Thank you everyone for watching! I will be assisting with an event in Wales this October. Hope you can join us 🏴 ceremonial-gatherings.mystrikingly.com
@zeph64393 ай бұрын
The rock pool and stone steps leading onto it are very reminiscent of similar circular pools carved into bedrock elsewhere in the world, notably near and around pyramids.. Places of power indeed ~ there is quite a lot of evidence to suggest that the megalithic dolmens, obelisks, pillars and stone circles all around the world point to an earlier Age of Civilization, as there must be a common source and denominator. The Dragon of Wales leads to that source.
@squatchinaround55154 ай бұрын
That moment with the horses just hit me hard for some reason when you said it captured the spirit of Wales. Beautiful video man
@TheWisdomOfOdin4 ай бұрын
Truly beautiful and serene moment. So happy to have caught it on camera ♥️ 🐴
@fareebug84394 ай бұрын
Same
@stellamariehere4 ай бұрын
Have a look into the story of Rhiannon 🐴
@welshpaganismАй бұрын
Thank you so much for creating this wonderful video about the spiritual heritage of Wales, a country I’m fortunate enough to call home 🏴 Glad you enjoyed your visit :)
@TedDaviesArtistry4 ай бұрын
Jacob, as a proud Welsh descendant in the USA I appreciate you creating this content in Wales!!! Very interesting and Stella was fantastic. Thank you again bro. Love your videos!!🙏🏴🏴🏴
@TheWisdomOfOdin4 ай бұрын
So glad you enjoyed it!
@TedDaviesArtistry4 ай бұрын
@@TheWisdomOfOdin thx again safe travels!!
@lorrainemorris5273 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing our ancient language and country and culture . And I AM VERY PROUD TO BE WELSH . CYMRU AM BYTH . DIOLCH 🏴.
@gwyrdd11153 ай бұрын
8:55 That's similar to how I would describe, it as a Welsh person living in Gwynedd, close to Eryri National Park. Moving back here after living away for so long in cities, puts me in a very different mindset. The landscape occupies a much greater portion of my mind than it did when when I lived in urban areas, almost as if the entire landscape is one great spirit that is an extra character in your life.
@mountainben883 ай бұрын
Someone should do a study on atheism in stronger old faith regions to see if those numbers are higher. I know of an old faith town that never uses pagan, but it's almost half-atheists and half-old faith and both seem to share many values that some might considered almost rightish being less inclusive to other groups and this just might be a result of not embracing universalistic views and artificially manufactured cultures from politics and believe the locals have a right to protect the towns from the entrance of criminals. The towns folk seem to have a very anti-criminal mentality. Christians behaving badly that can spread from a Christian town to this town making the few remaining Christians feel unsafe. The town people want to keep the remaining Christians, finding them highly entertaining. Like comedy to them. Christians are silly gooses. The children end up converting or relocating anyway and normally end up taking local classes to figure out how to obey local traditions in the hope of an atheist or religious wife/ husband being of the same genetic group as the locals and most children have no good choices anyway but migration to nearby towns, all available land and homes are owned. The locals' atheists are allies of the local old faith, the biggest debate is normally over the divine, not customs, values and traditions and all decent people are opposed to crime, the rest are always invited to leave.
@stellamariehere4 ай бұрын
I haven't watched it yet but I'm so excited! & it's been lovely getting to know you overseas, and for the short time we had together here in Cymru. Since the day we visited Tarren Deusant my journey has evolved profoundly. I've had some wild awakenings in the past two months with the land here bringing upon major insights and relationships with the spirits of place, I hear them clearly right now, calling for harmony upon the lands once more. Blessings Jacob 🐉🌿
@TheWisdomOfOdin4 ай бұрын
Our time together felt like a blur! But so happy we could make this video to hopefully help others in the explorations of the old ways 🙏 thanks for getting in my van 🤣🤣…
@stellamariehere4 ай бұрын
@@TheWisdomOfOdinThanks for shouting into rocks with me
@tishainess93394 ай бұрын
💖💖💖💖💖💖
@andrewt37684 ай бұрын
Wales is very close to the top of my list of places to visit. Thanks for sharing your experience there with us!
@dancingdingo4 ай бұрын
It's beautiful 😍 and there's castles on every corner. Watch out for dragons though.
@TheCynedd4 ай бұрын
I am, ancestrally, 50% Welsh. I understand what you are saying about my people. My grandmother, aunt and father taught me importance of our Welsh heritage.
@intricatecinnamonhat91504 ай бұрын
Wales is definitely it's own country and culture. The 'royal family' should notnhave it's name plastered all.over the place.
@Nicola564 ай бұрын
Some of the older carved faces on those rocks remind me of Sheila-na-Gig, so perhaps a sacred place to contemplate rebirth. I grew up in South Wales but now live in the heart of Mid Wales in the beautiful Brecon Beacons which is a radically different area to the industrialised South. There is also a huge difference between North and South Wales, my Nan who went to school in South Wales during the 1950s experienced the Welsh Knot, where teachers were still physically beating any child who spoke Welsh. My generation still carry this very recent trauma and so now my way of healing this is by singing to the land in Proto-Celtic, the ancient mother tongue language that went on to feed into and become Welsh. Hiraeth (pronounced hee-ry-th) is that deep yearning for our lost indigenous roots, it’s connected to the other Welsh word Haraith meaning speech and the Proto-Celtic Yêtĥ meaning speech and language, so the longing of Hiraeth sings of our lost language. Thank you for making such a beautiful and thought provoking video. 🙏
@stellamariehere4 ай бұрын
My nana also faced the Welsh Not but it was during the times of the Blue Books in the 1800s that the language stopped being spoken in my family. But it's being brought back! I actually did a post on Instagram all about the blue books and our language recently and people were blown away. Are you learning Proto-Celtic with Carolyn Hillier by any chance? 😊
@Nicola564 ай бұрын
@@stellamariehere Ahh I'll check out your video thank you, sad to hear that your nana went through that too.😥 Yes Carolyn Hillyer wrote a Proto-Celtic lexicon called 'Her bone bundle' which is amazing, I work very closely with Carolyn and have a small monthly circle with her to discuss these issues. I'm glad there are like minded people like yourself interested in raising awareness and healing these issues, it is so inspiring. 🥰🙏
@mountainben883 ай бұрын
Someone should do a study on atheism in stronger old faith regions to see if those numbers are higher. I know of an old faith town that never uses pagan, but it's almost half-atheists and half-old faith and both seem to share many values that some might considered almost rightish being less inclusive to other groups and this just might be a result of not embracing universalistic views and artificially manufactured cultures from politics and believe the locals have a right to protect the towns from the entrance of criminals. The towns folk seem to have a very anti-criminal mentality. Christians behaving badly that can spread from a Christian town to this town making the few remaining Christians feel unsafe. The town people want to keep the remaining Christians, finding them highly entertaining. Like comedy to them. Christians are silly gooses. The children end up converting or relocating anyway and normally end up taking local classes to figure out how to obey local traditions in the hope of an atheist or religious wife/ husband being of the same genetic group as the locals and most children have no good choices anyway but migration to nearby towns, all available land and homes are owned. The locals' atheists are allies of the local old faith, the biggest debate is normally over the divine, not customs, values and traditions and all decent people are opposed to crime, the rest are always invited to leave. The local will debate the best method of execution of criminals, lethal injection vs hanging or human sacrifice. Not that divided between the atheist and the religious. Atheist population leaned a little more for human sacrifice then the religious who wanted live burnings of criminals.
@fink4se4914 ай бұрын
I’ve always had a special affinity for Welsh mythology and practice and language, thank you for making this!
@dav3bassman3 ай бұрын
This is probably the best video on Wales / Welsh mythology I've ever seen. Well done indeed! Subbed :)
@jennalicious2themax4 ай бұрын
Really needed this video today
@stellamariehere4 ай бұрын
Thank you ❤
@AstheSunDies3 ай бұрын
Great video! Loved it! Magnificent Landscape, interesting history and deep beliefs. I'm from Northern Italy. We also have a Celtic Heritage. I hope it will become more known by people
@jandunn1698 күн бұрын
What a wonderful video!!!!! You really gave me the feeling that I am there with you. I am studying both Welsh and Scottish on Duolingo. It does help, and Kris Hughes and Mhara Starling are wonderful to learn magical words from as well. I enjoyed walking with you both and listening to what Stella had to say......
@kerrypennings42944 ай бұрын
Just ordered a book on the Mabinogi! Thanks for sharing this wonderful topic! I'm gonna have to hike there...
@mharastarling27304 ай бұрын
What a fabulous video! Thank you to yourself and Stella for taking us on such a wonderful journey.
@ramonbennett84164 ай бұрын
My Father, believed in a past life he was a Druid, and shared that we all need a connection to Nature and the outdoors environment. For a connection from where we came from. And the gifts that are given from our ancestors and environment. 🙏
@EnkiRising4 ай бұрын
The Druids didn't write down their teachings because the sound of rain doesn't need translating.
@jackjones70624 ай бұрын
And everyone knows what rain sounds like in Wales anyway
@sandraswift34893 ай бұрын
❤they knew the torah
@ryan.19903 ай бұрын
High on your own fumes
@zeph64393 ай бұрын
They actually did ~ evidently according to Cesar, the Druids had many books. St Patrick burned most of them.
@dav3bassman3 ай бұрын
@@zeph6439 no doubt kept it for themselves in the hall of records along with the contents of Alexandria ...
@fareebug84394 ай бұрын
Beautiful. Really lovely. Thank you for sharing. The moment with the horses really was so precious and touching, I could feel it deeply.
@jonathanbenka76044 ай бұрын
That interaction with the horses feels to as if they are the guardians of the spring and welcoming good intentions and energy.
@badchadb334 ай бұрын
Love this!! I am proud to have Welsh and Celtic ancestry. My last name, Blevins, is Welsh for Wolf Cub.
@Curly_Ange4 ай бұрын
Beautiful video! I loved it so much. The horses were so gorgeous and friendly. Lots of interesting information shared by you both. Thank you from Australia ❤
@sarahbutterfield64053 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing! It reminds me there are so many spiritual places in North Eastern Europe that I am so pulled towards seeing and visiting!
@StephanieD74 ай бұрын
I never see any videos of Welsh culture and the mythos. Thank youuuu! I have some Welsh heritage in my ancestry. I loved the moment the horses approached you two. So rad ❤
@Mark-Bloom4 ай бұрын
There's a book titled 'A Dictionary of Fairies' by Katherine Briggs which is pretty comprehensive, covering the fairies of all the Celtic nations. The fairies are listed in alphabetical order and have descriptions and sometimes lore / tales. I also believe The Witcher novel series loans from the Welsh and Irish languages for the elven races.
@earthmamma854 ай бұрын
I have always been drawn to paganism, Celtic beliefs, and always had a strong connection with nature. I’ve recently had my ancestry done and I am primarily English, Welsh, and Scottish with some Irish. It’s like my ancestors were always influencing me ❤
@thepagan54323 ай бұрын
I've been a Pagan for 57 years since I was 13, I moved from close to Avebury, Wiltshire to West Wales in 2019. Wales is a beautiful country and being from Celtic roots I feel at home.
@DarthHughes4 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this video ❤ my Father came from south Wales (and i think you showed his hometown in the video 😉) sadly my when my father was in school it was still forbidden to speak or learn Welsh so he and i never learned it but this video gave me another reason to force myself to try again. Even tho I personally never lived in Wales I always felt more connected to Wales and Wales is more of a homeland than Germany (where i grew up) Thank you again for the great video(s) can’t wait for so mich more ❤
@Timetraveler1111MN4 ай бұрын
15:15 I got emotionally moved ❤❤ horse love, when you were tuning your energies and talking about the fairies and the spirit of the land and then the horses just came up to you that was so beautiful. I needed that. I just came back from seeing my dad in a memory loss center. He can barely talk and is in a wheelchair and has went completely from being OK to completely worse in the last three months. It’s just really sad and so I needed this positivity.
@kev17344 ай бұрын
Horses: "all who wish to pass to the sacred fountain must provide us with an offering of apples" 🤣🤣 awesome place it's so nice that stella shared it with us...and you!
@bapitz19873 ай бұрын
Love all your videos, keep going bro!
@lisapatterson92974 ай бұрын
This is the video I have been waiting for!!! I have been on a journey to find out who I am and what I believe in or connect with spiritually ✨️ The dragon on the Wales flag kept coming into my meditations and down the rabbit hole I went. 😂 Luckly your channel crossed my path and I have learned so much from you, Thank you!!! I hope to visit Wales as I have not been to that part of Great Britain YET!
@TheWisdomOfOdin4 ай бұрын
Hope you get to wales soon’ so much to see!
@Spazticmonkey10004 ай бұрын
Love the Welsh, Celtic unity!
@cipherx63344 ай бұрын
This video is so well done, enjoyed every moment. Da iawn
@TheWisdomOfOdin4 ай бұрын
Thank you 🙏 🏴
@RilesWoolner4 ай бұрын
This was way fun to watch. Im of partial Welsh ancestry and its wild how many of my fellow Americans have a Welsh last name and yet don't even know its Welsh or that theyre ancestors came from Wales, let alone where Wales is, that there's a Welsh language or that Welsh mythology exists. Unfortuantely as well, for those who are aware of their Welsh roots among other ancestries, rarely will someone lead with their Welsh background when asked about their ethnicity. This is why videos like this are great. It helps the Welsh descendants know more about who we are.
@leejames31484 ай бұрын
Cymreag (Welsh) is not a difficult language. Of course, it has its complexities like any other language. However, Welsh is 98% phonetic. It has only 4 irregular verbs and the standard grammar is easily comprehensible. It is only perceived as difficult because you may not know these facts or someone may have a bad teacher. A person will know how to read Welsh well before they become proficient in reading English or indeed Irish or Scottish Gaelic. One very proud Welsh speaker (Cymro Cymraeg) here. 🏴🏴🏴🏴
@stellamariehere4 ай бұрын
Dw i'n newydd dechrau dysgu Cymraeg ac dw i'n mwyn siarad cymraeg yn rhugl, ond in this video I had barely began. Unfortunately the language stopped being spoken in my family during the time of the blue books 😢 but yes you're right it's so much easier than I thought it would be. (Unsure whether what I wrote was correct up there, in currently learning about whether to say 'ac' or 'a'.
@leejames31484 ай бұрын
@@stellamariehere Keep going! Dal ati! You’ll be Rhugl before you know it. Be the one that reignites the line of Welsh speakers in your family! You’ll be amazing! 😄🏴🏴
@NevisYsbryd4 ай бұрын
Yeah, I have studied both Welsh and Irish Gaelic a bit and Gaelic is *far* more difficult. Most of the spelling is actually the same and the grammar is pretty comparable to English and Romance languages. The number of sounds in Welsh that are not already included in the English kit is pretty small, too.
@anthapersephone73114 ай бұрын
Don’t tell me welsh is phonetic then throw a word at me with no vowels
@leejames31484 ай бұрын
@@anthapersephone7311 You are obviously being either very sarcastic or very ignorant. Welsh words have vowels in them. Welsh has 7 vowels. How is it that you didn’t know this? I will tell you that it is phonetic and I will throw a ton of vowels your way and still tell you that it is. You learn the Welsh sound for each letter not the English sound. That’s what makes it phonetic. THAT’S WHAT MAKES IT WELSH. Hope you understand now 😄
@Justificus4 ай бұрын
Having just found out through a genetic test that my ancestors also came from Scotland, Ireland, and Wales; this has been a video that feels like coming home. For the people of these countries, the Fae are very real - and no one is the least bashful about insisting that they truly live in areas, as such, that you just explored.
@otterlybooked3 ай бұрын
Blessed be your channel. You really helped me getting more into Paganism.
@AndyRocket10003 ай бұрын
Very nice video! Thanx
@adamification97213 ай бұрын
Great video. North and West Wales have such fantastic cultural sites. Being from the heavily anglicised south, seeing our traditions and culture fully preserved is always inspiring. Even still I'd highly recommend South Wales as well, we've clung on to everything we could.
@native_earth9164 ай бұрын
My grandmother is welsh, (Rhys) family, and we have alot of family stories and tradition that shows thru my family here in America, thank you for making this video and giveing me a deeper look at the land of parts of my heritage ❤
@imprint2030Ай бұрын
You absolutely need to come to Cornwall next! We have an insane amount of sacred sites especially on the Penwith peninsula. The whole thing is basically granite. There is also a strong modern pagan community down here (especially far south west cornwall).
@Tipi_Dan3 ай бұрын
This is just a very enjoyable video to watch.
@Mark-Bloom4 ай бұрын
I recall another book I forgot in my previous two comments: 'Fire in the Head: Shamanism and the Celtic Spirit' by Tom Cowan. It's mostly centred on the Gaelic Celt perspective but is an excellent read. It covers quite a lot and is in a similar vein to Michael Harner's 'The Way of the Shaman'.
@stanleywilliams442927 күн бұрын
Fire is the essential spark of life, blessed be!
@mel38234 ай бұрын
🥰 oh I hope to go and explore the UK sometime soon
@TimBrownYoutube4 ай бұрын
The timeless question: "Who are you and why are you in my van right now?"
@TheWisdomOfOdin4 ай бұрын
Haha 😆
@forgottenpower10664 ай бұрын
Love your videos
@jimawhitaker4 ай бұрын
She strikes me as a beautiful soul. I'm going over to her channel...
@mikehart56194 ай бұрын
Beautiful and informative. I was wondering, this sort of Paganism that is very connected to the land and rather local... do you have suggestions for those of us who live in North America... could I connect with the tylwyth teg here out in nature or should I expect to connect with some North American nature spirit perhaps of Native American lore? One line of my ancestors does trace back to Wales in the area near Ragland Castle and as far as I know, I have no Native American ancestry so I am reluctant to try to practice any Native American ritual or myth. It would be a cultural appropriation of the worst kind.
@johnwesterman81313 ай бұрын
In a church on Caurua Hill Ely Cardiff i experienced a vision of Mother Mary who shared with me Her deep love and great passion for Wales. Wales is God's best kept secret.
@debrascott3824 ай бұрын
Wow love this on so many levels and have gone from city girl to country girl myself would love to visit wales I’m always learning
@samshuijzen4 ай бұрын
I grew up in South Wales and this helped me connect again with something ancient, it's like I was there.. that place with the spring resembles very much a place I often used to visit as a kid, going camping there in the summer and going there to see the icicles in winter. A magical place, I was going back to it in my memory as a special place, such a similarity! It might have been a cave..(?)
@steadyeddie6394 ай бұрын
The power is within..
@ClamJaneH664 ай бұрын
So please Jacob you are exploring other parts of the UK's spirituality. Thank you for sharing.
@lchris334 ай бұрын
Fascinating look at a place, as you say, is often overlooked by outsiders. I've long been fascinated with the culture and stories of Wales. I've read a few versions of the Mabinogion. I especially like the 4-part series by Evangeline Walton. I suppose that could be considered a modern interpretation but stories have always been traditionally told and retold in various ways.
@Mark-Bloom4 ай бұрын
There's a fictional novel series called 'The Chronicles of Prydain' by Lloyd Alexander which is heavily influenced by Wales and Welsh mythology. It's in a similar vein to 'The Chronicles of Narnia' in terms of style (children's stories which can be enjoyed by adults). I think there are 5 books in the main series.
@dragonlady2664 ай бұрын
Disney loosely, and I mean it when I say loosely, based one of their movies off a mix of two of those books (The Book of Three, and The Black Cauldron.) The books that I read were much more interesting. ❤
@glanguish93903 ай бұрын
Also Katherine Kerr the Deverry Series
@pedrosilvasouto73204 ай бұрын
I would love that Portugal could become a Pagan country in the near future
@MangoDanceFitness3 ай бұрын
Thanks for doing the video all the same.
@NigeWebb3 ай бұрын
Gwych! Hwyl, Taffy Nige x
@dixersdc39634 ай бұрын
To add salt to the wound for Capel Celyn, by the time the project was finished, they didn't need that water anymore. Something about moving around Wales, I always feel like I'm travelling around on scars that still hurt the land they're on. There are only a handful of ancient woodlands, and in those places, you can get a little bit of respite from what tends to feel like a crying country.
@susankelly59764 ай бұрын
Thank you ❤
@Earth_journey_yoga4 ай бұрын
Wonderful video, thank you. 'Hiraeth' was that the word?
@stealthandysteath10693 ай бұрын
Hello, just a quick question. What are the three dots??? Thanks for any feedback 👍
@mindbodysoleil4 ай бұрын
Thank you! A stay in Snowdonia stole my heart
@aaroncarson17704 ай бұрын
When I was there, It felt like a distortion in space. As if the whole place was a sort of patchy gateway to Faerie, and it might look like a small quaint dell, in one instance, only to unravel into a vast, and complex landscape once you stepped into it.
@ron18364 ай бұрын
Stella is my kind of girl for sure.
@alphatoomegabeyondthematri51663 ай бұрын
Great video! I love Wales and just ordered the Mabinogion and am about to move to Wales which I am so looking forward to. Re England! To me England is more a name as I consider myself a Lancashire lass and a Briton, not English. This is why I think the name England as a whole does not really have a local feel or even kinship to many. I have relatives from Scotland, Wales and Ireland and many Welsh friends and I love the British Isles and Southern Ireland never a problem in any area but the teasing banter with friends from Yorkshire we laugh about the War of the Roses which I feel is the best way forward to value a long local history which has been very much attacked by the modern way of life. Remember it was not long ago many people never left their local village. Being a Northerner I don't particularly like London at all it is one place I will no longer ever step foot in agian, even before the recent invasion it has a bad vibe, evil resides there for a very long time. It may even breed a certain malevolence which if sensitive one can taste. The faye realm is indeed real and I have had many experience, so I am aware indeed how important offerings are. I see it as a way of making friends with beings that have been mistreated by humans and thus a genuine heart felt offering helps bridge the gap. There are the negative entities but I put them more in the realm of demonic which from my understanding many faye are also at war with. We can play a part in this fight against evil and learn to understand more as we go.
@Jay-ql4gp4 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@sabrinaleedance3 ай бұрын
Are all of us who went thru our New age phase in our early 20s all now getting into traditional, ancestral spirituality now that we are older?
@mjinba073 ай бұрын
Through the millennia, all people came new to the new places that we now think of as ancient. Humans have been gradually moving around the planet since forever. We know this from archaeologic, linguistic, and now genetic research. As an American, I have some Welsh in my genetic background, but to think that says something about my "roots" would be to overlook where those "Welsh" peoples came from, and where the preceding peoples had lived, and so on. So pursuing our roots only takes us to particular places during particular times and who knows what before that. For that reason, I think it's best to connect with the spirits where you are. That's the most human way to go about it, what we've always done. When it comes to "paganism," of course, after a couple thousand years of Christianity there's little or no cultural cohesion to support it. No long held communal practice or structure - and no dependence for the human psyche in the same way ancient hunter-gatherers or ancient farmers had. It becomes a very personal, individual matter in a modern world. There's power and truth in that. It's valid. But we should never confuse it with enacting or reviving an old or original form of paganism. That's just fantasy.
@kukumuniu56584 ай бұрын
Hi :) What do You think, why some people involved in shamanism and witchcraft believe that using absinthe and wormwood as an offering to the spirits and deities of nature can cause damage to our energy?
@flockthis83923 ай бұрын
Introduction very apt description, that place is less known yes. But still at the edge of the tourist town stuff. The good stuff is a little more to quote your lady friend... hidden and would blow your socks off. You won't need 'special mushrooms' oh you will think you have taken them 😂 but they are optional
@apokalupsishistoria4 ай бұрын
Conan the Barbarian is also called “the Cimmerian”, another name for Cymbrian, aka Welsh! If I recall correctly, “Wales” is essentially a colonist term for the Cymbri.
@joewilliams41533 ай бұрын
It’s interesting to try and look at the religion that came even before Celtic paganism in Europe, the oldest system of paganism that we know of, back when the great monument builders ruled Europe, they were probably animists, so a lot closer to more eastern traditional religions and beliefs in spirits and conscious power in everything around you, some parts of this have even fed into polytheistic religions, such as with celts you have fairies, with the Norse you have elves and dwarves, the Suomi have trolls, the idea of these sometimes mischievous forces or spirits that can disguise themselves as every day objects, it very much calls back to that even older prehistoric belief in animism
@ElizabethHalloway-nz7wb4 ай бұрын
A land of poets
@RilesWoolner4 ай бұрын
If you're an American and your last name is Jones, Sayer, Griffiths, Davies, Jenkins, Hughes, Perry, Smith, Williams, Mower, Walsh, Evans, James, Watkins, Hill, White, Baker, Boyd, Philips, Richards, Carey, Morgan, Thomas, Morris, Welch, Lewis, Roberts, Owen, Lloyd, Edwards, Moore, Pryce, Rosser, Kendrick, Trevor, Vaughn, Harris, Taylor, or Brown etc then its likely you have some Celtic Welsh ancestry
@Victoriafolkheart4 ай бұрын
There are quite a few in this lost that are English, not Cymraeg 🙏
@ScarecrowwxАй бұрын
Meredith is one as well, not too common but there's a Meredith side in my family
@samilede15 күн бұрын
Agree with the comment above; surnames which are descriptive (e.g. of appearance or profession, such as Brown, White, Smith, Baker) are English surnames, not Welsh ones.
@gwyrdd11153 ай бұрын
11:56 Your first pronunciation is correct (I'm a native speaker of the language). The second pronunciation is what English people do (particualrky those with 'posh' accents), when speaking other languages. They try to bend foreign sounding words to make sense to their anglo ears, and insert vowels where they shouldn't be, or cut some away where they're meant to be! An example is pronouncing the name 'Iolo' as 'Iolooowwwww' instead of 'Iolo'. That 'o' at the end might almost sound Japanese to an English speaker. As the accent in South Wales, particularly the South East has been influenced much more by English, you will find these Anglo habits in the way they pronounce certain things, which they aren't always aware of.
@edwardd.4844 ай бұрын
What about the red dragon mythology/spirituality?
@heidifarstadkvalheim49524 ай бұрын
Interesting - Loock up Maria Kvilhaug - she is norwegian historian who has desiferd the old Edda kvad ( old mother) - from the prehistoric time. She has written books in English ( Seed of Yggdrasil and The Maiden with the Meed) and she also has a podcast ( Edda podden and Lady of the Labyrint) I would ove that this get connected - the history before the Indoeuropean...
@Victoriafolkheart4 ай бұрын
I would like to add if I may, that Wales is not actually the 'real' name for the land. Its Cymru. Wales means "foreigner" ... Cymru means "compatriot or fellow-man" 🏴 Even our name was inverted. I try not to use Wales asmuch as possible but its so difficult because no one really knows what Cymru means or is. I have Welsh in my title but I really want to be able to change it to Cymraeg one day soon and still have people know what it is 🙏🏴
@wuldr4 ай бұрын
I hate to be that guy but Irish monks helped Christianity spread to England. Not Wales. Wales was Christian before Ireland.
@leejames31484 ай бұрын
PREACH!
@scaberouswretch36734 ай бұрын
Unfortunately. 😂
@CLP99th4 ай бұрын
Stella seems super cool
@KingUsyk4 ай бұрын
Earned it's own identity? it's never been in dispute, Wales is it's own country
@vex8667Ай бұрын
Wales is the oldest country out of all of them, 8500 years before the English (Anglo Saxsons) invaded, We fought back and was still recognised as country by Henry VIII, the term "Principality" was removed in 2013, but even then, the people of Wales never took to the title of Principality, Wales is and always have been a country in its own right, pre-dating all others.
@Victoriafolkheart4 ай бұрын
The faces on the rocks look medieval to me, i filmed almost identical ones a couple of weeks ago in a very old church in west wales
@jonatinthegreat36904 ай бұрын
I love the part where he tried singing the halo song when he put his face in the rock
@TheWisdomOfOdin4 ай бұрын
#exposed!
@desbufton3694 ай бұрын
I found it very interesting how the “phallic” rock didn’t have any organic growth on it…. All around it yes but not on that specific part…??? Maybe some kind of alchemy to prevent organic growth?? I’m by no means an expert, just observation, if someone who is more clued in these fields could fill me in that’d be awesome…. Peace & love everyone 🙏🏻❤️
@flashgordon12624 ай бұрын
Hello from knighton in midwales.
@pilipalaglas364 ай бұрын
I certainly learned about the Mabinogi in school and I'm a Cardiff girl.but a lot older than Stella so maybe they stopped teaching it which sadly wouldn't surprise me. l
@KellyLouiseBrown4 ай бұрын
Me too, but I learnt it at Welsh A Level.
@henrikpersson43714 ай бұрын
the spiritual journey is a personly one. you can join croups and do some spiritual rituals/theachings, but in the end it is the ego's journey to selfdiscovery of its divinty. : )) Namaste btw " Dimensionals portals in wales and ireland makes those places different and more "mystics", lands of the little pbl. lee Carrol talks about this, on yt as kryon
@Fin_Nash4 ай бұрын
Did you know the word "welsh" is old English for "foreigner/slave"? In a Cymraeg school, we were taught a lot of our history. The word you're looking for to describe the people is "Cymry" change the last 'Y' to a 'U' and you're speaking of the country/land.
@rymoe62993 ай бұрын
St Patrick was Welsh 👍🏻
@Gianfranco_694 ай бұрын
Wales is the closest to the surviving people of what used to Populate the whole of Britain.... English are from Northern Europe .. my Mothers welsh, Native speaker ...
@jeopardy-alpha4 ай бұрын
Proud that you done an video on this Jacob, especially once I was notified on this video. Because I am a Canadian who is part Scottish, Welsh along with a little of Slavic descent all added in. It always amazes and makes me mentally hungry in knowledge and learning on the Spirituality/Paganism of an location to learn the energy or ways of the old. I got to say as a Canadian who is part Welsh!
@welshed3 ай бұрын
Nobody debates if Wales is a country or not. Except people who are trying to wind up Welsh people. So, English people in other words.
@geargail4 ай бұрын
*helpful - learning basic Cyrmag
@hooverbaglegs4 ай бұрын
Tarren deusant - correct pronunciation for the second part is ‘daysant’…. It’s not French as the pronunciation in your clip suggests😂