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Britons (Celtic people)




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Queen Boadicea of the Iceni tribe.



The Britons (also called Brythons) were the people who spoke a Celtic language known as Common Brittonic. They lived in Great Britain during the Iron Age, Roman Britain and the Sub-Roman period following the Romans leaving Britain. After the Anglo-Saxons arrived many of the Britons were absorbed into the new culture and became English. Others withdrew into Wales, Cornwall and southern Scotland. Still others left Britain for Brittany.




Contents





  • 1 Name


  • 2 Celtic tribes

    • 2.1 Central


    • 2.2 Southeastern


    • 2.3 Western



  • 3 Notes


  • 4 References


  • 5 Other websites




Name |





6th Century Britons pushed westward



In about 330 BC, Pytheas, a Greek explorer began a voyage in which he discovered the British Isles.[1] In 326 BC he landed and gave the island the name Prettanike or Brettainiai.[2] The name became Britain.


When the Romans conquered Britain in 43 AD, they called the people living there Brittanni (also spelled Britanni).[3] They were also aware of their tribal identities. In their histories the Romans said of them "they are a people harassed by hosts,[a] who receive political exiles, who rebel, and who are among the remote peoples of the world."[3]Monks writing in the 4th and 5th centuries also called them Britanni. Some used the term Britto.[3]


The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle contains an account of the land and the people of Britain. ""The island of Britain is eight hundred miles long and two hundred miles broad: and here are in the island five peoples: English, Brito-Welsh,[b]Scottish, Pictish, and Book-Latin."[4]


The Welsh scholar John Rhys first used the terms Brythons and Brythonic. He wanted a more specific terms for the people of Wales and the Welsh of Cumbria and Cornwall than just the word Britons.[5]



Celtic tribes |


From the Iron Age onward, the territory inhabited by the Celtic Britons changed considerably. At first it was divided among a variety of Celtic tribes. Before the Romans came, they occupied most what is now the country of England.





Celtic tribes in pre-Roman Britain.




Central |


  • The Brigantes - Controlled what would later be much of Northern England.

  • The Carvetii - Located in the area of the Solway Plain just north of Hadrian's Wall.

  • The Corieltauvi - They lived in what is now the East Midlands.

  • The Cornovii - Lived in what is now the West Midlands.

  • The Parisii - Occupied what is now East Yorkshire.


Southeastern |


  • The Atrebates - Occupied what is now West Sussex, parts of Hampshire and Surrey.

  • The Belgae - Were in and around the county of Hampshire.

  • The Cantiaci - Lived in the modern county of Kent centered on Canterbury.

  • The Catuvellauni - Occupied what would later be Hertfordshire, Bedfordshire and Cambridgeshire.

  • The Durotriges - They occupied the later area of Dorset and western Hampshire.

  • The Dumnonii - They lived in the later areas of Cornwall and Devonshire

  • The Trinovantes - Controlled Essex and parts of Hertfordshire and Middlesex.

  • The Iceni - Were in area of what was later Norfolk, Suffolk, Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire

  • The Regnenses - They occupied what would be Sussex and Surrey.


Western |


  • The Damnonii - Occupied what would be Cornwall and Devonshire.

  • The Deceangli - Their territory included north-east Wales.

  • The Demetae - Gave their name to Dyfed; also inhabited modern Pembrokeshire and Carmarthenshire.

  • The Dobunni - Their territory included Northern Somerset, Bristol, and Gloucestershire.

  • The Gangani - They occupied much of northwestern Wales.

  • The Ordovices - They lived in northern Wales and Anglesey

  • The Silures - Their territory included modern Monmouthshire, Breconshire and Glamorganshire.


Notes |




  1. war bands; large multitudes.


  2. Britons absorbed into the Welsh culture.




References |




  1. Alasdair Macleod; Royal Geographical Society; Smithsonian Institution, Explorers: great tales of adventure and endurance (London; New York: DK in association with the Smithsonian Institution, 2010), p. 20


  2. Peter Ackroyd, Foundation: The History of England from Its Earliest Beginnings to the Tudors (New York: Thomas Dunne Books, 2012), p. 19


  3. 3.03.13.2 Christopher A. Snyder, An Age of Tyrants: Britain and the Britons, A.D. 400-600 (University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1998), p. 67


  4. Benjamin Thorpe, The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle according to the Several Original Authorities: Translation (London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1861), p. 5


  5. John Rhys, Celtic Britain (London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge; New York: E.S. Gorham, 1908), p. 3




Other websites |


  • The Kingdom of the Britons, BBC Scotland's History

  • Celtic Britons, BBC Wales History




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