Bladud or Blaiddyd is a legendary king of the Britons, although there is no historical evidence for his existence. He is first mentioned in Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae ( 1136), which describes him as the son of King Rud Hud Hudibras, and the tenth ruler in line from the first king, Brutus, saying Bladud was contemporaneous with the biblical prophet Elijah (9th century BC).
A Bleydiud son of Caratauc is mentioned in the Wales Harley MS 3859 genealogies (in the British Library), suggesting to some that Geoffrey misinterpreted a scrap of Welsh genealogy (such as the Harleian genealogies itself or a related text).Hutson, Eugene, British personal names in the Historia regum Britanniae, part of series University of California Publications in English, Volume 5, no. 1, University of California Press, 1940, p. 12. The Welsh form of the name is given as Blaiddyd in manuscripts of the Brut Tysilio (Welsh translations of Geoffrey's Historia).Jones, Mary. "Brut Tysilio" , maryjones.us. Retrieved 21 July 2009. The meaning of the name is "Wolf-lord" (Welsh language blaidd "wolf" + iudd "lord").Ifor Williams (1980) 1972, The Beginnings of Welsh Poetry: studies. Cardiff University of Wales Press,
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/a> Ifor Willimas here comments on a different personage, i.e., Bleiddud, Lord of Tenby in the poem Etmic Dinbych or 'Praise of Tenby'. The later shift in spelling to Bleiddydd is also discussed.Bladud signified "wolf-fighter" accord. to Sayce, A. H. (1890) " The Legend of King Bladud" Y Cymmrodor 10: 214 In the text he is said to have founded the city of Bath. He was succeeded by his son Leir (the Shakespearean King Lear).
The tale of Bladud was later embellished by other authors, such as John Hardyng and John Higgins, writing in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.
Supposedly he ruled for twenty years from 863 BC or perhaps 500 BC, in which time he built Kaerbadum or Caervaddon (Bath), creating the hot springs there by the use of magic. He dedicated the city to the goddess Athena and in honour of her, lit undying fires, whose flames turned to balls of stone as they grew low, with new ones springing up in their stead: an embellishment of an account from the third-century writer Solinus of the use of local coal on the altars of her temple.
He found that this mud was warm, and that the pigs wallowed to enjoy the heat. He also noticed that the pigs which did this did not suffer from skin diseases as others did, and on trying the mud-bath himself found that he was cured of his leprosy.Stern (2021) p.95 He was then restored to his position as heir-apparent to his father, and founded Bath so that others might also benefit as he had done.
The story of Bladud's cure-by-immersion was much exploited when Bath became a fashionable Spa. The statue of King Bladud overlooking the King's Bath at Bath carries the date of 1699, but it is much older than this.
It was assembled from parts of two statues (respectively depicting Edward III and Bladud himself) previously mounted on the city's north and south gates; its pitted appearance from weathering enhanced the association with disease.
In the eighteenth century Bladud's legendary cure was celebrated by John Wood, the architect responsible for the fashionable development of Bath, who incorporated many references to the king in his buildings.
Moyra Caldecott's The Winged Man is a fictional account of the life of Bladud.
Bladud, styled Blaiddyd, is a legendary hero in .
The narrator of Stephen Lawhead's second Song of Albion book ( The Silver Hand, 1992 ), Tegid Tathal, Chief Bard of Albion, is asked by the god Gofannon to tell the story of Bladudd the Blemished which he does in the way of myth, presenting it as a classic teaching story about sovereignty and mental/ physical purity.
The legend is reproduced with some artistic interpretation as a short story in Charles Dickens novel “The Pickwick Papers”, as the main character is visiting Bath.
Leprosy
Divination, wings and death
Conflation with Abaris the Hyperborean
In fiction
(p.29).
House of Brutus
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