With the help of a long horn that muffles their conversation, Lludd asks his brother Llefelys, king of France, for advice on the problem.
Llefelys tells him that a certain insect crushed up and mixed with water is deadly to the Coraniaid, but harmless to the Britons.
Triad 36, which clearly refers back to Lludd and Llefelys, calls them one of the "Three Oppressions" that arrived in Britain and stayed there, and adds that they "came from Asia".
[5] In a triad found in the infamous third series of Welsh Triads printed in The Myvyrian Archaiology of Wales (1801–1807), purportedly from a medieval manuscript but now known to be a forgery by Iolo Morganwg, the Coraniad are said to have settled near the Humber where they joined the Romans and Saxons against the Britons.
[6] Manley Pope, author of an 1862 translation of the Brut y Brenhinedd containing Lludd and Llefelys, follows the information given in Morganwg's triads and adds that they came from the country of Pwyll (i.e., Annwn).