Background
Emrys was the son of a gardener who was employed on a nearby estate.
Emrys was the son of a gardener who was employed on a nearby estate.
He was a literary critic and writer on politics and religion. After working in a shop in Liverpool for a time he trained at Bala Theological College. In 1874 he went to Lausanne in Switzerland to teach English in a private school and to study languages, developing a love of the French language and literature which had a great influence on his later writings.
He later went to Germany to teach English in Bonn and Gießen.
On his return to Wales the Calvinistic Methodist church refused to ordain him a minister because of his opposition to the policy of building English-language chapels in mainly Welsh-speaking areas of Wales. He was eventually ordained a minister in 1884 and then served as a pastor to several churches in Denbighshire, including Rhewl and Ruthin, for the rest of his life.
He was a prolific writer of newspaper articles in Welsh, three volumes of which were later published, as were two volumes of his sermons. A Secondary School in Abergele is named Ysgol Emrys Ap-Iwan in his honour.
He is often seen as one of the most important forerunners of modern Welsh nationalism. Emrys ap Iwan was a fervent advocate of the Welsh language and of Welsh nationalism and believed in self-government for Wales within a federal system of government.