Annotation:Morfa Rhuddlan

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MORFA RHUDDLAN. AKA - "Marsh of Rhuddlan (The)," "Rhuddlan Marsh." Welsh, Air (3/4 time). A Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB. Edward Jones, in Musical Relicks of the Welsh Bards (1784) explains:

Morfa Rhuddlan, or the Red Marsh, on the banks of the Clwyd in Flintshire, was the scene of many Battles of the Welsh with the Saxons. At the memorable conflict in 795, the Welsh were unsuccessful and their Monarch, Caradog slain. It is unknown whether this celebrated tune took its name from this or some later occasion … This plaintive style, so predominant in Welsh music, is well adapted to melancholy subjects. Our Music probably received a Pathetic tincture from our distresses under the oppression of the Saxons.

Sabine Baring-Gould further discusses the melody in A Book of North Wales ():

Between S. Asaph and Rhyl is Rhuddlan with its castle in ruins. Formerly the tide washed its walls. The marsh, Morfa Rhuddlan, was the scene of a great battle, fought against the Saxons in 796, in which the Welsh, under their King Carradog, were defeated with great slaughter, and the prisoners taken were all put to the sword. The beautiful melody "Morfa Rhuddlan" has been supposed to pertain to a lament composed on that occassion; but the character of the melody is not earlier than the seventeenth century, and it apparently owes its name to the verses adapted to it by Iean Glan Geirionydd, who lived a thousand years after the event of this battle.

Source for notated version:

Printed sources: Aird (Selection of Scotch, English, Irish and Foreign Airs, vol. 5), Glasgow, 1797; No. 43, p. 17. Edward Jones (Musical and Poetical Relicks of the Welsh Bards), 1784;

Recorded sources:




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