Amlawdd Wledig was a legendary king ofsub-Roman Britain. The Welsh title wledig, archaically Gwledic or Guletic and LatinisedGuleticus, is defined as follows: "lord, king, prince, ruler; term applied to a number of early British rulers and princes who were prominent in the defence of Britain about the time of the Roman withdrawal; commander of the native militia ".
Location
He is described as a king of 'some part of Wales, possibly on the border with Herefordshire'. If it is accepted that King Gwrfoddw of Ergyng is Amlawdd's son, there would be a logic to Amlawdd also having been a king in the Ergyng or Herefordshire area.
Family
Ancestry
At least three different genealogies are suggested for Amlawdd Wledig:
The Bonedd yr Arwyr names Amlawdd as the son of Kynwal, son of Ffrewdwr, son of Gwarvawr/Gwdion, son of Kadif/Kadien, son of Cynan, son of Eudaf, son of Caradoc, son of Brân, son of Llŷr.
Peter Bartrum notes that a different genealogy for Amlawdd is present in Peniarth MS 178, part 1, p. 1, where his daughter Eigr is listed as ferch Aflawdd Wledig ap Lambor ap Manael ap Carcelois ap Jossue ap Evgen chwaer Joseph Armathia, explaining that around the year 1400 the lineage of the Grail Kings from the Vulgate Quest was adapted by the monks of Glastonbury from Enigeus down to Lambor, father of the Maimed King, who in this account fathers an unnamed son who is in turn the father of Arthur's mother Eigr or Ygerne. Bartrum points out that later Welsh texts adapted this genealogy, replacing the word filius, which stood for the unnamed son, with Amlawdd Wledig.
It has also been suggested that the name Amlawdd could be identical in origin to the name Amleth or Amlethus, which appears in Saxo Grammaticus' thirteenth centuryGesta Danorum and is the origin of Shakespeare's character Hamlet. However, Amleth is described as a Jute who marries the daughter of the British King on his first trip to Britain. In terms of the chronology, Amleth could be identical to Amlawdd Wledig. However, Amlawdd is not described as being of Jutish or Saxon origin in the Welsh Arthurian texts.
Wives
Amlawdd is said to have been the husband of Gwen, the daughter of Cunedda Wledig, the legendary northern king said either to have migrated or to have been sent south byVortigern to drive Irish invaders from the Kingdom of Gwynedd.
Children
A number of figures from the Arthurian legends are suggested to have been the children of Amlawdd, including:
Two unnamed daughters, sisters to Enfeidas, by Amlawdd's fifth wife Denyw. Enfeidas is said, in Heinrich von dem Türlin's Diu Crône to be Arthur's aunt, a goddess, and the queen of Avalon.
Gwyar, argued by some to be the mother of Gwalchmai or Gawain; however, others argue that Gwyar is a male name and that Gwyar is therefore the name of Gwalchmai's father
King Gwrfoddw or Gwrfoddw Hen of Ergyng, who is listed as one of two brothers of Arthur's unnamed mother in Culhwch and Olwen
Twins Gweir Paladr Hir and Gweir Gwrhyd Ennwir, listed as 'uncles of Arthur, his mother's brothers' in the Arthurian court lists of the Mabinogion
Relationship to King Arthur and debated historicity