Jump to content

Dic Aberdaron

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by KasparBot (talk | contribs) at 19:23, 12 February 2016 (migrating Persondata to Wikidata, please help, see challenges for this article). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Richard Robert Jones (Dic Aberdaron), 1823

Dic Aberdaron (Richard Robert Jones) (1780–1843), also known as Dick of Aberdaron, was a Welsh traveller and polyglot.[1] He had little or no formal education, but was reputed to have taught himself 14 or 15 languages, both ancient and modern, including Latin at the age of 11.

Dic Aberdaron's Welsh, Greek, and Hebrew dictionary is now kept at St Asaph Cathedral.

First manuscript page of Dic's autobiography

He is buried in the parish church of St. Asaph, north Wales. William Roscoe, the writer, wrote a Memoir of him and the Welsh poet R. S. Thomas, who was once the vicar of Aberdaron, wrote a poem about him, simply titled Dic Aberdaron. T.H. Parry Williams wrote a somewhat different poem with the same title in Welsh, stressing his eccentricity and the pointlessness of his learning, since he never appears to have used any of his languages, but concludes: "Chwarae-teg i Dic - nid yw pawb yn gwirioni'r un fath" (Fair play to Dic - not everybody is silly in the same way).

Notes

  1. ^ Humphreys, H. The Celebrated Cambrian Linguist, or the History of Dick Aberdaron (Carnarvon: H. Humphreys, 1866).