Hanes y Cwrwgl Conwy //Conwy Coracle History
Cynllun y Cwrwgl Conwy // Conwy Coracle Design
Cwrwgl Conwy mewn defnydd // the Conwy Coracle in use
Cwrwgl o blaen Tu Hwnt I’r Bont
ac o blaen Pont Mawr, Llanrwst
Lle mae’ nhw wedi cael eu defnyddio? // Where were they used?
Mae disgrifiadau cwrwgl Conwy gan ‘dwristiaid cynnar yng nghymru’ yn awgrymu Llynnoedd ac afonydd ledled Dyffryn Conwy, gan gynnwys ardaloedd Llanrwst, Llyn Elsi, Capel Curig a Betws y Coed.
Conwy coracle descriptions by ‘early tourists in wales’ suggest Lakes and rivers throughout the Conwy Valley, including in the LLanrwst, Llyn Elsi, Capel Curig and Betws y Coed areas.
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Ioan Glan Lledr (19th Century)
"[Roedd] John Jones, neu Ioan Glan Lledr, yr olaf yn ôl traddodiad i bysgota â chwrwgl ar afonydd Lledr a Chonwy. Roedd yn fardd gwlad”
//
“John Jones, or Ioan Glan Lledr, the last, according to tradition, to fish with a coracle on the Lledr and Conwy Rivers. He was a country poet”
- Clwb Mynydda Cymru
Ioan Glan Lledr, c 1880
Extracts from Welsh Heritage Series No.5 ‘Traditional Fishing in Wales’ by Emrys Evans 1995
(Cyhoeddwyd gyntaf yn Gymraeg, 1989 gan Gwasg Carreg Gwalch, Llanrwst)
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Historical precident for using the Coracle as a space for conversation
"With the approach of the investiture of the Prince of Wales in 1969, efforts were made to seek a political solution.
Denis Coslett of the Free Wales Army invited the Prime Minister Harold Wilson to meet him for coracle based discussions in the middle of the River Tywi but this invitation was declined."
- Rivers in the Welsh physical and cultural landscape by Catherine Duigan (p 19)