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Breton nationalism

Breton nationalism (Breton: Broadelouriezh Brezhoneg, French: nationalisme Breton) is a form of regional nationalism associated with the region of Brittany in France. The political aspirations of Breton nationalists include the desire to obtain the right to self-rule, whether within France or independently of it, and to acquire more representation within the European Union, United Nations, and other international institutions.

Flag of Brittany
Location of Brittany within France (n.b. Loire-Atlantique, in light blue, is currently part of the Pays de la Loire region.)

Breton nationalism emerged in various forms over time, which nationalists consider to fall into phases known as "renovations" (emsav). The First Emsav was the birth of the modern Breton movement before 1914; the Second Emsav covers the period 1914-1945; and the Third Emsav for the postwar movements. Breton nationalism has an important cultural component which has long focused on the defense of the Breton and Gallo languages against the French Republic's policies of linguistic imperialism and coercive Francization through the State educational system. Instead, Breton nationalists favor language revival and the expansion of Breton-medium education. They have also been interested in both reviving and preserving the region's uniquely Celtic culture, music and symbols and have occasionally professed forms of pan-Celticism.

Positioning within the Breton movement edit

The academic Michel Nicolas describes this political tendency of the Breton movement as "a doctrine putting forward the nation, in the state and non-state framework". According to him, the people belonging to this tendency can choose to present themselves as separatists or independentists, that is to say claiming the right to "any nation to a state, and if necessary must be able to separate to create one".[1]

He thus opposes it to regionalism which aims at it for a "administrative redeployment granting autonomy at regional level" (that is to say autonomist), and at the Breton federalism which seeks it to set up a federal organization of the territory.[1]

History edit

Background edit

Prior to the expansion of the Roman Empire into the region, Gallic tribes had occupied the Armorican peninsula, dividing it into five regions that then formed the basis for the Roman administration of the area, and which survived into the period of the Duchy.[2] These Gallic tribes (termed the Armorici in Latin), had close relationships with the Britonnes tribes in Roman Britain.[3] Between the late 4th and the early 7th centuries, many of these Britonnes migrated to the Armorican peninsula, blending with the local people to form the later Britons,[4] who eventually became the Bretons.[5] These migrations from Britain contributed to Brittany's name, while also shaping its ethnic and linguistic identity.[6] Brittany was divided into small, warring kingdoms, each competing for resources.[7] The Frankish Carolingian Empire conquered the region during the 8th century, starting around 748 and taking the whole of Brittany by 799.[8] In 831, Louis the Pious appointed Nominoe, the Count of Vannes, as imperial missus dominicus for Brittany. The death of Louis, in 840, sparked a civil war that fragmented the realm, enabling Nominoe to assert his authority over the former March of Brittany. In 846, the ruler of West Francia, Charles the Bald, signed a peace treaty with Nominoe, recognizing him as the first duke of Brittany.[9]

Following his marriage to Claude, the Duchess of Brittany, Francis I of France secured the Union of Brittany and France. On 13 August 1532, the Estates of Brittany confirmed the arrangement by signing the Edict of Union. Upon the death of Francis III, Duke of Brittany in 1536, the Duchy of Brittany passed to Dauphin Henry - later Henry II of France. Henry's status from 1547 as king of France meant that the duchy became merely a French province. Institutions such as the Breton Estates and Parlement of Brittany continued to resist Paris in matters of taxation until their dissolution at the end of the 18th century.[10][11] Breton nationalism saw a revival following the 1839 publication of Barzaz Breiz, a collection of traditional Breton folktales, songs and music. Pitre-Chevalier's 1844 Histoire de la Bretagne, followed in the same footsteps by highlighting a number of historical events as manifestations of Breton nationalism and aspirations of independence. Chevalier did not hesitate to distort the causes of revolts, such as the Revolt of the papier timbré, in order to promote his agenda. The end of the 19th century was marked by the disintegration of archaic Breton social and economic structures with a parallel drive for compulsory primary education. During the course of the latter, primary teachers were specifically instructed with the phasing out of minority languages. Early Breton nationalist organizations, such as Association Brettone (founded in 1829), focused on issues such as the preservation of the Breton language and administrative autonomy. By 1914, the Breton language had been embraced by the region's intellectuals through a literary revival; however, it failed to reach the masses.[12]

Beginnings in the early 1910s edit

D'Ar Bobl to the Breton nationalist party edit

 
The work of Jean Boucher was an important factor of the nationalist current.

Several authors, cultural groups, or regionalist political groups, use the expression of "Breton nation" as from 19th century but without this one falls under nationalist dimension. It is only at the beginning of the 20th century that a nationalist current in Brittany began to be constituted. Imitating the French nationalism of the time, they focused their speech on the defense of Breton language and valorization of the history of Brittany; however, it distinguished itself by seeking to legitimize its action by comparing themselves with those of other European minorities, "Celts" in particular, like those of Wales and especially of Ireland.[13]

By the end of the 1900s, the journal Ar Bobl of Frañsez Jaffrennou began to spread ideas close to this ideology,[14] but 1911 is a key date for this current. The inauguration of a work by Jean Boucher in a niche of the City Hall of Rennes, depicted the Duchess Anne of Brittany kneeling before the King of France Charles VIII, causing an opposition movement in the regionalist movements. An activist, Camille Le Mercier d'Erm, disrupted the inauguration, and used her trial as a platform. This was the first public expression of a Breton nationalism. Following this event, a group of students in Rennes founded the Breton Nationalist Party, which began with several members of the Regionalist Federation of Brittany, with the aim of to break with the regionalist ideas of this group.[15] Among its first members were Louis Napoleon Le Roux, Aogust Bôcher, Pol Suliac, Joseph du Chauchix, Joseph Le Bras, Job Loyant,[14] but their numbers hardly went beyond the 13 members of the editorial board of Breiz Dishual.[16]

First strategic positioning edit

 
Poster of 1912 of the Breton Nationalist Party claiming a "free Brittany, forever free from the yoke of France".

The group was at odds with Breton regionalism, which it accused of ratifying a foreign influence, that of France, in Brittany. Seeking to apply the principle of subsidiarity, that is claiming a decentralization with a redistribution of powers, would be equivalent, according to the nationalists, to legitimizing a French domination. They opposed as much to monarchists (in particular by maintaining controversy with the members of the French Action), than to the Republicans by targeting "black hussars of the republic", accused of pursuing a policy of linguistic repression. In 1912, Breiz Dishual, the newspaper of the BNP, thus formulated for the first time this opposition towards the royalists and the republicans with the expression na ru na gwenn, Breizhad hepken[17] ("neither red nor white, Breton only"), picked up in the following decades by different trends. The nationalists thus refused to support certain circles such as the landed aristocracy or the urban bourgeoisie, considered to be compromised.[18] It was also within this first group that the first Federalist ideas appeared from April 1914 in Breiz Dishual.[16]

This current was also positioned face to face with events and international actors, especially in the Pan-Celtic current. Breiz Dishual, indicated from its first issue of July 1912 to want to take an example of the Irish nationalists methods.[19] This comparison between the Breton and Irish situations of the time is not peculiar to the Breton nationalist movement, and is also found among outside observers, such as Simon Südfeld for the liberal German newspaper Vossische Zeitung in 1913.[20] The Breton Nationalist Party as its newspaper Breiz Dishual, however, have only limited echoes in the Breton movement of the time, and his nationalism can only find a weak resonance. One of its founders, Louis Napoleon Le Roux, would play a role later to make the link between Breton nationalist currents and Irish.[21] It was also inspired by other European examples such as Hungary, Catalonia, Norway, and the Balkan States,[22] and inscribed its reflection on a European scale.[16]

The Breton Nationalist Party ceased to exist in 1914 on the outbreak of World War I in August that year. Its journal Breiz Dishual ceased publication at the same time.[23]

Dynamism of the 1920s edit

Breton regional group at the Unvaniez Yaouankiz Vreiz edit

After the World War I, the nationalist current continued its existence, becoming one of the most dynamic components of the Breton movement in the 1920s. The Breton Regionalist Group was the first party created (September 1918) taking up this ideology, mixing elders of the Breton Nationalist Party as Kamil Ar Merser 'Erm, and newcomers like Olier Mordrel, Frañsez Debauvais, Yann Bricler, and Morvan Marchal;[24] it was endowed as soon as January 1919 of a newspaper, Breiz Atao, to spread their ideas.[25] The adjective "regionalist" was preferred to that of "nationalist", on the one hand because the French State of the time tolerated little separatist ideas,[26] and secondly because it made it possible to forge links with the Breton bourgeoisie of the Regionalist Federation of Brittany.[25]

The ideology of the group was initially[24] and partially[25] in a "Maurrasian movement",[24][25] but quickly moved into a nationalism more and more affirmed.[27] The Breton Regionalist Group took the name of Unvaniez Yaouankiz Vreiz in May 1920, whose status indicated that it aimed at a "return to national independent life". Breiz Atao also evolved by taking as subtitle "monthly magazine of Breton nationalism" in January 1921, then that of "the Breton nation" in July of the same year.[28]

Attempt, from Breton regionalism, to Alsatian autonomy, to Irish nationalism edit

The nationalists aimed at first not to support the Breton population, but on their economic circles. They intended to become the thinking head in this elitist process. Frañsez Debauvais cites René Johannet in this way in the Breiz Atao of April 1921.[28] They thus came into competition with the regionalism of the Regionalist Federation of Brittany, and the relations between the two groups were therefore strained.[29] Antagonism was reinforced in 1920 when the BRF claimed the creation of a large western region encompassing Poitou, Anjou, Maine, Cotentin and Brittany,[30] provoked a unanimous rejection of other regionalist groups, as well as nationalists.[31] From then on, the nationalists' discourse became profoundly anti-regionalist, accusing them of falling into "biniousery" and "bretonnerie".[29]

 
The trial of the Alsatian autonomists in 1928 provides an example to follow for the Breton nationalists.

The nationalists also sought to get out of the French political markers of the time, left and right, and take up the slogan "na ru na gwenn, Breiziz hepken" already used by the first nationalists.[29] This positioning was reinforced by the fact that no French political party paid attention to the demands expressed by the regions. They also sought to emancipate themselves from the Church and the clerical milieus from which the regionalists come, claiming a Celtic heritage, the Catholic religion was alienating to the Bretons.[32] The Alsatian affair in 1926, during which the Cartel des Gauches tried to return to the Concordat in Alsace-Moselle, caused an autonomist agitation in this region, and the Breton nationalists took support on this example to decide to form a political party.[33]

The examples also came from abroad. Ireland was the main center of attention since the end of the 1910s: Home Rule movement,[27] then the Irish declaration of independence of 1919, and finally its independence in 1921 strengthened the nationalists in the path of secession.[29] The attempt to establish a certain form of autonomy in Wales in 1922 was another landmark for this trend.[34]

Marginalization and radicalization in the 1930s edit

Grouping within the Breton National Party edit

The Breton National Party was created in 1931 and recovered from the name Breiz Atao for its new magazine, after the Breton Autonomist Party chose to rename its publication in La Bretagne Fédérale.[35] Bringing together the nationalist current from the Breton Autonomist Party, it counted at its first congress in Landerneau on December 27, 1931 only 25 members.[36] It had only limited activity in its early years, although the 7 August 1932 attacks in Rennes brought it some publicity, even some credibility in the media.[37] Its numbers are however limited, and in 1940 it could only count on about 300 militants.[38]

Politically, it asserted the existence of a Breton nation, and thus claimed the independence of this one. Claiming to be apolitical,[36] claiming "the sacred union of all Britons", it nevertheless expressed an anti-communism[37] and a marked anti-socialism.[39] The French political evolution of the time marginalized this trend. Leftist political groups showed great hostility towards it, and no support could be found within the French Popular Front. The French far-right also fought any form of autonomism, and no alliance could be tied.[40] The year 1936 also marked a turning point in the attitude of the French authorities towards the autonomist movements which then become less conciliatory, and Daladier's rise to power in 1938 strengthened the fight against these groups.[41] Daladier's decree-law of May 25, 1938 which reinstated the offense of opinion regarding national integrity affected several BNP militants, including its director Debauvais who spent seven months in prison.[42] On October 20, 1939, the BNP like other parties was banned and dissolved. Two of its executives, Debeauvais and Mordrel fled into Germany[43] while other activists let themselves be mobilized.[44] At the regional level, it was opposed from its inception to the War Sao party,[37] and federalists of the Breton Federalist League mocked the SAGA program published by Mordrel in 1933.[38]

The geopolitical situation of the time offered to the Breton nationalist current an opening with the setting up in 1933 of Nazi Germany besides the Rhine. Betting on a victory of Germany in case of war with France,[38] it then developed an interested pacifist propaganda, calling for the neutrality of the Bretons in case of war involving France, or to refuse a "war for the Czechs". They sought to attract the goodwill of the German secret services, while some members of the BNP as Mordrel were already in contact with them.[38]

From pan-Celticism to racialism edit

Ideologically, the Breton National Party put the Breton national question before the social question, believing that it would be solved once independence was obtained.[45] Reactionary and right-wing in orientation, but capable of attracting left-wing personalities such as Yann Sohier, it was dominated by a militant base from small Breton towns.[45] The "na gwenn na ruz" orientation continued to be used by the nationalist movement, and initially rejected the fascist/anti-fascist divide that was expressed at the time.[46]

Pan-Celticism continued to be used by nationalists, while the federalists abandoned this idea.[45] They stood out, however, from the regionalists who were also active in this area via the Goursez Vreizh, but whose actions the nationalists mocked.[47] The Irish example continued to be celebrated by the Breton nationalists during the 1930s, notably in 1936 to mark the 20th anniversary of the Easter Rising.[48] It served as an example for the creation of the armed group Gwenn ha Du, modeled on the Irish Republican Army.[49] In contrast, the actions of the Welsh nationalists led by Saunders Lewis, although welcomed, were considered too non-violent,[41] like those of the Scottish nationalists of the Scottish National Party.[50] However, from 1937 this pan-Celticism dimension among the nationalists seemed to fade against other international issues,[46] and these displayed orientations that were increasingly pro-Nazi.[49]

An ultranationalist and overtly racist trend was also beginning to gain influence within the nationalist movement during this decade, on the sidelines of the Breton National Party, and sometimes outside it.[45] Olier Mordrel published in 1933 the "SAGA program" in the Breiz Atao, advocating strong state and corporate capitalism, as well as exclusion of foreigners from public posts.[51] It published, from July 1934, the journal Stur in which it elaborated a doctrine which served as an ideological base for the nationalists. It was openly racist, prefiguring a collaboration with the Nazi regime.[52] Mordrel praised the Italian fascist regime in 1935, leased the Nazi German regime in 1936, and there advocated the purity of the race of "Nordic Breton type" in 1937. The same year at the congress of Carhaix, the BNP endorsed this ideological evolution.[51] In this perspective, pan-Celticism continued to be used to make the link between "Celts" and "Germans" within the same "Nordic" community.[45] However these ideas at the time, only gathered a minority of militants.[53]

World War II edit

During World War II, the organized political movement as a whole collapsed in the collaboration with the Nazi occupier and/or with the Vichy regime.[54]

The behavior of each other is the object of a selective omission of war which always feeds polemics more than seventy years later: "In reality, at the Liberation, within the Breton movement, we minimize the collaboration, we create the myth of the wild épuration"[55]

About 15 to 16% of members of the BNP have been brought to court, few are the sympathizers to have been judged. What makes the Épuration an epiphenomenon whose reality is very far from the mythical image of a massive repression, maintained by the traumatized memory of the Breton nationalists.[56]

The behavior of the Breton nationalists, which for some historians, harmed Breton culture:

This culture of foreign hatred and scorn of the people who inhabited the nationalists led them to bring into disrepute for a long time the interest for the Breton language and culture in the region, or even to allow the Bretoners to justify the abandonment of the Breton language. However, in December 1946, at the initiative of the public authorities, Pêr-Jakez Helias launched a new program of radio programs in Breton on Quimerc'h Radio.[57]

Contemporary parties edit

Opinion polling edit

According to an opinion poll conducted in 2013, 18% of Bretons support Breton independence. The poll also found that 37% would describe themselves as Breton first, while 48% would describe themselves as French first.[58]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Nicolas 2007, p. 33
  2. ^ Jones 1988, p. 2.
  3. ^ Galliou & Jones 1991, p. 130.
  4. ^ Galliou & Jones 1991, p. 128.
  5. ^ Galliou & Jones 1991, pp. 130–131.
  6. ^ Jones 1988, pp. 2–3.
  7. ^ Smith 1992, pp. 20–21.
  8. ^ Price 1989, p. 21.
  9. ^ O'Callaghan 1982, pp. 16–17.
  10. ^ O'Callaghan 1982, pp. 31–33.
  11. ^ Leach 2010, p. 631.
  12. ^ O'Callaghan 1982, pp. 51–55.
  13. ^ Chartier 2010, p. 265
  14. ^ a b Nicolas 2007, p. 64
  15. ^ Chartier 2010, p. 266
  16. ^ a b c Nicolas 2007, p. 68
  17. ^ Mordrel Olier (1973). Breiz Atao - History and news of Breton nationalism. Alain Moreau. OCLC 668861.
  18. ^ Nicolas 2007, p. 65
  19. ^ Chartier 2010, p. 267
  20. ^ Chartier 2010, p. 268
  21. ^ Chartier 2010, p. 270
  22. ^ Nicolas 2007, p. 67
  23. ^ Theodore Zeldin, A History of French Passions 1848-1945, Oxford University Press, 1993, p. 62
  24. ^ a b c Chartier 2010, p. 314
  25. ^ a b c d Nicolas 2007, p. 69
  26. ^ Nicolas 2012, p. 32
  27. ^ a b Chartier 2010, p. 315
  28. ^ a b Nicolas 2007, p. 70
  29. ^ a b c d Nicolas 2007, p. 71
  30. ^ Chartier 2010, p. 332
  31. ^ Chartier 2010, p. 261
  32. ^ Nicolas 2007, p. 72
  33. ^ Nicolas 2007, p. 73
  34. ^ Chartier 2010, p. 319
  35. ^ Nicolas 2007, p. 75
  36. ^ a b Nicolas 2007, p. 76
  37. ^ a b c Nicolas 2007, p. 77
  38. ^ a b c d Nicolas 2007, p. 80
  39. ^ Nicolas 2007, p. 78
  40. ^ Nicolas 2007, p. 79
  41. ^ a b Chartier 2010, p. 425
  42. ^ Chartier 2010, p. 441
  43. ^ Nicolas 2007, p. 88
  44. ^ Nicolas 2007, p. 81
  45. ^ a b c d e Chartier 2010, p. 422
  46. ^ a b Chartier 2010, p. 426
  47. ^ Chartier 2010, p. 423
  48. ^ Chartier 2010, p. 424
  49. ^ a b Chartier 2010, p. 427
  50. ^ Chartier 2010, p. 433
  51. ^ a b Cadiou 2013, p. 295
  52. ^ Chartier 2010, p. 431
  53. ^ Chartier 2010, p. 439
  54. ^ Michel Nicolas, Histoire du mouvement breton, Syros, 1982, p. 102 ; Alain Déniel, p. 318
  55. ^ Ronan Calvez, Radio in Breton language: Roparz Hemon and Pierre-Jakez Hélias: two dreams of Brittany, University Press of Rennes, 2000, 330 pages, p. 91 ISBN 2868475345.
  56. ^ "Bretagne et identités régionales pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale". Fondation de la Résistance (in French).
  57. ^ report of the book by Luc Capdevila published in the n° 73 2002/1 of Vingtième Siècle : Revue d'histoire, pp. 211-237
  58. ^ "One in five Bretons want independence: poll". thelocals.fr. 29 January 2013.

Bibliography edit

  • Cadiou, Georges (2013). EMSAV : dictionnaire critique, historique et biographique : le mouvement breton de A à Z du XIXe siècle à nos jours. Spézet: Coop Breizh. ISBN 9782843465741.
  • Chartier, Erwan (2010). La construction de l'interceltisme en Bretagne, des origines à nos jours : mise en perspective historique et idéologique (PDF) (PhD) (in French). Université Européenne de Bretagne. HAL tel-00575335v1.
  • Galliou, Patrick; Jones, Michael (1991). The Bretons. Oxford: Blackwells. ISBN 978-0-631-16406-7.
  • Jones, Michael (1988). The Creation of Brittany: A Late Medieval State. London: Hambledon Press. ISBN 978-0-907628-80-4.
  • Leach, Daniel (August 2010). "'A sense of Nordism': the impact of Germanic assistance upon the militant interwar Breton nationalist movement". European Review of History. 17 (4): 629–646. doi:10.1080/13507481003743559. S2CID 153659806.
  • Nicolas, Michel (2007). Histoire de la revendication bretonne, ou la revanche de la démocratie locale sur le "démocratisme": des origines jusqu'aux années 1980. Bibliophiles de Bretagne (in French). Vol. 4. Breizh. ISBN 978-2-84346-312-9.
  • Nicolas, Michel (2012). Breizh, la Bretagne revendiquée : des années 1980 à nos jours. Morlaix: Skol Vreizh. ISBN 978-2-915623-81-9.
  • Price, Neil (1989). The Vikings in Brittany. Viking Society for Northern Research, University College London. ISBN 978-0-903521-22-2.
  • O'Callaghan, Michael (1982). "Separatism in Brittany" (PDF). Durham University Thesis: 1–239. Retrieved 8 May 2016.
  • Smith, Julia (1992). Province and Empire: Brittany and the Carolingians. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-38285-4.

breton, nationalism, this, article, written, like, personal, reflection, personal, essay, argumentative, essay, that, states, wikipedia, editor, personal, feelings, presents, original, argument, about, topic, please, help, improve, rewriting, encyclopedic, sty. This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs more complete citations for verification Please help add missing citation information so that sources are clearly identifiable April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Breton nationalism Breton Broadelouriezh Brezhoneg French nationalisme Breton is a form of regional nationalism associated with the region of Brittany in France The political aspirations of Breton nationalists include the desire to obtain the right to self rule whether within France or independently of it and to acquire more representation within the European Union United Nations and other international institutions Flag of BrittanyLocation of Brittany within France n b Loire Atlantique in light blue is currently part of the Pays de la Loire region Breton nationalism emerged in various forms over time which nationalists consider to fall into phases known as renovations emsav The First Emsav was the birth of the modern Breton movement before 1914 the Second Emsav covers the period 1914 1945 and the Third Emsav for the postwar movements Breton nationalism has an important cultural component which has long focused on the defense of the Breton and Gallo languages against the French Republic s policies of linguistic imperialism and coercive Francization through the State educational system Instead Breton nationalists favor language revival and the expansion of Breton medium education They have also been interested in both reviving and preserving the region s uniquely Celtic culture music and symbols and have occasionally professed forms of pan Celticism Contents 1 Positioning within the Breton movement 2 History 2 1 Background 2 2 Beginnings in the early 1910s 2 2 1 D Ar Bobl to the Breton nationalist party 2 2 2 First strategic positioning 2 3 Dynamism of the 1920s 2 3 1 Breton regional group at the Unvaniez Yaouankiz Vreiz 2 3 2 Attempt from Breton regionalism to Alsatian autonomy to Irish nationalism 2 4 Marginalization and radicalization in the 1930s 2 4 1 Grouping within the Breton National Party 2 4 2 From pan Celticism to racialism 2 5 World War II 3 Contemporary parties 4 Opinion polling 5 See also 6 References 6 1 BibliographyPositioning within the Breton movement editThe academic Michel Nicolas describes this political tendency of the Breton movement as a doctrine putting forward the nation in the state and non state framework According to him the people belonging to this tendency can choose to present themselves as separatists or independentists that is to say claiming the right to any nation to a state and if necessary must be able to separate to create one 1 He thus opposes it to regionalism which aims at it for a administrative redeployment granting autonomy at regional level that is to say autonomist and at the Breton federalism which seeks it to set up a federal organization of the territory 1 History editThis section is missing information about Breton nationalism after the Second World War Please expand the section to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page April 2022 Background edit Prior to the expansion of the Roman Empire into the region Gallic tribes had occupied the Armorican peninsula dividing it into five regions that then formed the basis for the Roman administration of the area and which survived into the period of the Duchy 2 These Gallic tribes termed the Armorici in Latin had close relationships with the Britonnes tribes in Roman Britain 3 Between the late 4th and the early 7th centuries many of these Britonnes migrated to the Armorican peninsula blending with the local people to form the later Britons 4 who eventually became the Bretons 5 These migrations from Britain contributed to Brittany s name while also shaping its ethnic and linguistic identity 6 Brittany was divided into small warring kingdoms each competing for resources 7 The Frankish Carolingian Empire conquered the region during the 8th century starting around 748 and taking the whole of Brittany by 799 8 In 831 Louis the Pious appointed Nominoe the Count of Vannes as imperial missus dominicus for Brittany The death of Louis in 840 sparked a civil war that fragmented the realm enabling Nominoe to assert his authority over the former March of Brittany In 846 the ruler of West Francia Charles the Bald signed a peace treaty with Nominoe recognizing him as the first duke of Brittany 9 Following his marriage to Claude the Duchess of Brittany Francis I of France secured the Union of Brittany and France On 13 August 1532 the Estates of Brittany confirmed the arrangement by signing the Edict of Union Upon the death of Francis III Duke of Brittany in 1536 the Duchy of Brittany passed to Dauphin Henry later Henry II of France Henry s status from 1547 as king of France meant that the duchy became merely a French province Institutions such as the Breton Estates and Parlement of Brittany continued to resist Paris in matters of taxation until their dissolution at the end of the 18th century 10 11 Breton nationalism saw a revival following the 1839 publication of Barzaz Breiz a collection of traditional Breton folktales songs and music Pitre Chevalier s 1844 Histoire de la Bretagne followed in the same footsteps by highlighting a number of historical events as manifestations of Breton nationalism and aspirations of independence Chevalier did not hesitate to distort the causes of revolts such as the Revolt of the papier timbre in order to promote his agenda The end of the 19th century was marked by the disintegration of archaic Breton social and economic structures with a parallel drive for compulsory primary education During the course of the latter primary teachers were specifically instructed with the phasing out of minority languages Early Breton nationalist organizations such as Association Brettone founded in 1829 focused on issues such as the preservation of the Breton language and administrative autonomy By 1914 the Breton language had been embraced by the region s intellectuals through a literary revival however it failed to reach the masses 12 Beginnings in the early 1910s edit D Ar Bobl to the Breton nationalist party edit nbsp The work of Jean Boucher was an important factor of the nationalist current Several authors cultural groups or regionalist political groups use the expression of Breton nation as from 19th century but without this one falls under nationalist dimension It is only at the beginning of the 20th century that a nationalist current in Brittany began to be constituted Imitating the French nationalism of the time they focused their speech on the defense of Breton language and valorization of the history of Brittany however it distinguished itself by seeking to legitimize its action by comparing themselves with those of other European minorities Celts in particular like those of Wales and especially of Ireland 13 By the end of the 1900s the journal Ar Bobl of Fransez Jaffrennou began to spread ideas close to this ideology 14 but 1911 is a key date for this current The inauguration of a work by Jean Boucher in a niche of the City Hall of Rennes depicted the Duchess Anne of Brittany kneeling before the King of France Charles VIII causing an opposition movement in the regionalist movements An activist Camille Le Mercier d Erm disrupted the inauguration and used her trial as a platform This was the first public expression of a Breton nationalism Following this event a group of students in Rennes founded the Breton Nationalist Party which began with several members of the Regionalist Federation of Brittany with the aim of to break with the regionalist ideas of this group 15 Among its first members were Louis Napoleon Le Roux Aogust Bocher Pol Suliac Joseph du Chauchix Joseph Le Bras Job Loyant 14 but their numbers hardly went beyond the 13 members of the editorial board of Breiz Dishual 16 First strategic positioning edit nbsp Poster of 1912 of the Breton Nationalist Party claiming a free Brittany forever free from the yoke of France The group was at odds with Breton regionalism which it accused of ratifying a foreign influence that of France in Brittany Seeking to apply the principle of subsidiarity that is claiming a decentralization with a redistribution of powers would be equivalent according to the nationalists to legitimizing a French domination They opposed as much to monarchists in particular by maintaining controversy with the members of the French Action than to the Republicans by targeting black hussars of the republic accused of pursuing a policy of linguistic repression In 1912 Breiz Dishual the newspaper of the BNP thus formulated for the first time this opposition towards the royalists and the republicans with the expression na ru na gwenn Breizhad hepken 17 neither red nor white Breton only picked up in the following decades by different trends The nationalists thus refused to support certain circles such as the landed aristocracy or the urban bourgeoisie considered to be compromised 18 It was also within this first group that the first Federalist ideas appeared from April 1914 in Breiz Dishual 16 This current was also positioned face to face with events and international actors especially in the Pan Celtic current Breiz Dishual indicated from its first issue of July 1912 to want to take an example of the Irish nationalists methods 19 This comparison between the Breton and Irish situations of the time is not peculiar to the Breton nationalist movement and is also found among outside observers such as Simon Sudfeld for the liberal German newspaper Vossische Zeitung in 1913 20 The Breton Nationalist Party as its newspaper Breiz Dishual however have only limited echoes in the Breton movement of the time and his nationalism can only find a weak resonance One of its founders Louis Napoleon Le Roux would play a role later to make the link between Breton nationalist currents and Irish 21 It was also inspired by other European examples such as Hungary Catalonia Norway and the Balkan States 22 and inscribed its reflection on a European scale 16 The Breton Nationalist Party ceased to exist in 1914 on the outbreak of World War I in August that year Its journal Breiz Dishual ceased publication at the same time 23 Dynamism of the 1920s edit Breton regional group at the Unvaniez Yaouankiz Vreiz edit After the World War I the nationalist current continued its existence becoming one of the most dynamic components of the Breton movement in the 1920s The Breton Regionalist Group was the first party created September 1918 taking up this ideology mixing elders of the Breton Nationalist Party as Kamil Ar Merser Erm and newcomers like Olier Mordrel Fransez Debauvais Yann Bricler and Morvan Marchal 24 it was endowed as soon as January 1919 of a newspaper Breiz Atao to spread their ideas 25 The adjective regionalist was preferred to that of nationalist on the one hand because the French State of the time tolerated little separatist ideas 26 and secondly because it made it possible to forge links with the Breton bourgeoisie of the Regionalist Federation of Brittany 25 The ideology of the group was initially 24 and partially 25 in a Maurrasian movement 24 25 but quickly moved into a nationalism more and more affirmed 27 The Breton Regionalist Group took the name of Unvaniez Yaouankiz Vreiz in May 1920 whose status indicated that it aimed at a return to national independent life Breiz Atao also evolved by taking as subtitle monthly magazine of Breton nationalism in January 1921 then that of the Breton nation in July of the same year 28 Attempt from Breton regionalism to Alsatian autonomy to Irish nationalism edit The nationalists aimed at first not to support the Breton population but on their economic circles They intended to become the thinking head in this elitist process Fransez Debauvais cites Rene Johannet in this way in the Breiz Atao of April 1921 28 They thus came into competition with the regionalism of the Regionalist Federation of Brittany and the relations between the two groups were therefore strained 29 Antagonism was reinforced in 1920 when the BRF claimed the creation of a large western region encompassing Poitou Anjou Maine Cotentin and Brittany 30 provoked a unanimous rejection of other regionalist groups as well as nationalists 31 From then on the nationalists discourse became profoundly anti regionalist accusing them of falling into biniousery and bretonnerie 29 nbsp The trial of the Alsatian autonomists in 1928 provides an example to follow for the Breton nationalists The nationalists also sought to get out of the French political markers of the time left and right and take up the slogan na ru na gwenn Breiziz hepken already used by the first nationalists 29 This positioning was reinforced by the fact that no French political party paid attention to the demands expressed by the regions They also sought to emancipate themselves from the Church and the clerical milieus from which the regionalists come claiming a Celtic heritage the Catholic religion was alienating to the Bretons 32 The Alsatian affair in 1926 during which the Cartel des Gauches tried to return to the Concordat in Alsace Moselle caused an autonomist agitation in this region and the Breton nationalists took support on this example to decide to form a political party 33 The examples also came from abroad Ireland was the main center of attention since the end of the 1910s Home Rule movement 27 then the Irish declaration of independence of 1919 and finally its independence in 1921 strengthened the nationalists in the path of secession 29 The attempt to establish a certain form of autonomy in Wales in 1922 was another landmark for this trend 34 Marginalization and radicalization in the 1930s edit Grouping within the Breton National Party edit The Breton National Party was created in 1931 and recovered from the name Breiz Atao for its new magazine after the Breton Autonomist Party chose to rename its publication in La Bretagne Federale 35 Bringing together the nationalist current from the Breton Autonomist Party it counted at its first congress in Landerneau on December 27 1931 only 25 members 36 It had only limited activity in its early years although the 7 August 1932 attacks in Rennes brought it some publicity even some credibility in the media 37 Its numbers are however limited and in 1940 it could only count on about 300 militants 38 Politically it asserted the existence of a Breton nation and thus claimed the independence of this one Claiming to be apolitical 36 claiming the sacred union of all Britons it nevertheless expressed an anti communism 37 and a marked anti socialism 39 The French political evolution of the time marginalized this trend Leftist political groups showed great hostility towards it and no support could be found within the French Popular Front The French far right also fought any form of autonomism and no alliance could be tied 40 The year 1936 also marked a turning point in the attitude of the French authorities towards the autonomist movements which then become less conciliatory and Daladier s rise to power in 1938 strengthened the fight against these groups 41 Daladier s decree law of May 25 1938 which reinstated the offense of opinion regarding national integrity affected several BNP militants including its director Debauvais who spent seven months in prison 42 On October 20 1939 the BNP like other parties was banned and dissolved Two of its executives Debeauvais and Mordrel fled into Germany 43 while other activists let themselves be mobilized 44 At the regional level it was opposed from its inception to the War Sao party 37 and federalists of the Breton Federalist League mocked the SAGA program published by Mordrel in 1933 38 The geopolitical situation of the time offered to the Breton nationalist current an opening with the setting up in 1933 of Nazi Germany besides the Rhine Betting on a victory of Germany in case of war with France 38 it then developed an interested pacifist propaganda calling for the neutrality of the Bretons in case of war involving France or to refuse a war for the Czechs They sought to attract the goodwill of the German secret services while some members of the BNP as Mordrel were already in contact with them 38 From pan Celticism to racialism edit Ideologically the Breton National Party put the Breton national question before the social question believing that it would be solved once independence was obtained 45 Reactionary and right wing in orientation but capable of attracting left wing personalities such as Yann Sohier it was dominated by a militant base from small Breton towns 45 The na gwenn na ruz orientation continued to be used by the nationalist movement and initially rejected the fascist anti fascist divide that was expressed at the time 46 Pan Celticism continued to be used by nationalists while the federalists abandoned this idea 45 They stood out however from the regionalists who were also active in this area via the Goursez Vreizh but whose actions the nationalists mocked 47 The Irish example continued to be celebrated by the Breton nationalists during the 1930s notably in 1936 to mark the 20th anniversary of the Easter Rising 48 It served as an example for the creation of the armed group Gwenn ha Du modeled on the Irish Republican Army 49 In contrast the actions of the Welsh nationalists led by Saunders Lewis although welcomed were considered too non violent 41 like those of the Scottish nationalists of the Scottish National Party 50 However from 1937 this pan Celticism dimension among the nationalists seemed to fade against other international issues 46 and these displayed orientations that were increasingly pro Nazi 49 An ultranationalist and overtly racist trend was also beginning to gain influence within the nationalist movement during this decade on the sidelines of the Breton National Party and sometimes outside it 45 Olier Mordrel published in 1933 the SAGA program in the Breiz Atao advocating strong state and corporate capitalism as well as exclusion of foreigners from public posts 51 It published from July 1934 the journal Stur in which it elaborated a doctrine which served as an ideological base for the nationalists It was openly racist prefiguring a collaboration with the Nazi regime 52 Mordrel praised the Italian fascist regime in 1935 leased the Nazi German regime in 1936 and there advocated the purity of the race of Nordic Breton type in 1937 The same year at the congress of Carhaix the BNP endorsed this ideological evolution 51 In this perspective pan Celticism continued to be used to make the link between Celts and Germans within the same Nordic community 45 However these ideas at the time only gathered a minority of militants 53 World War II edit See also Breton nationalism and World War II During World War II the organized political movement as a whole collapsed in the collaboration with the Nazi occupier and or with the Vichy regime 54 The behavior of each other is the object of a selective omission of war which always feeds polemics more than seventy years later In reality at the Liberation within the Breton movement we minimize the collaboration we create the myth of the wild epuration 55 About 15 to 16 of members of the BNP have been brought to court few are the sympathizers to have been judged What makes the Epuration an epiphenomenon whose reality is very far from the mythical image of a massive repression maintained by the traumatized memory of the Breton nationalists 56 The behavior of the Breton nationalists which for some historians harmed Breton culture This culture of foreign hatred and scorn of the people who inhabited the nationalists led them to bring into disrepute for a long time the interest for the Breton language and culture in the region or even to allow the Bretoners to justify the abandonment of the Breton language However in December 1946 at the initiative of the public authorities Per Jakez Helias launched a new program of radio programs in Breton on Quimerc h Radio 57 Contemporary parties editContemporary political parties or movements holding Breton nationalist views are the Unvaniezh Demokratel Breizh Breton Party Emgann Adsav Breizh Yaouank and Breizhistance Opinion polling editAccording to an opinion poll conducted in 2013 18 of Bretons support Breton independence The poll also found that 37 would describe themselves as Breton first while 48 would describe themselves as French first 58 See also editReunification of Brittany Breton Revolutionary Army Breton Liberation Front Bleimor Scouting Bonnets Rouges Corsican nationalism Corsican autonomy Occitan nationalism Pan Celtism Attack of 7 August 1932 in RennesReferences edit a b Nicolas 2007 p 33 Jones 1988 p 2 Galliou amp Jones 1991 p 130 Galliou amp Jones 1991 p 128 Galliou amp Jones 1991 pp 130 131 Jones 1988 pp 2 3 Smith 1992 pp 20 21 Price 1989 p 21 O Callaghan 1982 pp 16 17 O Callaghan 1982 pp 31 33 Leach 2010 p 631 O Callaghan 1982 pp 51 55 Chartier 2010 p 265 a b Nicolas 2007 p 64 Chartier 2010 p 266 a b c Nicolas 2007 p 68 Mordrel Olier 1973 Breiz Atao History and news of Breton nationalism Alain Moreau OCLC 668861 Nicolas 2007 p 65 Chartier 2010 p 267 Chartier 2010 p 268 Chartier 2010 p 270 Nicolas 2007 p 67 Theodore Zeldin A History of French Passions 1848 1945 Oxford University Press 1993 p 62 a b c Chartier 2010 p 314 a b c d Nicolas 2007 p 69 Nicolas 2012 p 32 a b Chartier 2010 p 315 a b Nicolas 2007 p 70 a b c d Nicolas 2007 p 71 Chartier 2010 p 332 Chartier 2010 p 261 Nicolas 2007 p 72 Nicolas 2007 p 73 Chartier 2010 p 319 Nicolas 2007 p 75 a b Nicolas 2007 p 76 a b c Nicolas 2007 p 77 a b c d Nicolas 2007 p 80 Nicolas 2007 p 78 Nicolas 2007 p 79 a b Chartier 2010 p 425 Chartier 2010 p 441 Nicolas 2007 p 88 Nicolas 2007 p 81 a b c d e Chartier 2010 p 422 a b Chartier 2010 p 426 Chartier 2010 p 423 Chartier 2010 p 424 a b Chartier 2010 p 427 Chartier 2010 p 433 a b Cadiou 2013 p 295 Chartier 2010 p 431 Chartier 2010 p 439 Michel Nicolas Histoire du mouvement breton Syros 1982 p 102 Alain Deniel p 318 Ronan Calvez Radio in Breton language Roparz Hemon and Pierre Jakez Helias two dreams of Brittany University Press of Rennes 2000 330 pages p 91 ISBN 2868475345 Bretagne et identites regionales pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale Fondation de la Resistance in French report of the book by Luc Capdevila published in the n 73 2002 1 of Vingtieme Siecle Revue d histoire pp 211 237 One in five Bretons want independence poll thelocals fr 29 January 2013 Bibliography edit Cadiou Georges 2013 EMSAV dictionnaire critique historique et biographique le mouvement breton de A a Z du XIXe siecle a nos jours Spezet Coop Breizh ISBN 9782843465741 Chartier Erwan 2010 La construction de l interceltisme en Bretagne des origines a nos jours mise en perspective historique et ideologique PDF PhD in French Universite Europeenne de Bretagne HAL tel 00575335v1 Galliou Patrick Jones Michael 1991 The Bretons Oxford Blackwells ISBN 978 0 631 16406 7 Jones Michael 1988 The Creation of Brittany A Late Medieval State London Hambledon Press ISBN 978 0 907628 80 4 Leach Daniel August 2010 A sense of Nordism the impact of Germanic assistance upon the militant interwar Breton nationalist movement European Review of History 17 4 629 646 doi 10 1080 13507481003743559 S2CID 153659806 Nicolas Michel 2007 Histoire de la revendication bretonne ou la revanche de la democratie locale sur le democratisme des origines jusqu aux annees 1980 Bibliophiles de Bretagne in French Vol 4 Breizh ISBN 978 2 84346 312 9 Nicolas Michel 2012 Breizh la Bretagne revendiquee des annees 1980 a nos jours Morlaix Skol Vreizh ISBN 978 2 915623 81 9 Price Neil 1989 The Vikings in Brittany Viking Society for Northern Research University College London ISBN 978 0 903521 22 2 O Callaghan Michael 1982 Separatism in Brittany PDF Durham University Thesis 1 239 Retrieved 8 May 2016 Smith Julia 1992 Province and Empire Brittany and the Carolingians Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 38285 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Breton nationalism amp oldid 1184385148, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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