Prince Madoc
By Madison Echlin

Prince Madoc, otherwise known as Prince Madog ab Owain Gwynedd, was a pseudo-archaeological Welsh Prince who supposedly emigrated with his followers to North America in 1170. He was from Gwynedd which is a Welsh country that shares boarders with Powys, Conwy, Debinshire, Anglesey, and Ceredigion. His father, Owain, was the King of Gwynedd in the 12th century. King Owain had 19 children, 13 of which were illegitimate including Madoc himself. After the death of Owain of Gwynedd in 1169, his sons debated who would inherit the throne. It is said that Prince Madoc left Gwynedd in a heated disagreement with his brothers and the fight for the throne, since he was supposedly a man of peace, and instead sought adventure by sea. [2]
It is said that Prince Madoc and his brother Riryd sailed from the North Coast of Wales in two ships and landed in the New World. Madoc then returned to Wales and persuaded others to voyage with him to America. [3] They sailed again from Lundy Island in 1171, but they were never heard from again. It is believed that they landed in what is now Mobile Bay, Alabama and traveled up the Alabama River and left behind several stone forts which the local Cherokee tribes said to have been constructed by "white people." These stone structures were dated to hundreds of years before Columbus. [2] However even this is debated. Some legends say he landed in Alabama, some say Florida, Newfoundland, Rhode Island, Nova Scotia, Virginia, somewhere in the Gulf of Mexico, the mouth of the Amazon River, the West Indies, and even the Caribbean. Some of the folklore even says that Madoc might have been the first Inca emperor having discovered Mexico and Peru based solely on the fact that Mango Capae sounds like Madog. [3] Madoc and his followers are reported as the founders of multiple civilizations including the Inca, Maya, and Aztec. Since there was no witness to ever return to Wales with news of their travels, this is mostly speculation.
The Mandan
The Mandans are a tribe of Native American Siouan speakers associated with the Great Plains and have lived for centuries in what is now North Dakota. They historically lived along the Missouri River valley in large settled villages and mostly practiced full time agriculture. However, 18th century reports of occasional physical characteristics among the tribe like their light colored blue or gray eyes and their light colored hair spurred rumors about pre-Colombian European contact. Some believed that the Mandan were "Welsh Indians" or descendants of Prince Madoc and his Welsh followers. It was proposed that interbreeding with the Norse emigrants would explain the blonde Indians. However, there is no real archaeological or scientific evidence to prove anything of the sort.
Early explorers and pioneers were said to have found evidence of Welsh influence among Native tribes along the Tennessee and Missouri Rivers. The Mandans were described as white men with towns and laid out streets and squares. The Mandan supposedly claimed ancestry with the Welsh and spoke Siouan which seemed remarkably similar to Welsh. Unfortunately two waves of the smallpox epidemic, the first in 1781 and then again in 1837, virtually wiped out the Mandans. After the second wave it is estimated that the population plummeted from 1,600 tribal members to 125 by 1838. But the belief in their Welsh heritage persisted, and in 1953 a plaque was created for Mobile Bay that read "In memory of Prince Madog, a Welsh explorer who landed on the shores of Mobile Bay in 1170 and left behind, with the Indians, the Welsh language." [4]
Claims to Rediscovery
In 1608, a member of an exploration party to the villages of the Monacan people in Virginia, Peter Wynne, reportedly found the Monacans language to seem very similar to Welsh. The Monacans were one of the non-Algonquian tribes that spoke Algonquian languages and were referred to by the Algonquians as "Mandoag."[5] In 1669, Reverend Morgan Jones was supposedly captured by a tribe of Virginia Indians in North Carolina called the Doeg. The chief supposedly spared Jones' life when he heard him speak Welsh, which the chief seemingly understood. Jones supposedly returned to the British Colonies in 1686 after living with the Doeg for months and spreading the Gospel. [6] The English forced many of the Doeg out of this region by the late 17th century.
In 1799 Governor John Sevier of Tennessee wrote a report that mentioned the discovery of skeletons that were encased in brass armor which bared the Welsh coat of arms. [4] Additionally, a 19th century painter, George Catlin, spent many years living among the Mandans and other Native American groups. Catlin argued that he had found Prince Madoc's descendants from his expedition. He believed that the Welsh had lived among the Mandan for years and intermarried until there was no distinction between the two cultures. This was further supported by the fact that their two languages were so similar that when spoken to in Welsh, the Mandan can easily understand and respond. [4]
There are also multiple formations, landmarks, and ruins in North America that are attributed to Prince Madoc and the Welsh. From the mysterious rock formation on Fort Mountain in Georgia, [7] to the "Welsh Caves" in one of Alabama's state parks. [8] Apparently the native tribes in all of these areas either assured ignorance, or such stonework and excavation found on theses sites were never attributed to local native tribes.
Unraveling the Prince
The sea-trade which was then active between Greenland and the people of Western Europe in 1100 AD would have given Madoc an idea of voyage through the Atlantic ocean. Furthermore ships of 1170 were large enough and strong enough to cross the Atlantic, so in these respects it would have been logistically possible for Madoc to make it to North America. However, the viking world by 1100 AD linked Norway, Iceland, and Greenland with Britain and had spread along the Western Isles and the shores of the Irish Sea at Dublin, Cumbria and in Gwynedd. A voyage to Greenland was less than 2000 miles in the Atlantic, to put everything into perspective there were hundreds of miles without inhabitants between the Eastern and Western Viking colonies. A voyage to what is now Florida would have been more than 4000 miles into what was basically the unknown. Madoc could have followed the route of trade where he would steer west towards the Greenland coast. The Viking explorers reached parts of the east coast of Canada around 1100, therefore it could have been possible for the Welsh prince to follow the same route and to have brought settlers with him to what is now Alabama. However, there is no real evidence of his existence and no real trace has ever been found of Madoc's presence in any part of North America. [2]
Motivations
The motivations for the creation Prince Madoc's legend and his voyage to the Americas was mostly based on nationalism or the national pride of Wales. The legend or myth of Prince Madoc is part of the oral history of a people who were proud to have resisted the might of Norman England for 200 years longer than the Saxons, and they longed for an achievement of their own. To have one of their own Welsh princes discover the new world and colonize it many years prior to Columbus would have given them something to be proud of. For this reason, people believe in this myth because it shows off a high achievement and therefore boosts the national pride of Wales. A lot of his story can also be attributed to romanticizing the past or making the past more than it was, more mysterious, more captivating, which is one of the foundations to all pseudo-archaological claims. The Madoc legend played a huge role in allowing marginalized Welsh to romanticize themselves as a lost tribe, while also claiming to be the heirs to one of the most ancient cultures in Europe. They also wished to escape their own colonization by the Saxons through embarking on their own colonial adventure. [3] While it is true there were many other "founders" of North America before Columbus, Native Americans and Vikings come to mind, there is no substantial proof of Madoc, his colonies, or even his existence. However, a 15th century Welsh poem depicts Prince Madoc's voyage into the Atlantic with 10 ships and his discovery of America. Whether this account was true or not, it was historically used by Queen Elizabeth I as evidence to the British claim to America during territorial struggles with Spain. [4] It could be argued that the motivation here for Queen Elizabeth was nationalism and Britain’s greed.
References
- ↑ David B. Quinn 1966 [1] Madoc. Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 1, University of Toronto, 1966.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Davies, Arthur, 1984 [2] Prince Madoc and the Discovery of America in 1477. The Geographical Journal, vol. 150, no. 3, 1984.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Southey, Robert, 1853 [3] Madoc. The British Library, 1853.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Johnson, Ben, 2018 [4] The Discovery of America - by the Welsh Prince Madog in the 12th Century. Historic UK, 2018.
- ↑ 2015 [5] Our History. Monacan Indian Nation, 2015.
- ↑ Greenwood, Isaac J., 1833-1911. The Rev. Morgan Jones And the Welsh Indians of Virginia. Boston: Printed by D. Clapp & son, 1898.
- ↑ Tibbs, David, 2016 [6] Legends of Fort Mountain Historical Marker. Historical Marker, 16 June 2016.
- ↑ McAlister, Brittney L., 2009 [7] The Welsh Caves. Alabama State Parks, 23 July 2009.