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  2. List of monarchs of Brittany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_monarchs_of_Brittany

    This is a list of monarchs of the Duchy of Brittany. In different epochs the sovereigns of Brittany were kings, princes, and dukes. The Breton ruler was sometimes elected, sometimes attained the position by conquest or intrigue, or by hereditary right. Hereditary dukes were sometimes a female ruler, carrying the title duchesse of Brittany.

  3. Category:9th-century monarchs of Brittany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:9th-century...

    This category is for 9th-century monarchs of Brittany. Before 938, the monarchs were variously styled kings, princes, and dukes. Before 938, the monarchs were variously styled kings, princes, and dukes.

  4. House of Rohan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Rohan

    The House of Rohan (Breton: Roc'han) is a Breton family of viscounts, later dukes and princes in the French nobility, coming from the locality of Rohan in Brittany.Their line descends from the viscounts of Porhoët and is said to trace back to the legendary Conan Meriadoc.

  5. Duchy of Brittany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duchy_of_Brittany

    After Henry II, the title Duke of Brittany was not used for over 200 years. The title Duke of Brittany reappeared when a great-grandson of Louis XIV was named Louis, Duke of Brittany; He was the last holder of the title prior to the French Revolution and did not live to inherit the French throne. At his death the title in essence became defunct.

  6. Gourmaëlon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gourmaëlon

    Gourmaëlon or Wrmaelon (died 913/4), was the Count of Cornouaille and de facto ruler of Brittany from 907 – c. 914. [1] As ruler of Brittany he was considered Prince de Bretagne in some chronicles and histories. His actual history is among the least well documented of the early medieval rulers of Brittany.

  7. Cornouaille - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornouaille

    The toponym Cornouaille was established in the early Middle Ages in the southwest of the Breton peninsula. [3] Prior to this, following the withdrawal of Rome from Britain, other British migrants from what is now modern Devon had established the region of Domnonea (in Breton) or Domnonée (in French) in the north of the peninsula, taken from the Latin Dumnonia.

  8. Category:Dukes of Brittany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Dukes_of_Brittany

    Alan II, Duke of Brittany; Alan IV, Duke of Brittany; Alan I, King of Brittany; Alan III, Duke of Brittany; Alan, Count of Nantes (988–990) Alix, Duchess of Brittany; Arthur I, Duke of Brittany; Arthur II, Duke of Brittany

  9. Salomon, King of Brittany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salomon,_King_of_Brittany

    Salomon was the son of Riwallon III of Poher, who himself was the son of Count Erispoë I of Poher, King of the Browaroch (775–812), and older brother of Nominoe.In 851, Charles the Bald, after his defeat at the Battle of Jengland, made peace with Salomon's cousin Erispoe, son of Nominoe, and granted him the counties of Rennes and Nantes and the Pays de Retz in Poitou as far as the river ...