WeeklyWorker

13.09.2006

Fact and fictions

Each year on September 16 Welsh nationalists celebrate 'Owain Glyndwr day'. Bob Davies looks at the myths surrounding the 'the last genuine Prince of Wales'

In recent years the campaign to make September 16 a national holiday in Wales has been stepped up. That this may well yet be realised is rather telling for us communists. It is not often that an individual is rewarded with such an accolade, at least in the UK. As such, and given the political fuss that invariably ensues to one degree or another at this time of year, the man (and his reputation) deserves analysis and comment.

For many people in Wales, the mere mention of Owain Glyndwr evokes images of a heroic figure associated with an intransigent and courageous battle against an oppressive and callous enemy. Often recognised and referred to as "the last genuine Prince of Wales", Glyndwr's history is simplistically portrayed. Between the years 1400 and 1409, he is deemed to have led a popular, 'national' battle on behalf of the 'Welsh' against the 'English' (neither existed in terms of mass consciousness in the early 15th century) in a quest to establish a 'free and independent Wales'. It is thus easy to see why this mythical image strikes a chord with many of Wales's latter-day patriots: they assert Glyndwr's claimed political mission was one any 21st century democrat should aspire to.

It would be wrong, of course, for communists to simply dismiss as irrelevant the widespread acceptance of the Glyndwr myth in a period when questions of democracy and self-determination, nationalism and independence are clearly on the agenda in Wales. As the man has now been moulded into a popular modern-day hero, whose history, it is asserted, carries some sort of hope for salvation for the people of Wales today, we have a duty to look at that history and try to separate myth from reality.

As with much official history, Owain Glyndwr's is recounted in a way that suits this or that political project. Many of the numerous websites dedicated to the man typify a general uncritical and unquestioning acceptance of the role he is deemed to have played. To many, his status as an icon is absolute. According to one website, ""¦ there seems to be little doubt that charismatic Owain fulfilled many of the mystical medieval prophecies about the rising up of the Red Dragon".1 Another states that Owain Glyndwr was one Welsh prince who was "never betrayed by his own people "¦ not even in the darkest days when many of them could have saved their skin by doing so. There is no parallel in the history of the Welsh."2 And a poem by Graham Hughes on the Owain Glyndwr website adds to the myth. It speaks of him as a "second Arthur", who "gives warmth to thaw our frozen hearts".3

Such fanciful comments may be useful to those who wish to maintain Glyndwr as a national saviour of the Welsh, but their irrationality and gushingly sentimental tone hardly help us understand what role and significance Glyndwr had. Communists will be the first to admit that it is hard to establish the exact details and an accurate, objective, historical analysis of any individual from the 15th century. Glyndwr is no exception. Given that most information about him is now written with such authority and fervour, you would be mistaken for thinking that documentation is plentiful. Far from it. RR Davies writes that information about him is "desperately little" and "very scanty".4

In fact, when one of Wales's most prestigious institutions, its National Library in Aberystwyth, fails to highlight any significant writing on Glyndwr until the 19th century, this begs the question: if his legacy was so important, why the lack of contemporary documentation? According to Wikipedia, "It was not until the late 19th century that Owain's reputation was to be revived. The 'Young Wales' movement recreated him as the father of Welsh nationalism."5

We can establish a number of facts about Owain Glyndwr from the writings and the painstaking research of several prominent historians (within, as well as outside, Wales). They provide a useful place to start when trying to place Glyndwr's legacy into some sort of rational perspective. During the period in question, between the late 14th and early 15th centuries, the entity that today is called Wales was ruled by three separate powers. The king of England (who controlled much of the land, administered through the shires), the powerful Anglo-Norman marcher lords (who often positioned themselves as close allies of the crown) and the Uchelwyr, the 'Welsh' feudalists, who traced their descendance from earlier petty princes and who now controlled the more mountainous regions of the country. Glyndwr was a member of this class, specifically the earlier dynasties of Powys and Deheubarth.

More importantly, though, medieval Wales was the site of a struggle between the "free" and the "unfree" - ""¦ between those who exercised power and lordship "¦ and those who were "¦ dependent on them and whose prime concern was the struggle for subsistence and survival".6 Class struggle was the order of the day, as social tension between the "free" and the "unfree", as well as within the nobility itself, was constant. Gwyn Williams highlights the fact that revolt was common at the time, as "thousands of lesser people were pitched into dependence and frustration".7

The nobility was obsessed with increasing their fiefdoms. More Lordships and land, for example, meant more power over people and more resources. It was typical for any ruling individual or group to form alliances and change allegiance or even straddle more than one allegiance, depending on what would be seen as primary in promoting wealth and power. As well as physical confrontation, political manoeuvring within the upper rankings of society was often characterised by conspiracy, bribery and corruption, as one fought another to maintain or increase personal fortunes and consequently their armed following.

Glyndwr's life was shaped by such struggles. Even if he was one of the more "respectable" and "charismatic" nobles, Glyndwr exhibited all the fawning, grasping, back-stabbing, bloodthirsty and disloyal characteristics of a petty aristocrat. It is documented in 1385, for example, that he fought alongside the English crown in campaigns in Scotland, yet switched allegiance and united with these same 'enemies' against the English crown some 15 years later. John Davies notes: "Until his 40s, his career, marked as it was by a readiness to cooperate with and to serve the English authorities, was typical of the careers of the members of that class".8

It was within this decaying and constantly warring medieval society that the Glyndwr myth was born. When a land dispute between him and a neighbouring English lord was dismissed by the English parliament at a time of splits within the ruling English elite, Glyndwr took advantage of the unrest which affected all social classes. His prestige, political skill and popularity amongst his class placed him at the helm of a revolt.

This rebellion is today officially acknowledged as the "last true Welsh revolt", even though there was nothing 'national' about it. While nationalists of all shades claim varying degrees of loyalty to Glyndwr's legacy, for our part we recognise the need to question all of the assertions it involves - not to do so would reinforce the mythology (and disarm us in current battles). For example, in a swipe against the house of Windsor, many nationalists claim that Glyndwr's family heritage, his 'Welshness', legitimises his title as "the last genuine Prince of Wales". Subsequent claimants to the title are of 'non-native' stock. Leaving aside the fact that Glyndwr ruled over only a part of the country and he had earlier been in alliance with the crown in England, there is a dangerous assumption here that nationality is somehow a legitimate basis for top-down rule. Communists and genuine democrats are republicans and we wish to see the end of the monarchy lock, stock and barrel - irrespective of the nationality of individual royals.

Furthermore, many nationalists fail to point out, or are simply unaware, that Glyndwr's investiture was hardly the result of a democratic movement and a decision of the populace, as we are often led to believe. But history shows he was either proclaimed Prince of Wales by fellow nobles,9 or he simply took the title for himself.10

We are frequently told about Glyndwr being responsible for the first and last genuine parliaments in Wales. Given the associated spin on this issue, particularly with current controversy surrounding extra powers for the Welsh assembly, you'd be forgiven for picturing mass representation. That would be just plain bloody stupid, though.

It would appear that Glyndwr did indeed initiate parliaments - two of them. RR Davies speaks of one being convoked in Machynlleth in 1404 and the other in Harlech in 1405.11 The same author reports that details on Machynlleth are sketchy, but he points out that the Harlech parliament was made up of "influential persons "¦ throughout Wales under Owain's control".12

Underlying all these arguments is a common theme that is characteristic of most official history and one that needs highlighting. Many nationalists would have us believe that Wales and the Welsh have existed since the dawn of time. Yet, shocking as it may be to some, that is not the case. From Roman times until the industrial revolution, the Welsh as a nationality did not exist in any serious, coherent form. Indeed, what has characterised 'Wales' since the birth of official history was not rule by 'the English', but rule via kingdoms - and constantly changing ones at that. Where these kingdoms changed rulers on a frequent basis, where borders and territories shifted, the idea that either the petty monarchs or the popular classes identified themselves as a common nationality is absurd - concepts surrounding national identity (and patriotism, citizenship and nations) only developed with the spread of capitalism.

Until the industrial revolution claims to territory remained the concern of those with power - the nobility or gentry. The engagement of the 'mass' as a whole and their identification with the politics of these ruling groups were limited, to say the least. Obedience was the order of the day - not any ideological commitment to a non-existent 'nation'.

Capitalist expansion resulted in territorial consolidation and increased international trading. South Wales was transformed into one of the world's most important coal-producing areas and a major sector of Britain's imperial economy. The revolutions of France and America influenced political thought in Wales, as elsewhere, and added to the abundance of social, political and cultural contradictions.

There was a deliberate promotion of an identity specific to Wales, and a swathe of literature which romantically portrayed the ancient Welsh struggle for freedom (in various accounts realised through a later reconciliation with the English and then a common Britishness). From the prophecies of Merlin to the cult of Arthur, from the Brut to Iolo Goch, official society proclaimed a Wales that had existed since the year dot and a history which could now be incorporated as a component of the imperial British identity.

At the same time, the new, prosperous Welsh capitalist class believed in greater rights for themselves and therefore the desirability of Welsh institutions which could help them achieve a bigger share of the profits from the spoils of the British empire. However, it was the backward-looking part of the middle classes - those rejecting working class socialism - who were the most concerned with the promotion of Welshness. Young Wales was formed in 1886 and it demanded home rule and a cultural revival. Hence Glyndwr was invented as a great leader of the Welsh.

Of course, for much of the 20th century Welsh nationalism exerted little influence - not least as a result of the strength of the working class. During the early period of the last century, for example, mass militant action was accompanied by a high level of political radicalisation in a world dominated by the Russian Revolution and class politics generally. Nationalism and its associated ideology enjoyed little credibility - it is telling how irrelevant and, indeed, hostile Plaid Cymru was, for example, to the aspirations of most workers in Wales when that party was formed in 1925. However, with the sustained post-war economic boom grinding to an end in the early 1970s, job losses and closures became the order of the day.

Nationalism blamed not capitalism, but the centralised British state. The call for Welsh independence began to attract a significant protest vote, taking advantage of disillusion with the failing politics of the Labour Party. Glyndwr became a political icon.

Communists and revolutionary democrats need to separate fact from fantasy in order to win hegemony for the programme of the working class.