gwynedd, the fragment of the [[True Cross]] known as [[Cross of Neith]], was paraded through London in May 1285 in a solemn procession on foot led by the king, the queen, the archbishop of Canterbury and fourteen bishops and the magnates of the realm. Edward was thereby appropriating the historical and religious regalia of the house of Gwynedd and placarding to the world the extinction of its dynasty and the annexation of the principality to his Crown. Commenting on this a contemporary chronicler is said to have declared "and then all Wales was cast to the ground".<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/history/british/middle_ages/culture_preserved_03.shtml |title=Wales: A Culture Preserved |last=Davies |first=Rees |date=1 May 2001 |page=3 |publisher=bbc.co.uk/history |access-date=6 May 2008}}</ref> Most of Llywelyn's relatives ended their lives in captivity with the notable exceptions of his younger brother [[Rhodri ap Gruffudd]], who had long since sold his claim to the crown and endeavoured to keep a very low profile, and a distant cousin, [[Madog ap Llywelyn]], who in 1294 led a revolt and briefly claimed the title [[Prince of Wales]]. Llywelyn and Eleanor's baby daughter [[Gwenllian of Wales]] was captured by Edward's troops in 1283. She was interned at [[Sempringham Priory]] in England for the rest of her life, becoming a [[nun]] in 1317 and dying without issue in 1337, probably knowing little of her heritage and speaking none of her language. Dafydd's two surviving [[Llywelyn ap Dafydd|sons]] were captured and incarcerated at [[Bristol]] Gaol, where they eventually died many years later. Llywelyn's elder brother [[Owain Goch ap Gruffudd]] disappears from the record in 1282. Llywelyn's surviving brother Rhodri ap Gruffudd (who had been exiled from Wales since 1272) survived and held manors in [[Gloucestershire]], [[Cheshire]], [[Surrey]], and [[Powys]] and died around 1315. His grandson, [[Owain Lawgoch]], later claimed the title [[Prince of Wales]].
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