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Talk:Manaw Gododdin

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Manaw/Manawpii The river (water) merchants of the Tribe of Odenathian/Oden/Edin (God=The, Odini=tribe of Odin/Edin) also Goddeu=The Forrest

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Manawpii Gododdin is the stone at the centre of the Godi and and thier mercentile base of Gaudy on the waters of Bodaria this was a Tribe who governed from a round house (Ger) and who used the rivers and waterways to trade there goods (Mann) + (Apii) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 78.144.180.67 (talk) 14:15, 20 March 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Name survivals

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"Manapii Gododdini, Manapii "The tribe of Of Odin, from Belgium of Assir-Vanir Of the "Land of the Godi Odin,Adam,Atum" Asia and the Kingdom of Van, called Vadalusia centered on the Holy Mt of Urartu (Ararta)" - this looks a trifle odd. Roryharrow (talk) 21:08, 25 January 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Manaw Gododdin

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Re. Section entitled 'Treatment by Historians', 3rd paragraph, we have the statement: 'John Edward Lloyd (History of Wales, 1911) makes only a few comments about Manaw in passing,[26] and John Davies (History of Wales, 1990) omits even that.' In my Penguin Edition of John Davies' 'History of Wales', the author explains in first parag. of page 51 that 'the Welsh treasured traditions .... relating to the kingdom of the Votadini (Gododdin) on the banks of the River Forth. Further down in the same parag., J.D. wrote that the historian Nennius states that 'Cunedda came with eight sons and a grandson from Manaw Gododdin and drove the Irish out of Gwynedd ... .' Abingdonpit (talk) 17:05, 18 April 2021 (UTC)[reply]