Strange DNA

Merging paper sources with DNA to Ancient Roots to Ireland, Scotland & Scandinavia through Europe to Armenia.

Sovereign Lord of the Celtic Britons Beli the Great Mawr Heli

Male 110 BC -


Personal Information    |    Notes    |    All    |    PDF

  • Name Beli the Great Mawr Heli  
    Prefix Sovereign Lord of the Celtic Britons 
    Born 110 BC 
    Gender Male 
    Died 72 BC Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I6578  Strange Genealogy
    Last Modified 1 Apr 2018 

    Father Druid King of the Britons Manogan Druid Eneid,   b. 135 BC, Briton Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 72 BC, Briton Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F4912  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Prophetess Don Anna Verch Mathonwy 
    Children 
     1. *King of the Britons Lludd Nodens Llaw of the Silver Hand Eiri Lud of Beli,   b. Abt 100 BC, London, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 18 BC Siluria, Britain Find all individuals with events at this location
     2. Amalech ap Beli
     3. Casswallan ap Beli Cassibellan
     4. Llefelys ap Beli
     5. Gilfaethwy ap Beli
     6. Gwydion ap Beli
     7. Govannon ap Beli
     8. Amaethon ap Beli
     9. Arianrhod verch Beli
    Last Modified 23 Jul 2018 
    Family ID F4818  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • • General Notes
      ◦ 150 BC
      Beli Mawr was a semi-legendary British king who was probably an historical ruler, though any facts have become so distorted by myth that it is impossible to be certain about the truth concerning him. Beli Mawr derived his name from that of Bel, one of the principal Celtic deities, the god of the sun and of the light. 

      Beli Mawr (Beli the Great) was an ancestor deity in Welsh mythology. He was the consort of Dôn and the father of Caswallawn, Arianrhod, Lludd and Llefelys. Several royal lines in medieval Wales traced their ancestry to him.

      He is usually, though not universally, considered to have derived from the Celtic god Belenus. Historical linguistics suggests that the name Beli may be derived from Bolgios, a name attested as the leader of a Gaulish attack on Macedon in the 3rd century BC. It is related to the Irish "Beltane", modern Gaelic "bealtuinn" (May-day), which comes from Irish "béalteine", reflecting the diphthonging of the initial vowel from Early Irish "beltene", or "belltaine", Proto-Celtic *belo-te(p)niâ (according to Stokes), and means "bright-fire". The Gaulish god-names "Belenos" (*Bright one) and "Belisama" (probably the same divinity, originally from *belo-nos = our shining one) are also from the same source, as was Shakespeare's "Cym-beline".

      However, it should be noted that in Medieval Welsh tradition, Beli Mawr is often given the patronymic ap Manogan and his father was noted as Manogen Druid Eneid. This appears to derive from a textual garbling of the name of a real historical figure, Adminius, son of Cunobelinus; after being transmitted through the Roman authors Suetonius and Orosius, this name became Bellinus filius Minocanni in the medieval Welsh text Historia Brittonum. Thus, although Beli became a separate personage in medieval pseudohistory from Cunobelinus (Cymbeline), he was generally presented as a king reigning in the period immediately before the Roman invasion; his "son" Caswallawn is the historical Cassivellaunus.

      Beli also appears in Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniæ as Heli.
      (Wikipedia)

      He was an only child...