A list of Dumnonian kings is one of the hardest of the major Dark Age kingdoms to accurately compile, as it is confused by Arthurian legend, complicated by strong associations with the kings of Wales and Brittany, and obscured by the Saxon advance. Therefore, this list should be treated with caution.
Dumnonian kings
The original Celtic chiefs of the Dumnonii ruled in the south-west corner of the British Isles until faced with the arrival of the Romans in their territory in c. AD 55, when the Romans established a legionary fortress at Isca Dumnoniorum (modern Exeter). Although subjugated by c. AD 78, the civitas Dumnoniorum was among the regions of Roman Britain least affected by Roman influence.[1] Known as Caer Uisc, Exeter was inhabited by Dumnonian Britons until c. 936, when King Athelstan expelled them.[2] Several other royal residences may also have served the kings of Dumnonia or Cornwall, including Tintagel and Cadbury Castle.
Custennin ap Cado, probably "Saint Custennin" (c. 530 – c. 560)
Gerren rac Denau ap Custennin, "Gerren for the South" (c. 560 – c. 598)
William of Malmesbury
Gwrgan: William of Malmesbury reports the terms of a grant of land made by King Gwrgan of Damnonia to the "old church" at Glastonbury in AD 601 in the time of Abbot Worgret.[3]
Possible rulers given in the early 17th-century Book of Baglan as ancestors of an 'Earl of Cornwall'[4]
Pearce identifies Constantine with the Constantine mentioned by Gildas, anchoring his reign to the 6th century, and giving later dates for the reigns of Erbin, Geraint, and Cadwy.[6]
Cornish kings
By the end of the 8th century, Dumnonia was much reduced in size by the advance of the West Saxons and the remaining territory became a rump state in Cornwall.
Recorded in Old Welsh documents, Saints' Lives and in local and Arthurian tradition
In the De Gestis Herewardi Saxonis written in the 12th century it is recorded that Hereward the Wake took refuge in Cornwall in the 11th century at the court of the Cornish Prince or King Alef.[11]
Cornish earls
If he is not to be identified with Hywel Dda of Deheubarth, the singularly recorded Huwal could have been the last native king. Some of the later supposed rulers listed below are given the title 'Earl of Cornwall'.
Conan (c.926–c.937)
Rolope ap Alanorus (fl. c.940s)
Vortegyn Helin ap Rolope (Vortegyn the High Lord) (fl. c.960s) as 'Duke of Cornwall and Wessex'
Veffyne ap Vortegyn (fl. c.980s) as 'Duke of Cornwall and Wessex'
Alured ap Veffyne (fl. c.1000s) as 'Duke of Cornwall and Wessex'
Godwyn ap Alured (fl. c.1010) as 'Duke of Cornwall and Wessex', possibly Godwin, Earl of Wessex
^Edward Huttom, London, 1919, Highways and Byways of Somerset, p.156.
^ abWilliams, John. Llyfr Baglan: or The Book of Baglan. Compiled Between the Years 1600 and 1607. Edited by Joseph Alfred Bradney. London: Mitchell, Hughes and Clarke, 1910. p. 80