The publication of "Cornish Today" by Kernewek dre Lyther in 1995 was a
landmark event in the Cornish Revival. In that book, Professor Williams
offered the first professional analysis of the various systems of
Cornish in use, and also outlined his suggested emendations for Unified
Cornish. The present revised edition makes this most important work
available to those who may have missed the earlier editions. As
companion volumes to "Cornish Today", two further works by Professor
Williams are being published: "Writings on Revived Cornish" and "Towards
Authentic Cornish". Nicholas Williams was born in Essex. While still at
school he taught himself Cornish and became a bard of the Cornish
Gorsedd for proficiency in the Cornish language in Newquay in 1962,
taking the bardic name Golvan. He won first prize in the Gorsedd verse
competition in 1961, 1964, and 1965. He read classics, English language,
and Celtic in Oxford and was awarded a PhD in Celtic in Queen's
University, Belfast in 1972. He is currently Associate Professor in the
School of Irish, Celtic Studies, Folklore and Linguistics in University
College, Dublin. He has written widely on the Celtic languages and
literatures, in particular Irish, Manx and Cornish. He published
"Cornish Today" in 1995, "Clappya Kernowek" in 1997, "English-Cornish
Dictionary" in 2000 (second edition 2006) and Testament Noweth in 2002.
He won first prize in the Gorsedd verse competitions of 1997, 1998, and
1999. With Graham Thomas he has produced an editio princeps of the
recently discovered Cornish play, "Bewnans Ke", which was published by
the University of Exeter Press in October 2006. Philip Payton, Professor
of Cornish Studies, University of Exeter, has described Nicholas
Williams as "the foremost inter--national authority" in the Cornish
language.