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   » » Wiki: Gwynno
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Gwynno, or Gwynnog ab Gildas, is the name of a 6th-century Welsh saint.

Archives at the record that his festival is 26 October; that he is regarded as a ; and that there is said to be a sacred well, Ffynnon Wyno, associated with , in .Bibliotheca Sanctorum VII

Gwynno appears to have been the son of Cau, called Euryn y Coed aur. The Church of St Gwynno, Llanwynno, Mid Glamorgan, Essay by J. Gwyn Davies

During the of 547, the monks of the dead went for safety from to . Instead of returning to , they travelled east to Glamorgan to settle at (Llanilltud Fawr in ). It appears that Saint Illtud's monks were accompanied to Glamorgan by several of his disciples and associates, some of whom were , among them Gwynno.Bowen, E. G. Settlements of the Celtic Saints in Wales, Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1954

The Celtic bishop, Saint , founded three centres of learning in South East Wales - at Llancarfan (near ), Caerworgorn (now Llantwit Major), and . Gwynno was one of the early members of the community at Llancarfan.Rees, Rice An Essay on the Welsh Saints, or the Primitive Christians usually considered to have been the founders of churches in Wales. London: Longman &c., 1836. Under the name of Gwynno, he is considered to have been one of the three founders of , Glamorganshire, together with Illtyd and ; , a chapel under Llantrisant, is dedicated to him.

At Llanwonno, the farmhouse at Darwonno (Welsh: Daearwynno) was not far from the church; indeed Gwynno may have lived there, and may have owned the land around it. It is significant that the nearest farmhouse to the church was always known as Daearwynno - Gwynno's land, but it is not clear whether the land belonged to Gwynno the saint, or whether it was a later acquisition of the church. There is no mention of Gwynno ever having performed miracles; no one knows of his work, or of the whereabouts of his grave, and not one of his writings has been preserved. Only Gwynno's name and Gwynno's church remain as a definite indication that he did exist and as a monument to his work.

Llanwnog in the county of claims him for its founder under the name of Gwynnog; and in the window of this church he is delineated in painted glass in episcopal habits, with a on his head, and a in his hand; underneath is an inscription in old English characters, "Sanctus Gwinocus, cujus animae propitietur Deus. Amen."

He is not to be confounded with , a virgin, the saint of Llanwenog, .

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