Richard Garfield Jenkin (9 October 1925 – 29 October 2002), was a Cornishnationalist politician and one of the founding members of Mebyon Kernow. He was also a Grand Bard of the Gorseth Kernow.[1]
Cornish language
In 1947, Jenkin was made a Bard of the Gorseth Kernow through Cornish language qualification,[2] while serving in the British Army.[citation needed] He chose the bardic nameMap Dyvroeth, meaning 'son of exile'.[2]
He was a Grand Bard of the Gorseth Kernow twice, between 1976 and 1982 and between 1985 and 1988.[3][4]
In 1951, Jenkin was one of the founding members of the Cornish nationalist party Mebyon Kernow.[2] Jenkin and his wife produced a magazine in 1952 called New Cornwall, which publicised Mebyon Kernow news and policies.[citation needed]
He served as the party's chairman between 1973 and 1983 and became its Honorary President in 1988.[2]
Jenkin was born on 9 October 1925 in Ilkeston, Derbyshire, where his Cornish father was in training as a clergyman.[citation needed]
Jenkin married Ann Trevenen (1930-2024), from Redruth in 1954; their marriage produced four children: Morwenna, Loveday, Gawen and Conan.[6] Ann became the first female Grand Bard from 1997 until 2000,[citation needed] and served as the Honorary President of Mebyon Kernow from 2011 until her death.[7] Loveday served as the party's leader between 1990 and 1997.
He died in Truro on 29 October 2002, aged 77.[citation needed]
Publications
Early life of R. M. Nance ed. Richard & Ann Jenkin (1961).
Cornwall the Hidden Land (with Ann Trevenen Jenkin, introduction by Philip Payton), Bracknell : West Country Publications, 1965.
Book of Sermons in Cornish produced by R.G. Jenkin (1983)
40 Years of Mebyon Kernow, by Richard Jenkin and others. Publisher: Mebyon Kernow (1991)
Cornwall the Hidden Land (with Ann Trevenen Jenkin, new introduction by Philip Payton), 2nd edition, including new material, Leedstown: Noonvares Press, (2005) ISBN0-9524601-5-7