| |
Wales Fact and Fiction Culture Please note - New Wiki (open) version is HERE- |
|
This version will not be updated. Use the Wiki version instead
|
EisteddfodThe
Eisteddfod (literally 'sitting') is a Welsh festival
of literature, music, and song. The tradition of such a meeting of Welsh
artists dates back to at least the 12th century, but with the decline
of the bardic tradition fell into abeyance. The present-day format owes
much to an eighteenth century revival arising out of a number of informal
eisteddfodau.
Nevertheless, it is taken very seriously, and an award of a crown or a chair for poetry is a great honour. One of the most dramatic events in Eisteddfod history was the award of the 1917 chair to the poet Ellis Humphrey Evans, bardic name Hedd Wyn, for the poem Yr Arwr (The Hero). The winner was announced, and the crowd waited for winner to stand up to accept the traditional congratulations before the chairing ceremony, but no winner appeared. It was then announced that Hedd Wyn had been killed the previous month on the battlefield in France. These events were portrayed in the Academy Award nominated film Hedd Wyn. Another important eisteddfod in the calendar is 'Eisteddfod Yr Urdd', or the youth eisteddfod. Organised by Urdd Gobaith Cymru, the Youth League of Wales, it brings together children from the age of 7, up to young adults of 24, from all across Wales, for a week of competition of singing, recitation, dancing, acting and musicianship. However, the most famous Eisteddfod is undoubtedly the International Eisteddfod, held annually in Llangollen. Choirs, singing groups, folk dancers and other groups attend from all over the world, sharing their national folk traditions in one of the world's
|