Brittany

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Brittany (Bretagne in French), otherwise known as the Armorican peninsula, is the most westerly region of mtropolitan France, reaching into the Atlantic Ocean between the English Channel and the Bay of Biscay.

Geography

The Armorican peninsula has rocky coasts to the north and south, visually striking in places, but attains no great heights inland, the Monts d'Arrée reaching only 385 metres. The coastline to the west holds the naval port of Brest. In the north is the ferry port of Roscoff.

Pre-history

There are traces of human activity as early as the Lower Palaeolithic era. Much later, the adaptation to new conditions as glaciation retreated and forests took over inland, meant that in Neolithic times, settlement tended to be along the coast. Brittany is particularly noted for its megalithic remains: menhirs both solitary and in long rows, and tombs of various types, including Barnenez on the north coast, the largest cairn in Europe, constructed in two phases hundreds of years apart. During the megalithic period, there was extensive trade with other parts of Europe, but the peninsula seems to have lagged behind other regions in the developing use of metals. A degree of celticisation (how much is uncertain) followed.

A significant westerly point, the isle of Ouessant (anglicised as Ushant) was known by repute to early Mediterranean geographers, showing that to some extent there was trade along the coasts.

History

Historical records begin with Julius Caesar's conquest of Gaul. In central Brittany, near Huelgoat, there are the remains of a settlement corresponding to his description of an oppidum, or fortified settlement.[1] His account of the conquest shows a combination of ruthless extirpation of the ruling class, conciliation and romanisation. Several uprisings had to be put down before Armorica was finally integrated into the Roman empire. Within the empire, Armorica benefited from its internal trade, supplying salt and more specialised luxury products.

With the collapse of the Empire in the West, However, Armorica was one of the first areas to be abandoned, and it is likely that it lost the prosperity it had had. In the absence of definitive evidence, there is continuing dispute over how far the "Breton" population which now emerged represents those Celts who had been romanised, and their language which had continued alongside Latin, and how far that population is the result of migration from the British Isles, under pressure of the Germanic invasions. Placename evidence indicates that there was substantial settlement of the migrants along the coasts, if not inland, and it appears that the bulk of them came from Wales. As a result of these movements, by the end of the 6th century contemporary chroniclers were referring to the former "Armorica" as "Britannia", a name previously associated only with the island of Britain. The newcomers had a Celtic form of Christianity, with its own forms of ecclesiastical discipline, its own method of calculating the date of Easter, and its own tonsure. As in Britain, there was controversy when these came up against the practices of the Roman church.

The Bretons and the Franks

  1. Excavated in 1938 by Mortimer Wheeler