Manuscript Source: Llyfr Aneirin, Lyfrgell Ganolog Caerdydd (Cardiff Central Library) MS 2.81
Digital Editions & Notes by Steve Sweeney-Turner
Hwn yw e gododin. aneirin ae cant.
This is the Gododdin. Aneirin sang it.
(Rubric, Llyfr Aneirin, page 1, line 1)
The CyberScotia edition of Llyfr Aneirin ("The Book of Aneirin") is a long-term work-in-progress and labour of love. In 2008, it will be launched as a website in its own right. The primary purpose is to provide a new diplomatic transcription of the complete manuscript in various digital formats, utilising some of the latest technical advances available to online scholarship. This transcription is currently in preparation and a limited preview is already available here. Partly as background research for my own transcription, I am also developing a digital archive of the early editions that have now passed into the public domain. These already include facsimile editions, transcriptions, "corrected" or modernised editions, and translations. I am also planning to include materials from the critical heritage. The currently-scheduled materials in the collection are:
| Editor | Year | Category | Language | Edition Title |
| Steve Sweeney-Turner | 2008 | Essay | English | A Rough Guide to Llyfr Aneirin (forthcoming) |
| Steve Sweeney-Turner | 2008 | Transcription | Cymraeg | Llyfr Aneirin (preview) |
| Steve Sweeney-Turner | 2007 | Bibliography | English | An Aneirin Bibliography |
| John Gwenogvryn Evans | 1908 | Facsimile | Cymraeg | Facsimile & Text of the Book of Aneirin |
| William Forbes Skene | 1868 | Edition | Cymraeg | The Book of Aneurin |
| William Forbes Skene | 1868 | Translation | English | The Gododin Poems |
| John Williams ab Ithel | 1852 | Edition | Cymraeg | Y Gododin |
| John Williams ab Ithel | 1852 | Translation | English | The Gododin (forthcoming) |
| Thomas Gray | 1775 | Versions | English | Four Aneirin Fragments (forthcoming) |
| Evan Evans | 1764 | Translations | Cymraeg—Latin | De Bardis Dissertatio (forthcoming) |
NOTE: Some of these editions attempt to represent medieval characters that are common in the manuscript, but not included in most computer fonts. However, specialist fonts are now available, such as those co-ordinated by the ambitious Medieval Unicode Font Initiative. After much experimentation, the font I have adopted throughout is the excellent Junicode Font by Prof. Peter Baker, a medieval literature scholar at the University of Viginia. Without first installing the Junicode Font (freeware), your computer will not display some of the editions correctly!
In addition to this collection, it should be noted that the modern colour facsimile published by Huws (1989) is also available online in a joint project between Y Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru (The National Library of Wales) and Lyfrgell Ganolog Caerdydd (Cardiff Central Library) at the LGC/NLW's excellent Welsh cultural history resource, Gasglu'r Tlysau (Gathering the Jewels). Although these images were scanned at a lower resolution than the CyberScotia edition of Evans (see above), the facsimiles themselves are of far higher quality than Evans's monochrome plates and represent the most valuable online resource of all.
My thanks to the generous staff of Lyfrgell Ganolog Caerdydd (Cardiff Central Library) for the help and support they have given this project.
This edition copyright © CyberScotia Books 2007.
Digital transcriptions, notes & additional materials copyright © Steve Sweeney-Turner 2007.
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