•
John Hunt, Baron Hunt of Llanvair Waterdine, (1910–1998),
KG,
CBE,
DSO, the leader of the first successful expedition to climb
Mount Everest, moved to the area after
World War II. The local village hall is dedicated to his achievement and is called the "Everest Hall". •
Hywel ap Syr Mathew (d. 1581), poet and historian, was a native of the village. He took part in the first
Eisteddfod at
Caerwys in 1523, and was said by
Lewys Dwnn to have been a
bardic teacher. He addressed
eulogies and
elegies in the traditional manner to some of the leading figures of his time, including
William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke, and
Richard Davies, the
Protestant bishop of St David's. An accomplished scribe, he made copies of
The Book of Arms and was a
herald bard. His chronicle of British history, written in the
Welsh language, survives in two copies; it follows the style of contemporary historians in England, beginning with the sons of Noah and continuing down to 1556. In it Hywel states that he had been present at the
siege of
Boulogne in 1544 and some of his comments suggest that he was a devout
Catholic. Both Lewys Dwnn and
Dafydd Benwyn wrote elegies for him on his death. ==See also==