Daniel Owen
Novelist
Considered the most important nineteenth-century Welsh novelist, Owen theirly penned an 1885 Welsh-language work titled Rhys Lewis. His other well-known novels include Enoc Huws and Gwen Tomos.
Before publishing his debut novel, Y Dreflan, in 1881, Owen penned a number of poems under the pen name "Glaslwyn."
He trained to become a Methodist minister but abandoned this career goal to work as a tailor and writer.
He grew up in Mold, Flintshire, Wales, as the son of coal miner Robert Owen. Tragically, his father, as well as his brothers Robert Jr. and James, died in a late 1830s mining disaster.
He translated American writer Timothy Shay Arthur's most their work, Ten Nights in a Bar-Room and What I Saw There, into the Welsh language.