|
By AD 600, the Angles and Saxons had conquered and settled much of what would become England.
The former Britons, their Post-Roman civilisation having collapsed to a very large extent,
had transformed in just two centuries into the Early Welsh.
Their language changed
considerably to reflect their increasing isolation, becoming different even from British
kingdoms outside of Cymru. From this point onwards, they were never in the ascendant,
merely surviving for the most point as their eastern borders were slowly compressed.
Between the late 600s to the early 800s Cymru was relatively
inactive and detached from British and Continental affairs. The arrival of Mervyn Vrych in
Gwynedd began a chain of peaceful changes that saw the kingdoms united under Rhodri Mawr
in the middle of the ninth century. As sub-kingdoms were formed for his sons, some former
states such as Dogfeiling and Ceredigion found themselves part of what were once rival
kingdoms.
English pressure on the eastern border had virtually halved the
territory of Powys by the middle seventh century, once Pengwern had fallen, and
its northern region,
together with Gwent's Ergyng province, had both fallen to the Mercians. This virtually set
Cymru's borders, with only small pockets of land being regained before the modern division
between England and Wales was confirmed.
|