







N I G H T B R I N G E R . S E
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MOLMUTIUS
The son of Cloten whose kingdom, Cornwall, he inherited and immediately set about enlarging. The rest of England was, at that time, ruled by a king named Pinner. Molmutius defeated his army and Pinner fell in battle. He then defeated the combined forces of Rudaucus, King of Cambria, and Stater, King of Albany, so that he reigned supreme, the twenty-first in line from Brutus. Molmutius reigned for forty years and during that time formulated the Molmutine Laws, which laid down a code of ethics that has survived, in some extent, to the present day. Molmutius was allegedly buried on the White Mount in London, where Bendigeid Vran's head had previously been buried, as had Brutus himself. He left two sons, Belinus and Brennius, both of whom laid claim to his throne, thus once again throwing Britain into turmoil.
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