Mordaf
Mordaf (or Mordaff) was a bishop in Wales during the 10th century.[1]
During the reign of Howel he went to Rome with the Bishops of St David's[2] and St Asaph.[3]
References
- ^ Hardy, T. Duffus. Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae; or, a Calendar of the Principal Ecclesiastical Dignitaries in England and Wales, and of the Chief Officers in the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge from the Earliest Times to the Year MDCCXV, Corrected and Continued to the Present Time, Vol. I, "Bangor". Oxford Univ. Press, 1854. Accessed 07 Jan 2018
- ^ Annals of Wales (B text), p. 10.
- ^ "Willis' Survey of St. Asaph, considerably enlarged and brought down to the present time" Edwards, E. p40: Wrexham, John Painter, 1801
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Bishops of Bangor
- Deiniol
- Elfodd
- Mordaf
- Dyfan
- Revedun
- Hervey le Breton
- David the Scot
- Meurig
- Arthur of Bardsey
- Gwion
- Rotoland
- Alan
- Robert of Shrewsbury
- Cadwgan of Llandyfai
- Hywel ap Ednyfed
- Richard
- Anian
- Gruffydd ap Iorwerth
- Einion Sais
- Matthew de Englefeld
- Ithel ap Robert
- Thomas de Ringstead
- Alexander Dalby
- Gervase de Castro
- Hywel ab Goronwy
- John Gilbert
- Geoffrey Herdeby
- John Swaffham
- Lewis Aber
- Richard Young
- Lewis Byford
- Gruffydd Young
- Benedict Nichols
- William Barrow
- John Clederowe
- Thomas Cheriton
- John Stanberry
- James Blakedon
- Richard Edenham
- Henry Deane
- Thomas Pigot
- John Penny
- Thomas Skevington
- John Capon
- John Bird
- Arthur Bulkeley
- William Glyn
- Maurice Clenock
- Rowland Meyrick
- Nicholas Robinson
- Hugh Bellot
- Richard Vaughan
- Henry Rowlands
- Lewis Bayly
- David Dolben
- Edmund Griffith
- William Roberts
- Episcopacy abolished (Commonwealth)
- William Roberts
- Robert Price
- Robert Morgan
- Humphrey Lloyd
- Humphrey Humphreys
- John Evans
- Benjamin Hoadly
- Richard Reynolds
- William Baker
- Thomas Sherlock
- Charles Cecil
- Thomas Herring
- Matthew Hutton
- Zachary Pearce
- John Egerton
- John Ewer
- John Moore
- John Warren
- William Cleaver
- John Randolph
- Henry Majendie
- Christopher Bethell
- James Colquhoun Campbell
- Daniel Lewis Lloyd
- Watkin Williams
- Watkin Williams
- Daniel Davies
- Charles Green (Archbishop of Wales)
- David Edwardes Davies
- John Jones
- Gwilym Williams (Archbishop of Wales)
- Cledan Mears
- Barry Morgan
- Saunders Davies
- Anthony Crockett
- Andy John (Archbishop of Wales)
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