Dangos 53283 canlyniad

Disgrifiad archifol
Ffeil
Dewisiadau chwilio manwl
Rhagolwg argraffu Gweld:

621 canlyniad gyda gwrthrychau digidol Dangos canlyniadau gyda gwrthrychau digidol

Barddoniaeth Ieuan ab Iago

Barddoniaeth Ieuan ab Iago. Prynodd Ieuan y gyfrol hon yn 1831 (gweler f. 1) ac ymddengys iddo gopio iddi ddethol gerddi hyd 1845. Mae'r rhan fwyaf o'r cerddi wedi eu dyddio, a'r rheini yn nhrefn amser. Ceir traethawd ar ff. 22-26 verso. Ar ddiwedd y gyfrol ceir sgriblau Iago, ei fab, gan gynnwys rhestr o drigolion y Druid, 1842-7.

Dyddiadur poced

Dyddiadur poced Marshall's Ladies Daily Remembrancer, 1837, wedi ei ddefnyddio fel llyfr nodiadau gan Ieuan. Cynnwys farddoniaeth Ieuan, peth ohoni mewn pensil ac heb fod yn gwbl ddarllenadwy bellach, 1837-1849; rai hen benillion; amryw gyfrifon; gyfarwyddydau meddygol; a nodiad am y ddau frawd yn yr Unol Daleithiau, 1839. James James ac enwau eraill wedi eu torri yma a thraw.

Denbighshire (misc. parishes)

Printed particulars and conditions of sale with agreements to purchase properties sold by the Wynnstay estate in Denbighshire, incorporating plans of the various lots, July 1853. The names of the purchasers and prices paid have been added in some cases. The file also contains a manuscript list of Sir Watkin Williams Wynn’s property to be offered for sale and a list of Wrexham property biddings. The properties include lands at Rhos Robin, near the turnpike road and near Rose Villa in the township of Gwersyllt in the parish of Gresford; houses near the turnpike road and at Cross Lanes in the parishes of Marchwiail and Bangor [Is-coed]; Brynyffynnon, Brynyffynnon Lodge, parts of the garden and the orchard, the Bowling Green Inn, the Hop Pole in York Street, a slaughterhouse and other premises in High Street, Brook Street and Penybryn, Wrexham; and tithe rent charges from farms and lands in the several townships of Wrexham.

Meifod unscheduled deed

Surrender by David Jones, by the direction of Rev. Richard John Davies of Aberhafesb, to Charles Watkin Williams Wynn, of the leasehold of a house previously erected by Lewis Pugh on part of a field called Tirdu belonging to Pentrego Farm in the parish of Meifod (boundaries described) 1853.

Description of Milford Haven

  • NLW MS 24190E.
  • Ffeil
  • 1853

A transcript, 1853, in the hand of Matilda Pasley, of a version of George Owen of Henllys's 'Description of Milford Haven', dated 17 December 1595 (ff. 2-26), together with a note by the transcriber (f. 1).
The manuscript mostly agrees with the texts of Cardiff 2.46 and BL Add. 22623, as published in George Owen, The Description of Penbrokshire, ed. by Henry Owen, Cymmrodorion Record Series, 4 vols (London, 1892-1936), pp. 529-562; where Henry Owen lists minor variations between those two manuscripts the present transcript does not consistently correspond with one or the other. The wording of the title page (f. 2) is significantly different (see Henry Owen (ed.), p. 533), while the section beginning 'For the more ease…' which concludes the other manuscripts is here interpolated on ff. 17-18. A memorandum concerning Owen's methodology for drawing his map of Milford Haven does not appear to be recorded elsewhere (f. 22). The present manuscript is itself copied from an intermediate transcript made at Worsley [New] Hall, Lancashire, on 22 October 1852, by Mary L[ouisa Egerton, Viscountess] Brackley, from the original 1595 manuscript belonging to her father-in-law [Francis Egerton, 1st] Earl of Ellesmere (probably the manuscript now Huntington Library MS EL 1145 (34/B/32)) (see f. 1). In 1853 Matilda Pasley's husband, Sir Thomas Pasley, Bart, was in command of Pembroke Dockyard and the Pasleys became acquainted with Lady Brackley during visits to Stackpole Court, the seat of her father, the 1st Earl Cawdor (see Lawrence Phillips, 'Captain Sir Thomas Sabine Pasley, Bt., R.N., and Pembroke Dockyard, 1849-1854', Mariner's Mirror, 71.2 (1985), 159-165 (pp. 160-161)).

Owen, George, 1552-1613

Fanny Morgan letters to the Dyer family

Transcripts, [19 cent., second ¼]-1854, in the hands of the Rev. Thomas Dyer (1782-1852) of Abbess Roding and W. H. D. Longstaffe, of letters, 1759-1775, of Fanny Morgan, Wales and Cross Inn, primarily to Catherine (Kitty), Elizabeth and Armine, daughters of the Rev. Thomas Dyer (1700-1780), Marylebone, and to Sally Dyer (later Phillips) of Court Henry, their cousin.
The letters were copied by the younger Thomas Dyer, in no particular order, into two notebooks formerly belonging to Elizabeth. W. H. D. Longstaffe dissected the notebooks to reassemble the transcripts in chronological order, recopying portions as necessary. These were then pasted onto guards, and annotated by Longstaffe, and apparently assembled into a volume; this was subsequently also disbound and the individual leaves put in the present plastic sleeves. The elder Thomas Dyer (1700-1780) was the younger brother of John Dyer, the poet; the younger Thomas Dyer (1782-1852) was his grandson and the nephew of the three Dyer sisters.

Morgan, Fanny, active 1759-1775

Lieutenant Herbert M. Vaughan diary

  • NLW MS 24165B.
  • Ffeil
  • 1851-1855

Diary, 1 May 1851-18 September 1852, of Lieutenant Herbert M[illingchamp] Vaughan, 90th Light Infantry, mostly while stationed at Ballincollig and Cork, Ireland. The diary contains an account of his various duties, his social and recreational activities, including balls, regattas, parties and picnics, and hunting and shooting.
Vaughan's company was at Ballincollig until late 1851, when it removed to nearby Cork; the regiment was sent to Dublin in August 1852 (f. 112 verso). Additionally Vaughan spent most of September 1851 on leave in London (ff. 38-46 verso) and was at home at Plas Llangoedmor, Cardiganshire, [9] October-[29] December 1851 (ff. 49-65 verso). Among the incidents recounted are the death by suicide of one of his men during an assignment to transport ammunition (ff. 8-11); [George W. Stone] performing Electro-Biology [i.e. hypnotism] experiments on some of his men (ff. 26 verso, 29 verso-30); several visits to the Great Exhibition in London (ff. 39 verso-43 verso passim); attending the Cork garrison races, [21] April 1852 (ff. 86-87 verso); and a riot by paupers at Cork workhouse, [9] May 1852 (f. 90 recto-verso). Vaughan assisted in keeping order during the Cork County by-election in March 1852 (ff. 82-83) and in Cork City at the General Election in July 1852 (ff. 102 verso-103 verso). His main preoccupation in open season was fox hunting and shooting game (ff. 49 verso-84 verso passim). A memo found loose within the volume, dated 31 July 1852 with additions to 1855, has been tipped in inside the back cover (f. 122, see also f. 109).

Vaughan, Herbert M. (Herbert Millingchamp), 1829-1855

Bills and receipts

Bills and receipts of the Gogerddan estate, 1858, Lady Day to Michaelmas. For general description see series level.

Denbighshire and Montgomeryshire

Conditions of sale with agreements to purchase farms and lands belonging to the Wynnstay estate, mainly 1857, with additional items, 1843, 1857-1858. The properties include Llwyn Issa, Hewl Bach, Tynyffrith, Llwynybresych and Henffridd in the parish of Derwen; Vach Lwyd Ucha, Pen y pentre, Pentre Poltas and Brynllwyd in Gyffylliog; Hafodwen in Llanarmon Dyffryn Ceiriog; Hafod, Cwmdy and an allotment of common in the parish of Llanarmon Mynydd Mawr; Plas Ucha and Tynycoed in Llanelidan; Tydy and Maes y cae in Llangadwaladr; an allotment of land on Erithig Hill and Maes Onn, Llanrhaeadr-yng-Nghinmeirch; Pentrepoeth, Vownog in the townships of Lloran Uchaf and Lloran Isaf in the parish of Llansilin; cottages and lands in Llangadwaladr, Llanrhaeadr-yng-Nghinmeirch, Bodlith, Lloran Uchaf and Lloran Isaf, Llansilin, Llanynys, Cefn Mawr, Street Issa, Acrefair, Dinhinlle, Bodylltyn and Ruabon; the Boar’s Head Inn, the Spread Eagles Inn, Sir Watkin’s Coffee House, and a stationer’s shop and printing office, Ruthin; Gwernsebon in the township of Cefn-coch and Tynant in Henfachau in the parish of Llanrhaeadr-ym-Mochnant, Denbighshire and Montgomeryshire. The purchasers include William Lord Bagot. The file also contains a numbered schedule of landowners in Hafodgynfor [Llangollen] (postmark 1843) and enclosures, 1857-1858

Account book of the schooner Hope

An account book, [1850]-1860, of the schooner 'Hope' of Aberystwyth, Cardiganshire, owned by Mary Williams (mother of the Rev. John Williams) and David Jenkins.
The volume contains accounts of cash laid out and received by the shiphusband and statements of account, 1853-1860 (ff. 12 verso-33). A copy of Reynolds' Original Birmingham Almanack for 1851 (1850) has been bound in at the end of the volume (ff. 134-141).

Canlyniadau 81 i 100 o 53283