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  2. Dumnonia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dumnonia

    The kingdom is named after the Dumnonii, a British Celtic tribe living in the south-west at the time of the Roman invasion of Britain, according to Ptolemy's Geography. Variants of the name Dumnonia include Domnonia and Damnonia , the latter being used by Gildas in the 6th century as a pun on "damnation" to deprecate the area's contemporary ...

  3. Dumnonii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dumnonii

    The people of Dumnonia spoke a Southwestern Brythonic dialect of Celtic similar to the forerunner of more recent Cornish and Breton. Irish immigrants, the Déisi, [4] are evidenced by the Ogham-inscribed stones they have left behind, confirmed and supplemented by toponymical studies. [5]

  4. List of kings of Dumnonia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_kings_of_Dumnonia

    The kings of Dumnonia were the rulers of the large Brythonic kingdom of Dumnonia in the south-west of Great Britain during the Sub-Roman and early medieval periods.. A list of Dumnonian kings is one of the hardest of the major Dark Age kingdoms to accurately compile, as it is confused by Arthurian legend, complicated by strong associations with the kings of Wales and Brittany, and obscured by ...

  5. Damnonia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Damnonia

    Damnonia, a name of the Kingdom of Strathclyde, the early mediaeval kingdom that subsumed the Damnonii Damnonia, an alternative spelling of Dumnonia , the early mediaeval kingdom (named for the Celtic tribe of Roman Britain, the Dumnonii), in what today is Devon and Cornwall.

  6. Gaelic folk music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaelic_folk_music

    The six Celtic nationalities are divided into two musical groups, Gaelic and Brythonic, [1] which according to Alan Stivell differentiate "mostly by the extended range (sometimes more than two octaves) of Irish and Scottish melodies and the closed range of Breton and Welsh melodies (often reduced to a half-octave), and by the frequent use of the pure pentatonic scale in Gaelic music".

  7. Saint Petroc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Petroc

    Petroc or Petrock (Medieval Latin: Petrocus; Welsh: Pedrog; French: Perreux; c. 468 – c. 564) was a British prince and Christian saint.. Probably born in South Wales, he primarily ministered to the Britons of Devon (Dewnens) and Cornwall (Kernow) then forming the kingdom of Dumnonia where he is associated with a monastery at Padstow, which is named after him (Pedroc-stowe, or 'Petrock's ...

  8. Domnonée - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domnonée

    Domnonée is the modern French form of Domnonia or Dumnonia (Latin for "Devon"; Breton: Domnonea), a historic kingdom in northern Armorica founded by British immigrants from Dumnonia (Sub-Roman Devon) fleeing the Saxon invasions of Britain in the early Middle Ages.

  9. Cornovii (Cornwall) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornovii_(Cornwall)

    The extreme western peninsula of Dumnonia came to be known as "Cernyw" in Welsh, "Kernow" in Cornish and "Kernev (Veur)" in Breton. [when?] The modern English name Cornwall arises from the Old English word for Brittonic-speakers, wealas, being suffixed onto a borrowed form of the Brittonic place-name. The location of the Dumnonii in pre-Roman times

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