Caffi Meinir, Nant Gwrtheyrn
Caffi Meinir, Nant Gwrtheyrn
This café and restaurant, which sits beside the Wales Coast path, is named after the tragic heroine of a local folk tale. Meinir and Rhys had grown up in the Nant Gwrtheyrn valley and fallen in love. On the morning of their wedding, to be held at Clynnog Fawr, Meinir followed local custom and hid, then Rhys’ friends went to find her and to take her to church. Meinir could not be found. The wedding was cancelled and Rhys fell into depression. Months later he was sheltering from a storm under an old hollow oak tree when lightning broke open the trunk. Inside was Meinir’s decomposed body, still in her wedding dress.
Near Caffi Meinir is a sculpture relating to the tale of Rhys and Meinir. It was created by Sebastien Boyesen in 2010. Sebastien Boyesen’s other work in Wales includes the Merchant Navy War Memorial in Newport.
The name Nant Gwrtheyrn is also the stuff of legend. Gwrtheyrn, or Vortigern, was a British king in what is now south-east England in the fifth century. He hired Saxon mercenaries to help fend off his rivals and asked to marry the daughter of the Saxon leader Hengist. At a celebratory banquet the Saxons killed Gwrtheyrn’s men, and he fled to the obscurity of this valley beyond Snowdonia.
Vortigern and all his cattle were “consumed with lightning”, according to Thomas Pennant, writing in the 18th century. The king had been profligate, wrote Pennant, and monks determined that he should “perish with signal marks of the vengeance of Heaven”.
Pennant also noted that a tumulus, known as Bedd Gwrtheyrn, stood near the sea until the early 17th century – the grave of the “unfortunate prince”. Parishioners who opened a stone coffin there had found the bones of a tall man.
“Nant” = stream or valley. To hear how to pronounce Nant Gwrtheyrn, press play:Or, download mp3 (27KB)
Postcode: LL53 6NL View Location Map
Other LEGEND HiPoints in this region:
Dinas Dinlle – said to be childhood home of the Mabinogion’s Lleu Llaw Gyffes