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Rock.
Folk, rock.
Defaid yn y Cnapan Rhan 1 = Guto Pryderi Puw, Sion Penant, Huw Morgan, Iestyn Pierce, Tim Barnes, Huw Dylan Owen.
Ar Log yng Ngwyl Werin y Cnapan yn Ffostrasol ym1988. Ar Log in the Cnapan Folk Festival in Ffostrasol, Ceredigion in 1988
Folk, rock.
Cnapan have spent 3 generations growing in to what it is today. Here Judi shares with us what Cnapan means to her and what makes it so special. www.cnapan.co.uk enquiry@cnapan.co.uk 01239 820575
Defaid yn y Cnapan 2 = Guto Pryderi Puw, Sion Penant, Huw Morgan, Iestyn Pierce, Tim Barnes, Huw Dylan Owen.
http://www.karenbrown.com Cnapan House is a charming hotel in the town of Newport, in the beatiful country Wales in the United Kingdom. You will love the wel...
Gwerinos - Emlyn Roberts (bouzouki, llais/vocals) Tudur Huws Jones (banjo) Elfed ap Gomer (allweddellau/keyboard) Idris Morris Jones (ffidl) Roger Vaughan (bas) Jos (drymiau) Ywain Myfyr (gitar, llais/vocals)
Tokyu-Cnapan.flv.
Folk, rock.
Huw Morgan, Sion Pennant, Tim Barnes, Huw Dylan Owen, Guto Puw, Iestyn Pearce - Defaid - Cnapan 1992.
Huw Morgan, Sion Pennant, Tim Barnes, Huw Dylan Owen, Guto Puw, Iestyn Pearce - Defaid - Cnapan 1992.
Huw Morgan, Sion Pennant, Tim Barnes, Huw Dylan Owen, Guto Puw, Iestyn Pearce - Defaid - Cnapan 1992.
Highlight of Cnapan Music Festival 2013. [Video Copyright to Pretty Wreckless Images and Jazz Dyson]
Datblygu yn perfformio yng Ngŵyl Cnapan 1992.
Last minute cancellation by R Kelly = brilliance from local saviours Cocoa Tea and Bunny Wailer. Raises question; why pay fortunes for huge international sta...
Animated CountrysiderZ juniors, busting a routine to Egyptian Lover at Cnapan show in South West Wales 2013! Dancers: Billy i mean Business, Tom the Bomb, Bi...
Cairn Liath is a mountain near Braemar in Scotland. 818mtrs. It has breathtaking views from the top and is worth the long hard slog to get to the top. This w...
1) Gwanwyn - Trelew 2) Gwerinos 3) Grwp Pobl Ifanc - Gaiman.
Welsh band.
Fideo cerdd o'r gan Brwydyr Maes Dulyn gan Sobin a'r Smaeliaid.
Laurence Hobden (Tang) - Land of the Long White Cloud in Mor Music, York - 18/Oct/2014.
Dating back to 1752, the event used be marked with a game of cnapan/gem y bel ddu, or black ball.
BBC News 2015-01-09Cnapan (sometimes spelt Knapan or Knappan) is a Celtic form of medieval football, vaguely resembling some modern versions of rugby football, played in Wales until the nineteenth century. The game originated in, and seems to have remained largely confined to, the western counties of Wales, especially Carmarthenshire, Ceredigion and Pembrokeshire. According to George Owen of Henllys, in his Description of Pembrokeshire (1603), cnapan had been "extremely popular in Pembrokeshire since greate antiquitie [sic]".
Little information is known about the origins of cnapan, due to the age of the game, but it seems to have originated sometime in the Middle Ages as a form of "organised chaos", to relieve the back-breaking monotonous work of daily life. George Owen of Henllys says, in his Description of Pembrokeshire (1603), that it had been a form of war training for the "Ancient Britons", used to improve strength and stamina. The game also seems to have evolved gradually over the years, with no definitive set of rules governing its play; but as the game is played with but a few simple rules, this has not been a major hindrance to play. Welsh clergyman and historian, Theophilus Evans (1693–1767), tells of a game similar to cnapan being played on the banks of the River Teifi; the ancient boundary between the counties of Ceredigion and Carmarthenshire, southwest Wales. Leaving aside the gentry on horseback, there were certainly two groups of players on each side, some who grappled for the cnapan (ball) and others who were the fastest and most elusive runners. There were also features approximating to scrummages and lineouts. The game died out in the nineteenth century, as the codified game of rugby union became popular.