The Coraniaid also appear in the
Welsh Triads. Triad 36, which clearly refers back to
Lludd and Llefelys, calls them one of the "Three Oppressions" that arrived in Britain and stayed there, and adds that they "came from Asia". In a triad found in the infamous third series of Welsh Triads printed in
The Myvyrian Archaiology of Wales (1801–1807), purportedly from a medieval manuscript but now known to be a forgery by
Iolo Morganwg, the Coraniad are said to have settled near the
Humber where they joined the
Romans and
Saxons against the Britons. Manley Pope, author of an 1862 translation of the
Brut y Brenhinedd containing
Lludd and Llefelys, follows the information given in Morganwg's triads and adds that they came from the country of
Pwyll (i.e.,
Annwn). He further associates the Coraniaid with the
Corieltauvi tribe of the
East Midlands, and attributes to them the various placenames including the element
pool (from Pwyll) around Britain, including
Welshpool. Linguistically, this is improbable: The native Welsh name for Welshpool is
Y Trallwng, for instance, and the English name Welshpool is comparatively recent. In her translation of
the Mabinogion, Davies (2007) notes that
Coraniaid may be a name for the Romans – otherwise
Cesariaid, and records that other
Triads of the Isle of Britain name the three plagues as
Coraniaid,
Gwyddyl Ffichti (Goidelic
Picts), and
Saxons. ==References==