River Aeron


The River Aeron is a small river in Ceredigion, Wales, that flows into Cardigan Bay at Aberaeron. It is also referred to on some older maps as the River Ayron.

Etymology

The name of the river means "battle" or "slaughter" and derives from the Middle Welsh aer with the same meaning. Aeron is believed to have been a Welsh god of war. Past interpretations of the name have included that of William Owen Pughe, who in his Dictionary of the Welsh Language believed Aeron meant "queen of brightness". Aeron can also mean berries, fruit and grain. It is a word that suggests the fruitfulness of the autumn harvest in a valley of plenty.

Literary tradition

lived near the banks of the river in the 1940s, at a secluded mansion called Plas Gelli, just outside Talsarn. He called the Aeron valley "the most precious place in the world." He also mentions the peacefulness of the Aeron valley in his 1949 radio broadcast, Living in Wales. It’s said that Dylan and his wife, Caitlin, named their daughter, Aeronwy, after the Aeron. The Dylan Thomas Trail follows the river from Talsarn to Aberaeron.
Talsarn and its hinterland was once the centre of a thriving group of country poets. They included John Davies, John Jenkins and his brother Joseph Jenkins, Jenkin Jenkins Felincoed, William Lloyd, Dinah Davies Tynrhos, David Davies and Dan Jenkins Pentrefelin. Joseph Jenkins also wrote for agricultural journals, as well as writing a book on his travels in Australia.
The village of Ystrad Aeron, a few miles along the River Aeron from Talsarn, was the home of the bookbinder and poet, John Davies 1722–1799. Davies’ diary with poems for 1 January 1796 to 19 December 1799 is in the National Library of Wales. It is available online.
The next village along the Aeron from Ystrad Aeron is Ciliau Aeron, which also has a varied literary tradition. The dockworker-poet James Hughes 1799-1844 was born here at Neuadd-ddu.
The poet-priest David Davis, 1745-1827 had his first ministry in the village's Unitarian chapel.
The Dylan Thomas Trail runs through Ciliau Aeron, passing the Ty Glyn Aeron hotel, which had once been the home from the early 1900s of the poet and writer, Evelyn Anna Lewes. One of her books was A Guide to Aberaeron and the Aeron Valley. She is entered in the Dictionary of Welsh Biography. The publisher, Geoffrey Faber, bought the mansion in 1930 and T. S. Eliot took his holidays there throughout the 1930s.
The poet, Stevie Krayer, who lived in Ciliau Aeron for over twenty years, has written a sequence of poems about the Aeron.