词条 | Ann Griffiths |
释义 |
BiographyAnn was born in April 1776 near the village of Llanfihangel-yng-Ngwynfa, {{convert|6|mi|spell=in|0}} from the market town of Llanfyllin in the former county of Montgomeryshire (now in Powys). She was the daughter of John Evan Thomas, a tenant farmer and churchwarden, and his wife, Jane. She had two older sisters, an older brother, John, and a younger brother, Edward. Her parents' house, Dolwar Fechan, was an isolated farmhouse some {{convert|2+1/2|mi|spell=in|0}} south of Llanfihangel and {{convert|1|mi|spell=in}} north of Dolanog, set among hills and streams. Not far away lay Pennant Melangell, where Saint Melangell had lived as a hermit in the 6th century.[2] Ann was brought up in the Anglican church. In 1794, her mother died when she was 18, and about that time or perhaps earlier she followed her brothers John and Edward in being drawn to the Methodists. In 1796 she joined the Calvinistic Methodist movement after hearing the preaching of Benjamin Jones of Pwllheli. After the deaths of both her parents, she married Thomas Griffiths, a farmer from the parish of Meifod and an elder of the Calvinistic Methodist church. However, she died after childbirth in August 1805, at the age of 29, and was buried on 12 August 1805 at Llanfihangel-yng-Ngwynfa. Ann Griffiths left a handful of stanzas in the Welsh language. These were preserved and published by her mentor, the Calvinistic Methodist minister, John Hughes of Pontrobert, and his wife, Ruth, who had been a maid at Ann Griffiths' farm and was a close confidante. PoetryAnn's poems express her fervent evangelical Christian faith and reflect her incisive intellect and thorough scriptural knowledge. She is the most prominent female hymnist in Welsh. Her work is regarded as a highlight of Welsh literature, and her longest poem {{lang|cy|Rhyfedd, rhyfedd gan angylion...}} (Wondrous, wondrous to angels...)[3] was described by the dramatist and literary critic Saunders Lewis as "one of the majestic songs in the religious poetry of Europe". Her hymn Wele'n sefyll rhwng y myrtwydd is commonly sung in Wales to the tune Cwm Rhondda. The service of enthronement of Rowan Williams as Archbishop of Canterbury in February 2003 included Williams' own translation of one of her hymns: "Yr Arglwydd Iesu" ("The Lord Jesus"). LegacyTogether with Mary Jones (1784–1864), a poor Welsh girl who walked to Bala to buy a Bible, Ann Griffiths became a national icon by the end of the 19th century, and was a significant figure in Welsh nonconformism.[4] The Ann Griffiths Memorial Chapel in Dolanog, Powys, is named in her honour,[5] and has a carved corbel head based on contemporary descriptions of her. There are stained glass windows in her memory in Eglwys y Crwys Welsh Presbyterian Church, Cathays, Cardiff, in the Williams Pantycelyn Memorial Chapel in Llandovery, and in the Ceiriog Memorial Institute in Glyn Ceiriog. The television channel S4C commissioned Ann!, a musical based on Ann Griffiths' life, to be performed at the 2003 National Eisteddfod at Meifod. This was later televised and released on CD.[6] References1. ^James E. Wyn: Introduction to the Life and Work of Ann Griffiths Retrieved 29 January 2018. 2. ^Archaeologia Cambrensis, Journal of the Cambrian Archaeological Association, Vol. III, 6th Series, London, 1903. 3. ^{{cite web |last1=James |first1=E. Wyn |title=Introduction to the life and work of Ann Griffiths |url=http://www.anngriffiths.cardiff.ac.uk/introduction.html |website=gwefan Ann Griffiths website |publisher=Cardiff University |accessdate=26 April 2017}} 4. ^{{cite web |last1=James |first1=E. Wyn |title=Bala and the Bible: Thomas Charles, Ann Griffiths and Mary Jones |url=http://www.anngriffiths.cardiff.ac.uk/bible.html |publisher=Cardiff University}} 5. ^{{cite web |title=Ann Griffiths Memorial Chapel, Dolanog |url=http://www.living-stones.info/en/attraction.php?image_id=13 |website=Living Stones |accessdate=11 March 2019}} 6. ^{{cite web |title=Maldwyn Theatre Company – Ann! |url=http://www.sainwales.com/store/sain/sain-scd-2446 |website=Sain |accessdate=1 July 2017}} Further reading
The standard edition of her hymns and letters is E. Wyn James (ed.), Rhyfeddaf fyth . . . (Gwasg Gregynog, 1998). External links{{Wikisourcelang|cy|Categori:Ann Griffiths|Ann Griffiths}}
12 : Deaths in childbirth|Welsh women writers|Welsh-language writers|Welsh-language poets|Welsh Methodist hymnwriters|Welsh women poets|1776 births|1805 deaths|Converts to Methodism from Anglicanism|Welsh Methodists|Women religious writers|Women hymnwriters |
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