Dafydd Arafnah Thomas 1a 2a 3
Birth Name | Dafydd Arafnah Thomas 2a 1a |
Birth Name | Davydd Aravnah Thomas 3 |
Gender | male |
Age at Death | unknown |
Events
Event | Date | Place | Description | Sources |
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Birth | between January 1896 and March 1896 | Brynamman, Carmarthenshire, Wales | Vol 11a Page 1098 | 2a 3 |
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Census | 1911 | Tanybryn, Llandeilo Road, Brynamman, Carmarthenshire, Wales | 2a | |
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Occupation | Minister | 1a | ||
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Death | 4 | |||
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Parents
Relation to main person | Name | Birth date | Death date | Relation within this family (if not by birth) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Father | William Davies Thomas | about 1861 | ||
Mother | Mary Moses | between January 1860 and March 1860 | ||
Dafydd Arafnah Thomas | between January 1896 and March 1896 | |||
Sister | Eluned Kate Thomas | between July 1898 and September 1898 | ||
Father | William Davies Thomas | about 1861 | ||
Brother | J Lloyd Thomas |
Pedigree
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William Davies Thomas
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Mary Moses
- Dafydd Arafnah Thomas
- Eluned Kate Thomas
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Mary Moses
Ancestors
Source References
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Dictionary of Welsh Biography
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- Date: 1959
- Page: Moses-Evans, David Lewis
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Citation:
MOSES-EVANS, DAVID LEWIS (1822 - 1893), poet and schoolmaster
Name: David Lewis Moses-Evans
Date of birth: 1822
Date of death: 1893
Child: Mary Thomas (née Moses)
Child: E. Tudor Moses-Evans
Child: D.L. Moses-Evans
Child: John Moy Evans
Child: T. Moy Evans
Gender: Male
Occupation: poet and schoolmaster
Area of activity: Education; Literature and Writing; Poetry
Authors: Moelwyn Idwal Williams, John Lloyd ThomasBorn 1 May 1822 at Cwm-pib, Cribyn Clotas, near Lampeter. He was of the same family as David Davis, Castellhywel. At the age of 12 Moses moved to Blaenbidernyn near Pencarreg. Some five years afterwards, he opened a school on his own account in Pencarreg and later at Rhydcymerau, Brynaman, and Cwm-twrch. He finally returned to Brynaman where he became employed as a clerk in the local iron works, a post which he held for forty years. He was recognised locally as a good Welsh scholar.
In the 1840's he contributed a series of character sketches to Yr Haul and in the 1850's he was a frequent contributor to Yr Ymofynydd on botanical subjects. He translated ‘The Vicar of Wakefield’ and ‘We are Seven,’ etc., into Welsh. At the Lampeter eisteddfod of 1859 he was second to John Morris Jones (Ioan Cunllo) for an ode to the memory of Daniel Evans (Daniel Ddu o Geredigion), his work being highly praised by Eben Fardd.
He was known colloquially as Dafydd Moses but about 1860 he added the surname Evans after researching his family history, and this was the surname used by the 5 or 6 youngest of his 9 children, 4 sons and 5 daughters. Moses died 1 Sept. 1893.
His daughter Mary was the step-mother of J. Lloyd Thomas, headmaster of Llanfyllin grammar school, and the mother of Dafydd Arafnah Thomas, a minister. See T.J. Morgan's article on the eisteddfod poets of Cwmaman and the Swansea valley in J.W.B.S., 9, 162-85, for his role as a teacher of poets in the area and the comments of Watcyn Wyn (Watkin Hezekiah Williams and Gwydderig. See also Huw Walters, Canu'r pwll a'r pulpud, 94-103.
Gwydderig (Richard Williams, 1842 - 1917) bequeathed his manuscripts to T. Moy Evans, one of D.L. Moses-Evans's sons, headmaster of St. David's College school Lampeter before becoming a solicitor in Ammanford : he edited a volume of stories, Hirnos Gaeaf.
Another son, John M(oy) Evans, was a prominent solicitor in Swansea, a town council member and chairman of the library committee and of the Royal Institution. He was president of the South Wales Unitarian assembly and edited series of articles in the Cambrian Daily Leader. Other sons were D.L. Moses-Evans, a solicitor in Ystalyfera, and E. Tudor Moses-Evans, vicar of Monkton, Pembs. and canon of St. David's.
Authors
Dr Moelwyn Idwal Williams, Aberystwyth
John Lloyd Thomas, (1889 - 1974), PontardaweSources
Cymru (O.M.E.), 1894, 269;
NLW MS 9267.Published date: 1959
Article Copyright: http://rightsstatements.org/page/InC/1.0/ -
Citation:
The source says that David Lewis Moses Evans lived in Brynaman (Carmarthenshire) for 40 years, however I have also cited this source for references that he lived in Llanguike (Glamorgan). These places are right next to each other, on opposite sides of the county border; it seems he lived in one and worked in the other, and the source refers to where he worked.
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1911 United Kingdom Census
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- Page: RG14/32972/113
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- General Register Office: England & Wales Birth Index
- (Death unknown but obviously not living)