Idwal Iwrch
Idwal ap Cadwaladr (650? - † 720?) (in Latin: Ituvellus ; in English Judwald ), also known under the name of Idwal Iwrch (the Roe-deer), was a king of Gwynedd.
To died of his/her father, Cadwaladr Blessed the, towards 682, the kingdom of Gwynedd enters during one enough embrumée time. Its nickname suggests an young man of small size and the historical chronicles indicate that it probably was found not implied in conflicts too important or prolonged with his neighbors and that it rather was interested in the interior situation of the kingdom.
It is under its reign that the kingdom close to Mercie, in the west, reinforced its power and its influence. It may be that Idwal is responsible for the incursions that the kingdom Welsh of Powys launched on the borders mercians, at the time of the reign of the king Coenred de Mercie. But even if these raids actually took place and that Gwynedd was implied there, they were to be relatively scattered actions which did not degenerate into more serious conflict. His/her son Rhodri succeeded to him, probably in 720.
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