Tudur Explained
Tudur (in Welsh pronounced as /ˈtɨ̞dɨ̞r/), from old Welsh Tutir, is the Welsh form of the given name Theodoric and may refer to:
- Welsh: [[Tewdrig]]|italic=no, king of Welsh: Glywysing|italic=no (fl. 6th century)
- Welsh: [[Tudur Hen]]|italic=no (Theodoric the Old), eponymous founder of the Tudor dynasty
- Welsh: [[Tudur ap Goronwy]]|italic=no (died 1367), Welsh landowner, soldier and administrator of the Tudors of Penmynydd family
- Welsh: [[Tudur ap Gruffudd]]|italic=no (c. 1357 – 1405), participated in the rebellion of his brother, Welsh: Owain Glyndŵr|italic=no
- Welsh: [[Tudur ap Gwyn Hagr]]|italic=no (fl. second half of the 14th century), a Welsh language poet
- Welsh: [[Tudur Penllyn]]|italic=no (1420–1490), Welsh-language poet
- Welsh: [[Tudur Aled]]|italic=no (1465–1525), late medieval Welsh poet, born in Welsh: Llansannan|italic=no, Denbighshire
- Welsh: Harri Tudur (1457–1509), the Welsh-language name for Henry VII of England (r. from 1485)
- Welsh: [[Siôn Tudur]]|italic=no (1522–1602), Welsh-language poet
- R. Tudur Jones (1921–1998), Welsh nationalist and Calvinist theologian
- Owain Tudur Jones (born 1984), Welsh international footballer
See also