Diemazz

Holy war
Tudhaliya IV
WZMJ
Bishop of Stafford
Below the Waste
Pterygopalatine fossa
Eunomius
Qinhuangdao
Purine
Gurmit Singh
Margaret Rogers
Parthian style
Akhal
Curtain (novel)
Ra (board game)
0520221540
File:Founding Ceremony of the Hakko Ichiu Monument JPG
Pokot
Bp (digraph)
aaja nachle madhuri dixit
WVSM
Abyss (Thelema)
Cenred of Mercia
1930 1945 in fashion
Zobel network
WJSL
WGPX
Forgotten Rebels
Paryushan
WRGO
Buffer Zone II
Haidong Prefecture
WVKF
Khigga
Erosion
Cervere
Zhang Dachun
t844t
JPEG2000
Gao Huan
Abanindranath Tagore
708 hearing
City of Geelong


Bretons
René Laennec Jacques Cartier Anne de Bretagne
François rené de Chateaubriand Robert Surcouf Jules Verne
René Laennec; Jacques Cartier; Anne de Bretagne;
François-René de Chateaubriand; Robert Surcouf; Jules Verne
Total population

ca. 200,000 speakers of Breton; total 6 million - 7 million[dubious ]

Regions with significant populations
France, Canada (mainly Quebec), United Kingdom, United States and Ireland
Languages
French, Breton, Gallo,
Religion
Predominantly Roman Catholic

William-Adolphe Bouguereau, Breton Brother and Sister.

The Bretons are a distinct Celtic ethnic group located in the region of Brittany in France. They trace much of their heritage to groups of Brythons who settled the area from south western Great Britain in the 4th to 6th centuries. The region of Brittany is named after them, and some still speak the Celtic Breton language.

Contents

History

Brittany was a quasi-independent kingdom and Duchy during the Middle Ages, and an important object of contention between the kingdoms of England and France. The War of the Breton Succession was a central component of the Hundred Years' War.

Bretons are thought to have played a key, though nebulous, part in the transmission of Arthurian legend into wider European literature. Geoffrey of Monmouth was himself a Welshman of Breton descent.

Bretons have emigrated around the world, at various points in their history. One wing of William the Conqueror's army in 1066 was Breton, as were many of the 'Normans' who took part in the conquest and colonization of England, Wales, Ireland, Sicily, and other lands. Breton ports became key points of departure during the French colonization of the Americas (particularly Nantes, Saint-Malo, and later Lorient and Brest). Bretons furnished a significant proportion of the French colonists in present-day Québec; they played an important role in the French slave trade and buccaneering. For a long time, Catholic priests in Haiti were recruited primarily from Brittany (this was during a period when the church was reluctant to ordain black Haitians as priests). There is a substantial Breton community in Greater Paris.

Modern Breton identity

Today, the Breton nationality is not recognised by the French Republic, nor by the European Union or any other official body, which is why there are no specific statistics on that population.[citation needed] However, it is reported[who?] that hundreds of thousands of people in France claim Breton ethnicity, including a few French celebrities such as Malik Zidi[1] and Patrick Poivre d'Arvor.

Culture

Language

Main article: Breton language

Breton is a Brythonic language closely related to Cornish and a bit more distantly to Welsh. The Breton language as such is part of the Insular Celtic language group. In eastern Brittany, a regional langue d'oïl named Gallo developed; it shares certain points of vocabulary, idiom, and pronunciation with Breton. Neither language has official status under French law; however, some still use Breton as an everyday language (particularly those of the older generation) and bilingual road signs are common in the west of Brittany. During the first half of the 20th Century, Breton was strongly discouraged by the French state and it was often looked down upon in schools and churches.

Religion

The Breton people are predominantly Roman Catholic, with Reformed and non-affiliated minorities. Brittany was one of the most staunchly Roman Catholic regions in all of France. Attendance of Sunday mass dropped during the 1970s and the 1980s but other religious practices such as pilgrimages have experienced a revival. This includes the Tro Breizh which takes in the shrines of the seven founding saints of Breton Christianity. The Christian Tradition is widely respected by both believers and nonbelievers, who see it as a symbol of Breton heritage and culture.

Symbols of Britanny

Flag Of Britanny : Gwenn Ha Du (White and Black)
  • National Anthem: Bro Gozh ma Zadoù ("Old Country of My Fathers")
  • Motto of the Dukes of Brittany: Kentoc'h mervel eget bezañ saotret in Breton, or Potius mori quam fœdari in Latin
  • National Day: 19 May, the Feast of Saint Erwann (Saint Yves)
  • Chivalric order: L'Ordre de l'Hermine (The Order of the Stoat)

References

See also

search:

Site Map: RSS 2.0

Recent Searches: Bretons
Botou
Cracker (food)
Bishop of Penrith
Bhutta Village
Denying
Ziyang
Beuzeville
Portraits at Lingyan Pavilion
Bishop of Hulme

Related Pages: