The actual City of Glasgow web site with the insignia's
story. It just so happens to miss the "King of Cadzow"
part of the story.
Go
there now...
This site, the Glasgow Guide, mentions
that Languoreth is "Queen of Cadzow".
More...
This site is about
Hydderch Hael, King of Cadzow,
and catalogs the same story.
More...
Page with more about
Hydderch Hael, King of Cadzow,
and which speculates that they may have maintained a royal
center near Hamilton.
More...
The first Cadzow record
The armorial insignia of the city of Glasgow contains the earliest reference to Cadzow that we have found so far.
The elements of the insignia tell of the legends surrounding
St. Mungo, a priest of the Celtic church who lived
in the 6th century and died in 603. From this, we can
surmise that this story of Hydderch Hael, King of Cadzow,
occurred in the 6th century.
The story, quoted below, is copied from a pamphlet
printed by the City of Glasgow District Council.
The fish with a ring in its mouth is a salmon and
the ring was a present from Hydderch Hael, King of
Cadzow, to his Queen Languoreth.
The Queen gave the ring to a knight, and the King,
suspecting an intrigue, took it from him while he
slept during a hunting party and threw it into the
River Clyde.
On returning home the King demanded the ring and
threatened Languoreth with death if she could not
produce it. The Queen appealed to the knight who,
of course, could not help and then confessed to St.
Mungo who sent one of his monks to fish in the river,
instructing him to bring back the first fish caught.
This was done and St. Mungo extracted the ring from
its mouth.
The scene is represented on the counter seal of
Bishop Robert Wyschard, made about 1271.
A related 6th century story centers around Rederech,
the 6th century ruler of Strathclyde. Strathclyde is
an ancient Kingdom of the Britons with its capital
at Dumbarton, the birthplace of St Patrick. Rederech's
stronghold was a fortress set dramatically on Dumbarton
Rock, a massive Gibraltar-like volcanic plug. Legend
has it that his summer hunting lodge lay eastwards
at Cadzow, where St Mungo converted him to Christianity
in 568.
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