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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Coel_HenCoel Hen - Wikipedia

    Coel Hen. An illustration depicting Coel from a 15th-century Welsh-language version of Geoffrey of Monmouth 's Historia Regum Britanniae. Coel ( Old Welsh: Coil ), also called Coel Hen ( Coel the Old) and King Cole, is a figure prominent in Welsh literature and legend since the Middle Ages.

  2. Coel Hen or Coel the Old, the son of Tegfan, was a Celtic ruler who lived around the turn of the fourth and fifth centuries at the time of the departure of the Roman legions from Britain.

  3. Coel Hen, King of Northern Britain. (Died c. 420) (Welsh: Coel; Latin: Coelius; English: Cole) Coel Hen or Coel the Old is known to most of us through the famous nursery rhyme: Old King Cole was a merry old soul. And a merry old soul was he. He called for his pipe, And he called for his bowl, And he called for his fiddlers, three.

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  5. Mar 13, 2023 · Coel Hen, or “Coel the Old,” was a Welsh-born king of northern England sometime toward the end of the Roman rule of Great Britain, in the 4th to 5th century.

  6. Lyrics. Identity of King Cole. Coel Hen theory. Cole-brook theory. "Old King Coal" Modern usage. In art. As a marching cadence. In music. In fiction. In humour and satire. Notes. References. Old King Cole. " Old King Cole " is a British nursery rhyme first attested in 1708.

    • 1708-9
    • Traditional
  7. www.wikiwand.com › en › Coel_HenCoel Hen - Wikiwand

    Coel ( Old Welsh: Coil ), also called Coel Hen ( Coel the Old) and King Cole, is a figure prominent in Welsh literature and legend since the Middle Ages.

  8. Apr 1, 1999 · Coel Hen can be considered by means of surviving tradition to be the first king in, and of, 'Northern Britain'. It seems to have been he who oversaw the transition from direct Roman rule to an independent Britain which now took care of its own defence.

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