Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-mkpzs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T00:43:10.706Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Early Brittany

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Extract

Who are the Bretons and where do they come from? This is a question with not only historical and ethnological implications, but even political ones which sometimes tend to cloud the landscape.

Professor Léon Fleuriot teaches Celtic i n the second University at Rennes (Université de Haute-Bretagne) . He is a specialist in Old Breton (Le vieux Breton : éléments d'une grammaire, Paris, 1964; Dictionnaire des gloses en vieux Breton, Paris, 1964), a language barely known from glosses in Latin manuscripts from the scriptoria of the oldest Breton monasteries, from place-names and surnames in the cartularies of these monasteries. This has made him more interested still in the history and culture of the people speaking Old Breton, and he has revised all the evidence about them. Part I of this article is a version of the introduction to a large work on this subject not yet published.

Dr P.-R. Giot, specialist in Brittany, well known to the readers of Antiquity, is head of the Laboratoire d'Anthropologie–Prehistoire–Protohistoire et Quaternuire Armoricains in the first University at Rennes (Université de Rennes) . From the study of the dry bones of the old inhabitants of the country he has got involved in their history and archaeology.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 1977

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bibliography

Falc’hun, F. 1962. Le Breton, forme moderne du Gaulois, Annales de Bretagne, LXIX, 413-428.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Falc’hun, F. 1963a. Histoire de la langue Bretonne d’après la géographie linguistique (Paris).Google Scholar
Falc’hun, F. 1963b. Celtique continental et celtique insulaire en Breton, Annales de Bretagne, LXX, 425-454.Google Scholar
Fleuriot, L. 1967. Innsbrucker Beiträge zur Indeogermanistik undKeltologie, XNI, 155-170.Google Scholar
Giot, P.-R. and Monnier, J. L.. 1973. Le cimitière breton de St-Saturnin ou St-Umel en Plomeur: fouilles de 1973. Perspectives sur les Bretons, Bull. Soc. Archéol. Finistère, CI, 83-115.Google Scholar
Giot, P.-R. and Monnier, J. L.. 1974. Fouilles en 1974, Bull. Soc. Archéol. Finistère, en, 47-53 Google Scholar
Giot, P.-R. and Monnier, J. L.. 1975. Fouilles en 1975, Bull. Soc. Archéol. Finistère, CIII, 37-49 Google Scholar

A Few References

Delumeau, J. 1969. Histoire de la Bretagne (Toulouse).Google Scholar
Delumeau, J. 1970. Documents de l’histoire de laBretagne (Toulouse).Google Scholar
Giot, P.-R. 1951. Armoricains et Bretons (Travaux du Laboratoire d’Anthropologie, Rennes).Google Scholar
Giot, P.-R. 1971. La céramique onctueuse de Cornouaille, Bull. Soc. Archéol. Finistère, XCVN, 109-130.Google Scholar
Giot, P.-R. 1972. Armoricains et Bretons, vingt ans après, Annales de Bretagne, LXXIX, 103-118.Google Scholar
Giot, P.-R. 1973. Armoricains et Bretons: perspectives nouvelles sur les Bretons, Annales de Bretagne, LXXX, 129-136.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giot, P.-R. 1973. Les sites ‘protohistoriques’ des dunes de Guisseny, Finistère, Annales de Bretagne, LXXX, 105 127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reinach, S. 1928. Les Francs et la Bretagne Armoricaine, Revue Archéol., XXVIL, 246-253.Google Scholar