Llys Don and Caer Aranrhod
According to Lady
Charlotte Guest there are two central female characters in the Fourth
Branch of the Mabinogi or Math vab Mathonwy
whose identities are linked to the Ptolemaic or classical
constellations. She associated Aranrhod with that beautiful circle of
stars Corona Borealis or the
Crown of the North Wind which the Welsh call Caer Aranrhod or 'Aranrhod's Fort', and secondly she equated the shadowy
matriarch Don with Cassiopeia known in Wales as Llys
Don or the 'Court of Don'.i
How old is this
material? Was the author of Math vab Mathonwy, (and his intended
audience) aware of these celestial associations? Or are these later
accretions, inventions of the likes of Owen Pughe and Iolo Morganwg?
Present scholarship takes this second view, for example Patrick Simms
Williams has said: 'On balance, however, Caer Sidi, sidydd,
and the like as astronomical terms look like eighteenth
century inventions based on the extant Taliesin poetry'. Caer Sidi
does not concern us for the moment, but the reference here in '...and
the like...' can only be to Llys Don and Caer Aranrhod in the 'Legendary' Taliesin poem Cadeir
Ceridwen which mentions Gwydion,
Llys Don and Arianrhod. The antiquity of Gwydion in association with
the Milky Way (Caer Gwydion)
is not in question. Can the same be said of Don and Cassiopeia
and Aranrhod and Corona Borealis?
Llys Don and
Casseiopeia
Cassiopeia
or 'Llys Don'. The lady in the town with breasts?
The
origins for the association of Don with the constellation Cassiopeia
are not clear cut and one searches the prose, the poetry and the
Triads in vain for an early unambiguous celestial reference.
Conversely, notices in later authorities are plentiful but most
appear to hark back to Lady Guest's note on Gwydion in her
translation of Math,
or to her sources, (probably Iolo Morgannwg and Owen Pughe, maybe Robert
Roberts too).ii
Lady Guest understood Don as a man, other writers who followed
include Richard Hinckley Allen who noted in 'Star Myths': 'As the
figure almost wholly lies in the Milky Way, the Celts fixed upon it
as their Llys Don,
the Home of Don,
their king of the fairies and father of the mythical character
Gwydyon, who gave his name to that great circle'.iii
And, in 'Celtic
Mythology and Religion',
Alexander Macbain also betrays his source: 'The family of Don is
evidently connected with the sky and its changes. He has given his
name in Welsh to the constellation of Cassiopeia, called Llys Don,
the court of Don'. Iolo Morgannwg though, in his list of Welsh
constellations in 'Y Barddas', offers no clues as to the gender of
Dôn, simply stating: 'Llys Don - The Palace of Don, with the note
'Cassiopeia'
attached. Likewise, Matthew Arnold in 'On
the Study of Celtic Literature'
enthused:
'Why, the heroes
and heroines of the old Cymric world are all in the sky as well as in
Welsh story … Cassiopeia's chair is Llys Don, Don's Court'.
However, John Rhys in 'Celtic
Folklore: Welsh And Manx'
treats
Don as the mother
of the Plant
Don, the
Children of Dôn
and
says: 'The last
stage in the Welsh history of Don consists of her translation to the
skies, where the constellation
of Cassiopeia is
supposed to constitute Llys
Don or Don's
Court'.
There
is, at least, one mention looking beyond the influence horizon of
Iolo Morganwg and Lady Guest, towards a traditional origin for Don =
Cassiopeia.
Robert Roberts (1777-1836) who “was well read in astronomy, and
science more generally”, and who can be viewed “as a relatively
reliable source". He recorded in the astronomical section,
Arweiniad
i Wybodaeth o Seryddiaeth
("A Guide to a Knowledge of Astronomy"), of his book
Daearyddiaeth
"Geography" (published in Chester in 1816). the following:
Llys Don – The Court of Don – Cassiopeia. This is, however, still
very late.
It is now generally accepted that in medieval Wales Don was regarded as the mother of Aranrhod and that, in accord with Triad 35, Beli Mawr was the father. Interestingly, this triad also mentions a son of Aranrhod (the redactor of Triad 35 understood Ar(y)anrot as 'Silver Wheel'.iv) named Nwyfre, meaning 'Firmament', 'Sky', which seems to confirm this family's early celestial connections.
The earliest mention
I can find of 'Llys Don' is in the poem known as Kadeir Kerrituen
(Cadair Ceridwen) The Song or The (bardic) Chair of Ceridwen in The
Book of Taliesin (In connection with this title it is interesting to note that Cassiopeia is always depicted as seated in a chair). The poem refers to other characters from Math vab
Mathonwy - Gwydion, Aranrhod and Lleu, and to their adventures,
including the Stealing of the Swine and the Creation of Blodeuedd.
The mention of 'Llys Don' is
in the voice of Taliesin who declares, 'Ry'm gelwir kyfrwys
yn Llys Don', 'I'm called a
knowledgeable one in Don's Court'. Marged Haycock has suggested
'Don's Court (llys) was
imagined (like Kaer Sidi)
as a place for poetry and entertainment' Later in the poem there are
references to the (scientific) books of Bede and to Ocean currents,
but there appears to be no overt astronomy here, unlike several other
poems in the collection.
Cassiopeia
belongs to that group of constellations called by astronomers, 'The
Royal Family'. They are Cassiopiea The Queen, Cepheus The King,
Andromeda The Princess and Perseus The Hero. The analogous roles in
The Fourth Branch (a 'Perseus type tale') are thus Don The Queen,
Math vab Mathonwy The King, Aranrhod The Princess and Llew Llaw
Gyffes The Hero. The two families differ in their relationships with
one another
Queen Cassiopiea
Mother Wife (Queen) Don
Mother Sister Grandmother
King Cepheus
Husband Father (in-law) (King) Math Brother
Uncle Father-in-law
Princess
Andromeda Daughter Wife
(Princess) Aranrhod Daughter
Niece
Hero Perseus
Husband
Son-in-Law (Hero) Llew Grandson Nephew
Son
The only kinship,
that of mother and daughter, which does not differ in the two
families is that between Cassiopeia and Andromeda, on the one hand
and Don and Aranrhod, on the other. All four are associated with
constellations:
Cassiopeia
Cassiopeia = Don Llys
Don (The Court of Don) = Cassiopeia.
Andromeda Andromeda
= Aranrhod Caer Aranrhod (The Fort of Aranrhod) = Corona
Borealis.
This is a very
unlikely correspondence, it suggests that the two traditions are more
than superficially related. Nonetheless, as far as Don is concerned
it has to be admitted that firm evidence of an early connection with
Cassiopeia is slight, however absence of evidence does not
constitute evidence of absence. It is surely significant that her
brother Gwydion and her son Nwyfre in connection with the Milky Way
and the Firmament are both found early in the literature. My
identification of Math vab Mathonwy with Cepheus (Cassiopeia's
husband), should also be taken into consideration, as should Llew
Llaw Gyffes' long historical association with the constellation
Perseus.
There
is one curious passage, however, in Math
vab Mathonwy
itself which just might be a reference to Don in her guise as
Cassiopeia.
As Gwydion was on a
day in his bed and waking, he heard a cry in the chest below his
feet; though it was not loud, yet it was so loud that he heard it.
This is what he did then, he arose quickly and opened the chest, and
as he opened it, he could see a little boy waving his arms from the
fold of a sheet, and parting it. And he took the boy between his
hands and took him to the town, where he knew there was a woman with
breasts, and he fixed a price with the woman to foster the child.v
Present consensus
does not recognise Don as the 'woman in the town with breasts', with
whom Gwydion makes a deal to suckle the, (as yet unnamed) child Llew,
but her role in the tale as the 'royal Mother' is undisputed; Don is
the the Mother of Gwydion, Gilvaethwy, Aranrhod and Gofannon and the
grandmother of Llew Llaw Gyffes and Dylan Eil Ton as well as
Bleiddwn, Hyddwn and Hychdwn Hir. She is also the sister of Math vab
Mathonwy whom I have identified with the constellation Cepheus
(husband of Cassiopeia). Scholars have
generally accepted that Don is to be equated with Danu
'the
mother of the gods in the Irish pantheon', it
may well be significant then that Cassiepeia is the only
constellation figure who is consistently characterised as bare
breasted, and in some late classical sources her bared beasts are
part of her punishment so as to bring shame upon her for the crime of
vanity. Or alternatively as Deborah
Holding has suggested:
A
distinguishing feature of Cassiopeia is the easily observed celestial
'W', formed by the shape of its five brightest stars. Schedar
(or
Schedir), the brightest of them all, is a 2nd magnitude star, rose
pink in colour and situated in the breast of the figure, perhaps in
order to highlight the theme of royal motherhood.
'he could see a little boy waving his arms from the fold of a sheet, and parting it. And he took the boy between his hands and took him to the town, where he knew there was a woman with breasts'.
It might be coincidental that it is Gwydion (The Milky Way) who finds (Llew) the boy in the chest (Perseus) and carries him to 'the lady in the town with breasts' (Cassiopeia). But I don't think so.
It might be coincidental that it is Gwydion (The Milky Way) who finds (Llew) the boy in the chest (Perseus) and carries him to 'the lady in the town with breasts' (Cassiopeia). But I don't think so.
Aranrhod and Coronae
Borealis.
It
has often been remarked that the name of the classical mythological
princess most often associated with Corona
Borealis,
namely 'Ariadne' is very similar to that
of 'Arianrhod', for example Allen noted 'this name (Arianrhod)
bearing a singular resemblance to that of the classical owner of the
Crown' (Ariadne), with the implication that this similarity of names
is solely what lies behind the association of Arianrhod with the
constellation Corona Borealis.
But it is worth mentioning that both Ariadne and Arianrhod are
characterised as princesses and as virginal island dwellers,
presenting multiple connections:
Arianrhod princess virgin Island dwelling Caer
Aranrhod (Corona
Borealis)
Ariadne princess virgin Island dwelling Corona
Borealis
It
is also true that, whatever the actual etymology of 'Aranrhod,' as
Rachel Bromwich noted '...Aryanrot
is the spelling of the name in triad 35... In the mind of the triad's
redactor there was clearly a connection between the name Ar(y)anrot
and the title (of the triad) Tri
Aryanllu,
'Three Silver Hosts'. The second part of the name Rot
or Rhod
means 'wheel'. The name, then, meant 'Silver Wheel' or 'Silver
Circle' to the redactor and presumably to his 'audience'. This has
led some to claim that Aranrhod was a goddess of the Moon or of the
Milky Way, but it is surely simpler to assume an association with the
constellation Caer
Aranrhod
or Corona
Borealis
which is depicted as a crown, in other words a 'Silver Circle'. Put
this beside the fact that her mother Don is said to be Cassiopeia,
her
brother
is represented as the Milky Way or Caer
Gwydion
and that her son is named 'Sky', 'Firmament' and the evidence starts
to look convincing for an early association of Ar(y)anrhod with 'The
Crown of the North Wind'.
There
is a further surprising connection. The Welsh constellation Caer Arianrhod, has an earthly counterpart, it is a "submerged rock, visible at low water," about a mile off the coast of Gwynedd. It has been marked on maps of Wales ever since it first appeared on Humphrey Lhwyd's map Cambriae Typus as Caer Ierjenrod. A
visual comparison of the constellation Caer
Aranrhod
with the sea girt 'town' of Caer
Aranrhod
reveals an uncanny topographical resemblance between Coronae
Borealis and
its relationship with the Milky Way (at the point where it branches),
and the 'island' Caer
Aranrhod
and its relationship to the coast at the point where the river Llyfni
enters the sea. One is reminded of the ancient dictum 'As above so
below', This is of course an entirely natural coincidence, but it is curious that we are now confronted with several
coincidences.
There is even more to this, Caer Aranrhod, the natural rocky outcrop is known locally by several different names which recall not Ariadne but another classical princess, namely Andromeda. Edward Lhuyd noted Tre Ga'r Anthrag and two other versions as Caer Anrhad and Caer Anrhod, (these two both closer to Andromeda than Ariadne) whilst Rees recorded Tregan Anthrod (even closer). The first part of the name Andromeda is from the Greek Andro or anthro. These similarities are easily as noteworthy as that between Arianrhod and Ariadne.
There is even more to this, Caer Aranrhod, the natural rocky outcrop is known locally by several different names which recall not Ariadne but another classical princess, namely Andromeda. Edward Lhuyd noted Tre Ga'r Anthrag and two other versions as Caer Anrhad and Caer Anrhod, (these two both closer to Andromeda than Ariadne) whilst Rees recorded Tregan Anthrod (even closer). The first part of the name Andromeda is from the Greek Andro or anthro. These similarities are easily as noteworthy as that between Arianrhod and Ariadne.
Notes and References
iThe
Mabinogion. Guest. 2nd ed. Notes to Math son of Mathonwy
pp 436 – 437 1877. London.
ii
But this is not certain as some medieval sources speak of a 'fairy
king' called Don. See for instance Marged Haycock's note to line 26
of the BT. Poem Kadeir Kerrituen in Legendary Poems from the Book of
Taliesin. Aberystwyth. 2007.
iiiStar
Names. Their Lore and Meanining. Hinckley Allen. Stechert. 1899.
Republication Dover. 1963.
ivSee
Trioedd Ynys Prydein.Ed. Trans. Rachel Bromwich. 3rd
edition. 2006. Cardiff. P284.
vMath
vab Mathonwy. Gruffydd. P. 19. 1928. Cardiff.