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The Mabinogi Stories

The Mabinogi is made up of four Branches which tell the stories of three Kindreds. More detailed, illustrated versions of the Stories are coming soon. This page is a summary of all Four Branches.

Go down to First Branch: Pwyll
Second Branch: Branwen
Third Branch: Manawydan
Fourth Branch: Math

These names for the Branches are not in the mediaeval manuscripts, but they have been in use for over 150 years since 19thC Guest. Branwen is less justified than the others, as her name does not begin the Branch, but is as well established now as the others.

The First Branch: PWYLL

Pwyll I
Pwyll prince of Dyfed, decides to go hunting. Separated from his companions, lost in the forest, he sees a stag brought down by strange shining hounds. He beats them off and puts his own hounds to feed on the stag. A horseman appears, owner of the other hounds, who rebukes him for his gross discourtesy. He is Arawn, king of fabled Annwfn. Pwyll undertakes to compensate Arawn for the offence, and win his friendship (alliance).
Arawn shapechanges Pwyll so they can change places. Pwyll lives as 'the man in Arawn's place' for a year (but without making love to 'his' wife the beautiful queen). He fights and conquers Arawn's enemy Hafgan, which is the aim of his contract with Arawn.
Once they both resume their own places, Arawn has some explaining to do to his queen when they are alone together in bed. He concludes Pwyll has shown himself a true friend. Pwyll is acclaimed a hero, 'Head of Annwfn', and the two rulers continue to exchange rich gifts to seal the alliance.

Pwyll II
Pwyll decides to accept the challenge of Gorsedd Arberth, a hill behind his court. Its prophecy promises 'wounds or a marvel' if he sits there. As he does so he and his company see a marvellous woman rider on a pale horse go past. Pwyll sends a man and then another after her to find out what she desires, but neither can reach her.
On the third day Pwyll himself chases her but as with his men however fast he rides she stays ahead, though she rides slowly. He begs her to stop. She does so but rebukes him for riding his horse so hard. She identifies herself as Rhiannon, declaring her purpose is to marry Pwyll instead of her existing suitor. He gladly agrees to a wedding in a year's time.
At the feast a good looking princely young man asks Pwyll for a favour, which he generously grants. Rhiannon instantly rebukes his foolish words. For this is Gwawl, the unwanted suitor, who asks for Rhiannon herself! Pwyll is devastated but Rhiannon insists he must agree for honour's sake. However she promises she will free them from Pwyll's words.
At Gwawl's wedding Pwyll follows Rhiannon's instructions, appearing as a beggar asking a small favour, which Gwawl agrees. Pwyll produces a small bag (which Rhiannon had given him) asking for it to be filled with food. But it cannot be filled! Pwyll explains a noble man must step in it and declare it full. Gwawl, urged by Rhiannon, does it, and Pwyll immmediately pulls the bag over his head and ties its strings, trapping him.
Pwyll calls his men in from hiding. They beat Gwawl with sticks, playing 'badger-in-the-bag', until Gwawl surrenders his rights to Rhiannon and his revenge, and pays for the feast as well.
Rhiannon and Pwyll are duly married and journey to Dyfed together.

Pwyll III
After jointly ruling Dyfed together in happiness for three years, Rhiannon and Pwyll have no child. The Council of nobles demand Pwyll divorce Rhiannon but he temporises with delay and Rhiannon then gives birth to a son. Six Maids are on duty while she sleeps. But they also sleep, waking to find the child gone.
In great fear they plot to blame Rhiannon. They smear her with puppy blood, then when she wakes accuse her of killing and eating her own baby. With no witness on her side Rhiannon and her counsellors accept her doing penance. She will sit at the gate of Arberth for seven years, telling her crime to travelers, offering to carry them on her back like a horse.
Meanwhile in Gwent, the good lord Teyrnon has a beautiful mare who births a foal every May Eve, which mysteriously disappears. Teyrnon agrees with his wife he will stand vigil to protect the mare, bringing her inside the hall. He sees the new foal born then through the window a dreadful claw reaches for it. Teyrnon slashes it, runs outside but in the dark can see nothing to follow. He discovers a baby left on the step.
He offers the child to his barren wife who gives out it is her own son. They name him Gwri. The boy grows marvellously, adores horses, so his 'mother' gives him the colt born at May Eve. Eventually Teyrnon realises how Gwri resembles Pwyll of Dyfed who he had once served in the past. He and his wife decide to return the boy to Dyfed, and Teyrnon duly takes him there.
At the gates of Narberth Gwri politely refuses Rhiannon's offer of a ride, and they all go into the hall. At the feast Rhiannon sits beside Pwyll as queen, while Teyrnon recounts his tale. All acknowledge the boy as the lost heir. Rhiannon's first words to him that he resolves her pryder, 'loss, anxiety' give him his name - Pryderi. Teyrnon is held in high honour.
Pryderi grows up as a fine prince, becomes ruler of Dyfed when Pwyll dies, and conquers wider territories. He marries Cigfa of Gloyw (Gloucester).

Go to First Branch: Pwyll
Second Branch: Branwen
Third Branch: Manawydan
Fourth Branch: Math

The Second Branch: BRANWEN

Branwen's Blow
The king of Britain, Bendigeidfran has a beautiful sister, Branwem, the highest lady in Britain. They also have a brother Manawydan, and two half brothers by another mother. The King of Ireland arrives in thirteen ships at Bendigeidfran's court at Harlech rock, asking for alliance by marriage with Branwen. After feasting British and Irish together, the Council of Britain agreed that Branwen Lady of Britain and Matholwuch King of Ireland would be married.
The wedding feast was held at Aberffraw in pavilion tents, for Bendigeidfran had never been contained in a house. All was well, Branwen and Matholwch slept together that night, and the feast continued.
But Efnysien, one of Branwen's half brothers, was a quarrelsome man. He objected to his sister's wedding feeling that he had not been properly consulted. To show his anger at being insulted he mutilated Matholwch's fine horses most horribly, cutting their lips, ears, eyelids and tails.
When Matholwch heard of it he was amazed that he had been given the peerless Branwen and then insulted. He left for his ships. However Bendigeidfran sent two noble messengers to overtake them who listened to Matholwch's anger. Bendigeidfran then sent his own brother Manawydan to offer the highest honour payment that can be paid: all the horses would be replaced and as well a silver rod, and a gold plate the size of a face. For Bendigeidfran wished it to be clear the insult was not his making.
On his side Matholwch's Council felt that they would not get a better offer and to refuse would bring shame. So it was agreed and the two kings once more joined their companies in feasting. But Bendigeidfran felt Matholwch was not truly happy so he offered to add to the huge compensation already being paid. He gave Matholwch a Cauldron of enchantment which revived any dead man placed inside it, except he would be voiceless.
As the kings conversed Matholwch asked after the Cauldron's provenance and Bendigeidfran recounted the tale. It had come from Ireland with two refugees, Llassar and Cymidei, who fled the white hot Iron House. Matholwch gave their tale from Ireland. He himself had been sitting a hill by a lake, when an enormous, evil looking man with red blond hair came up from the water with a cauldron on his back. With him came his even more monstrous wife. They told the Irish king she would birth a boy who in sex weeks would be a fully armed warrior.
Matholwch took them on and for a year it was well but then they became insulting and hated. They would not leave so the Council decided to kill them. An iron house was built and the problem family persuaded to go inside it with much food and drink. Once they were drunk the iron was heated with brush fires but the couple forced their way out and fled - to Britain.
After the feast was done the Irish sailed home in their thirteen ships. Branwen distributed rich gifts among great rejoicing, and in due course she bore a son who they named Gwern. But gradually the insult done to Matholwch by the British arose again and there was resentment. Matholwch's kindred mocked him until he and his advisers took revenge, on Branwen.
She was forced to live in the kitchens, do the baking, and endure a daily blow to her ears by the butcher all bloody from his work. It was kept secret by stopping trade with Britain, and imprisoning anyone who came from there.

The Assembly of Bran.
Over three years Branwen reared a starling, teaching it to bear a written message at the base of its wing. She taught it human speech and described her brother. In this way she sent her brother Bendigeidfran a message about her suffering.
Bendigeidfran called a muster to arms of his seven-score and fourteen districts. In Council the attack on Ireland was planned and seven left as regents of Britain, led by Bendigeidfran's son, Caradawg. When Bendigeidfran went to Ireland he waded across the sea. Swineherds on the shore who saw it, took the story of a 'forest in the sea' to Matholwch.
He sent to Branwen to ask her counsel. She explained the mountain beside the forest was her brother wasing the sea and the forest was ships' masts. So there was a mustering of the forces of Ireland. But the Council advised retreat, to go beyond the river Llinon and destroy its bridge. When Bendigeidfran came there he famously said 'He who would be leader must be a bridge'. So he lay down across the river and his warbands crossed by way of his body.
When all had passed the messengers of Matholwch came offering compensation. Matholwch offered to give the kingship of Ireland to the little boy Gweir and do it in Bendigeidfran's presence. But Bendigeidfran was not pleased and they had to return to Matholwch.
His Council advised him to build a mighty house big enough to contain the massive Bendigeidfran who had never been in a building before. Not only that but it would hold the two peoples to meet together. Branwen the peaceweaver counselled to accept this and so her brother's Council did.
But the Irish laid a trap. On every one of the hundred pillars of the house was a hook, where hung a bag with a warrior hidden in it. Dfnysien the angry man came in first and he asked the Irish what was in the bag. 'Flour' they answered. Efnysien felt the bag, found the man's head and crushed the skull with his hands. He repeated the dialogue with each one, killing them while singing an englyn song punning about grinding flour.
Then the to great companies entered and held their peace meeting, making Gweir the little boy the sovereign. Bendigeidfran called the boy to him, then the child went to his uncle Manawydan, qand to Nysien the quiet uncle. Efnysien was angered that the boy did not go to him, and complained. Bendigeidfran told little Gweir to go to Efnysien.
In his mind Efnysien thought of the terrible crime je would do to his kindred. Then he picked up the boy and flung him into the heart of the fire. Branwen leapt after him but Bendigeidfran held her back. Then there was uproar and everyone reached for their weapons, and fighting broke out.
The Irish fired up the Cauldron and filled it with their dead, reviving them. Now Efnysien saw the shame of what he had done.So he crawled in among the Irish corpses so he was thrown into the Cauldron. He stretched himself out until the Cauldron broke into four pieces and his heart broke too. But few were left alive, only seven Britons, and Bendigeidfran mortaly wounded by a poisoned spear.

The Assembly of the Head.

The Singing of the Birds of Rhiannon.

Go to First Branch: Pwyll
Second Branch: Branwen
Third Branch: Manawydan
Fourth Branch: Math

The Third Branch: MANAWYDAN

Go to First Branch: Pwyll
Second Branch: Branwen
Third Branch: Manawydan
Fourth Branch: Math

The Fourth Branch: MATH

Go to First Branch: Pwyll
Second Branch: Branwen
Third Branch: Manawydan
Fourth Branch: Math

stories.1517144096.txt.gz · Last modified: 2018/01/28 12:54 by admin