Online Encyclopedia

GELLERT, or KILLHART

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 558 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GELLERT, or KILLHART  , in Welsh traditional
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history, the
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dog of Llewellyn, prince of Wales . The dog, a greyhound, was
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left to guard the cradle in which the infant heir slept . A wolf enters, and is about to attack the child, when Gellert flies at him . In the struggle the cradle is upset and the infant falls underneath . Gellert kills the wolf, but when Prince Llewellyn arrives and
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sees the empty cradle and
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blood all around, he does not for the moment
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notice the wolf, but thinks Gellert has killed the baby . He at once stabs him, but almost instantly finds his son safe under the cradle and realizes the dog's bravery . Gellert is supposed to have been buried near the
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village of Beddgelert ("
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grave of Gellert "), Snowdon, where his tomb is still pointed out to visitors . The date of the incident is traditionally given as 1205 . The incident has given rise to a Welsh proverb, " I repent as much as the man who slew his greyhound." The whole story is, however, only the Welsh version of a tale long before current in
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Europe, which.is traced to the
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Indian Panchatantra and perhaps as far back as 200 B.C . See W . A . Clouston, Popular Tales and
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Fictions (1887); D .

E .

Jenkins, Beddgelert, its Facts, Fairies and
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Folklore (Portmadoc, 1899) .

End of Article: GELLERT, or KILLHART
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CHRISTIAN FURCHTEGOTT GELLERT (1715-1769)
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AULUS GELLIUS (c. A.D. 13o-I8o)

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