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Brittany

Coordinates: 48°00′N 3°00′W / 48.000°N 3.000°W / 48.000; -3.000

Brittany (/ˈbrɪtəni/; French: Bretagne [bʁətaɲ] (listen); Breton: Breizh, pronounced [bʁɛjs] or [bʁɛx];[2] Gallo: Bertaèyn [bəʁtaɛɲ]) is a peninsula, historical country and cultural area in the west of modern France, covering the western part of what was known as Armorica during the period of Roman occupation. It became an independent kingdom and then a duchy before being united with the Kingdom of France in 1532 as a province governed as a separate nation under the crown.

Brittany
Bretagne (French)
Breizh (Breton)
Bertaèyn (Gallo)
Motto(s): 
None (de jure)
Historical: Kentoc'h mervel eget bezañ saotret
Rather death than dishonour (de facto)
Anthem: "Bro Gozh ma Zadoù"
Old Land of Our Fathers (Official in the Brittany Region since 2021)[1]
CountryFrance
Largest settlements
Area
 • Total34,023 km2 (13,136 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)
 • Total4,829,968
DemonymBretons
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
ISO 3166 codeFR-E

Brittany has also been referred to as Little Britain (as opposed to Great Britain, with which it shares an etymology).[3] It is bordered by the English Channel to the north, Normandy to the northeast, eastern Pays de la Loire to the southeast, the Bay of Biscay to the south, and the Celtic Sea and the Atlantic Ocean to the west. Its land area is 34,023 km2 (13,136 sq mi).

Brittany is the site of some of the world's oldest standing architecture, home to the Cairn of Barnenez, the Tumulus Saint-Michel and others, which date to the early 5th millennium BC.[4][5] Today, the historical province of Brittany is split among five French departments: Finistère in the west, Côtes-d'Armor in the north, Ille-et-Vilaine in the northeast, Morbihan in the south and Loire-Atlantique in the southeast. Loire-Atlantique now belongs to the Pays de la Loire region while the other four departments make up the Brittany region.

At the 2010 census, the population of historic Brittany was estimated to be 4,475,295. In 2017, the largest metropolitan areas were Nantes (934,165 inhabitants), Rennes (733,320 inhabitants), and Brest (321,364 inhabitants).[6] Brittany is the traditional homeland of the Breton people and is one of the six Celtic nations,[7][8][9][10] retaining a distinct cultural identity that reflects its history. A nationalist movement seeks greater autonomy within the French Republic, or independence from it.[11][12]

Etymology

The word Brittany, along with its French, Breton and Gallo equivalents Bretagne, Breizh and Bertaèyn, derive from the Latin Britannia, which means "land of the Britons". This word had been used by the Romans since the 1st century to refer to Great Britain, and more specifically the Roman province of Britain. This word derives from a Greek word, Πρεττανικη (Prettanike) or Βρεττανίαι (Brettaniai), used by Pytheas, an explorer from Massalia who visited the British Isles around 320 BC. The Greek word itself comes from the common Brythonic ethnonym reconstructed as *Pritanī, itself from Proto-Celtic *kʷritanoi (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *kʷer- 'to cut, make').

The Romans called Brittany Armorica. It was a quite indefinite region that extended along the English Channel coast from the Seine estuary, then along the Atlantic coast to the Loire estuary and, according to several sources, maybe to the Garonne estuary. This term probably comes from a Gallic word, aremorica, which means "close to the sea".[13] Another name, Letauia (in English "Litavis"), was used until the 12th century. It possibly means "wide and flat" or "to expand" and it gave the Welsh name for Brittany: Llydaw.[14]

After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, many Britons settled in western Armorica, and the region started to be called Britannia, although this name only replaced Armorica in the sixth century or perhaps by the end of the fifth.[15]

Breton-speaking people may pronounce the word Breizh in two different ways, according to their region of origin. Breton can be divided into two main dialects: the KLT (Kerne-Leon-Tregor) and the dialect of Vannes. KLT speakers pronounce it [brɛjs] and would write it Breiz, while the Vannetais speakers pronounce it [brɛχ] and would write it Breih. The official spelling is a compromise between both variants, with a z and an h together. In 1941, efforts to unify the dialects led to the creation of the so-called Breton zh, a standard which has never been widely accepted.[2] On its side, Gallo has never had a widely accepted writing system and several ones coexist. For instance, the name of the region in that language can be written Bertaèyn in ELG script, or Bertègn in MOGA, and a couple of other scripts also exist.[16]

History

Prehistoric origins

Brittany has been inhabited by humans since the Lower Palaeolithic. This population was scarce and very similar to the other Neanderthals found in the whole of Western Europe. Their only original feature was a distinct culture, called "Colombanian".[17] One of the oldest hearths in the world has been found in Plouhinec, Finistère.

Homo sapiens settled in Brittany around 35,000 years ago. They replaced or absorbed the Neanderthals and developed local industries, similar to the Châtelperronian or to the Magdalenian. After the last glacial period, the warmer climate allowed the area to become heavily wooded. At that time, Brittany was populated by relatively large communities who started to change their lifestyles from a life of hunting and gathering, to become settled farmers. Agriculture was introduced during the 5th millennium BC by migrants from the south and east. However, the Neolithic Revolution in Brittany did not happen due to a radical change of population, but by slow immigration and exchange of skills.[18]

Neolithic Brittany is characterised by important megalithic production and sites such as Quelfénnec, it is sometimes designated as the "core area" of megalithic culture.[19] The oldest monuments, cairns, were followed by princely tombs and stone rows. The Morbihan département, on the southern coast, comprises a large share of these structures, including the Carnac stones and the Broken Menhir of Er Grah in the Locmariaquer megaliths, the largest single stone erected by Neolithic people.[citation needed]

Gallic era

 
The five Gallic tribes of Brittany

During the protohistorical period, Brittany was inhabited by five Celtic tribes:[20]

  • The Curiosolitae, who lived around the present town of Corseul. Their territory encompassed parts of Côtes-d'Armor, Ille-et-Vilaine and Morbihan départements.
  • The Namnetes, who lived in the current Loire-Atlantique département (in today's administrative région of Pays de la Loire), north of the Loire. They gave their name to the city of Nantes. The south bank of the river was occupied by an allied tribe, the Ambilatres,[21] whose existence and territory remain unsure.[20]
  • The Osismii, who lived in the western part of Brittany. Their territory comprised the Finistère département and the western extremity of Côtes-d'Armor and Morbihan.
  • The Redones (or Rhedones), who lived in the eastern part of the Ille-et-Vilaine département. They gave their name to the city of Rennes (Roazhon in Breton language, in the center of the département) and to the town of Redon (in the south of the département, bordering the département of Loire-Atlantique in the administrative région of Pays de la Loire, where its suburb town of Saint-Nicolas-de-Redon is located; however the city of Redon was founded around AD 832 under the initial name of Riedones, long after the Redones people were assimilated to Bretons; the cultural link between Riedones and the former Redones people is highly probable but difficult to recover and the name of Riedones may have been written from a local usage preserving the name of the former people in the vernacular oral language from a reading of an ancient Greek orthography).
  • The Veneti, who lived in the present Morbihan département and gave their name to the city of Vannes. Despite confusion by the classical scholar Strabo, they were unrelated to the Adriatic Veneti.

Those people had strong economic ties to the Insular Celts, especially for the tin trade[citation needed]. Several tribes also belonged to an "Armorican confederation" which, according to Julius Caesar, gathered the Curiosolitae, the Redones, the Osismii, the Unelli, the Caletes, the Lemovices and the Ambibarii.[22] The last four peoples mentioned by Caesar were respectively located in Cotentin (Lower-Normandy), pays de Caux (Upper-Normandy), Limousin (Aquitany) and the location of the Ambibarii is unknown. The Caletes are sometimes also considered as Belgians and ″Lemovices″ is probably a mistake for ″Lexovii″ (Lower-Normandy).[citation needed]

Gallo-Roman era

 
The temple of Mars in Corseul

The region became part of the Roman Republic in 51 BC. It was included in the province of Gallia Lugdunensis in 13 BC. Gallic towns and villages were redeveloped according to Roman standards, and several cities were created. These cities are Condate (Rennes), Vorgium (Carhaix), Darioritum (Vannes) and Condevincum or Condevicnum (Nantes). Together with Fanum Martis (Corseul), they were the capitals of the local civitates. They all had a grid plan and a forum, and sometimes a temple, a basilica, thermae or an aqueduct, like Carhaix.

The Romans also built three major roads through the region. However, most of the population remained rural. The free peasants lived in small huts, whereas the landowners and their employees lived in proper villae rusticae. The Gallic deities continued to be worshiped, and were often assimilated to the Roman gods. Only a small number of statues depicting Roman gods were found in Brittany, and most of the time they combine Celtic elements.[23]

During the 3rd century AD, the region was attacked several times by Franks, Alamanni and pirates. At the same time, the local economy collapsed and many farming estates were abandoned. To face the invasions, many towns and cities were fortified, like Nantes, Rennes and Vannes.[23]

 
A French map of the traditional regions of Brittany in Ancien Régime France. The earlier state of Domnonia or Domnonée that united Brittany comprised the counties along the north coast

Immigration of Britons

Toward the end of the 4th century, the Britons of what is now Wales and the South-Western peninsula of Great Britain began to emigrate to Armorica.[citation needed]

The Romano-Britons

The history behind such an establishment is unclear, but medieval Breton, Angevin and Welsh sources connect it to a figure known as Conan Meriadoc. Welsh literary sources assert that Conan came to Armorica on the orders of the Roman usurper Magnus Maximus,[a] who sent some of his British troops to Gaul to enforce his claims and settled them in Armorica. This account was supported by the Counts of Anjou, who claimed descent from a Roman soldier[b] expelled from Lower Brittany by Conan on Magnus's orders.[citation needed]

The refugee Britons

Regardless of the truth of this story, Brythonic (British Celtic) settlement probably increased during the Anglo-Saxon invasion of Britain in the 5th and 6th centuries.[citation needed]

Scholars such as Léon Fleuriot have suggested a two-wave model of migration from Britain which saw the emergence of an independent Breton people and established the dominance of the Brythonic Breton language in Armorica.[24] Their petty kingdoms are now known by the names of the counties that succeeded them—Domnonée (Devon), Cornouaille (Cornwall), Léon (Caerleon); but these names in Breton and Latin are in most cases identical to their British homelands. (In Breton and French, however, Gwened or Vannetais continued the name of the indigenous Veneti.) Although the details remain confused, these colonies consisted of related and intermarried dynasties which repeatedly unified (as by the 7th-century Saint Judicaël) before splintering again according to Celtic inheritance practices.[citation needed]

Resistance

The area was finally consolidated in the 840s under Nominoe in resistance to Frankish control.[25] Among the immigrant Britons, there were some clergymen who helped the evangelisation of the region, which was still pagan, particularly in rural areas.[citation needed]

 
The Brythonic community around the 6th century. The sea was a communication medium rather than a barrier.

Battle of the Catalaunian Plains

The army recruited for Flavius Aetius to combat Attila the Hun at the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains included Romans, Visigoths, Franks, Alans and Armoricans, amongst others. The Alans were placed front and centre, opposite the Huns. The Armoricans supplied archers who attacked the Huns' front lines during the main battle and thwarted Attila's night assault on the Roman camp with a hail of arrows "like rain". After the battle was won, Aetius sent the Alans to Armorica and Galicia.

Riothamus

The late 5th century Brittonic leader Riothamus received correspondence from the eminent Roman jurist Sidonius Apollinaris and was called "King of the Britons" by Jordanes. Some suggest that he was a Breton, though others believe that he was from Britain, pointing to the passage that he arrived in the land of the Biturges "by way of Ocean", which would hardly have been efficient or required for a Breton. Both historians describe Riothamus's losing battle against King Euric of the Visigoths at Déols around the year 470.

In response to a plea from the Roman Emperor Anthemius, Riothamus had led twelve thousand men to establish a military presence in Bourges in central Gaul, but was betrayed by Arvandus, the Praetorian Prefect of Gaul, and subsequently ambushed by Euric's army.[c] After a long battle, the Armorican survivors escaped to Avallon in Burgundy, after which they are lost to history. According to Breton king-lists, Riotham survived and reigned as Prince of Domnonia until his death sometime between 500 and 520, though this may have been a different person.

Middle Ages

The Kingdom of Brittany

 
A 1922 nationalist engraving of Nominoe, first king of Brittany

At the beginning of the medieval era, Brittany was divided among three kingdoms, Domnonea, Cornouaille and Broërec. These realms eventually merged into a single state during the 9th century.[26][27] The unification of Brittany was carried out by Nominoe, king between 845 and 851 and considered as the Breton Pater Patriae. His son Erispoe secured the independence of the new kingdom of Brittany and won the Battle of Jengland against Charles the Bald. The Bretons won another war in 867, and the kingdom reached then its maximum extent: It received parts of Normandy, Maine and Anjou and the Channel Islands.

Viking occupation

Brittany was heavily attacked by the Vikings at the beginning of the 10th century. The kingdom lost its eastern territories, including Normandy and Anjou, and the county of Nantes was given to Fulk I of Anjou in 909. However, Nantes was seized by the Vikings in 914. At this time Brittany was also called Lydwiccum.[28]

The Duchy of Brittany

Nantes was eventually liberated by Alan II of Brittany in 937 with the support of his godbrother King Æthelstan of England.

Alan II totally expelled the Vikings from Brittany and recreated a strong Breton state. For aiding in removing the problem, Alan paid homage to Louis IV of France (who was Æthelstan's nephew and had returned from England in the same year as Alan II) and thus Brittany ceased to be a kingdom and became a duchy.

Norman allies

Several Breton lords helped William the Conqueror to invade England and received large estates there (e.g. William's double-second cousin Alan Rufus and the latter's brother Brian of Brittany). Some of these lords were powerful rivals.

Internal disputes

Medieval Brittany was far from being a united nation. The French king maintained envoys in Brittany, alliances contracted by local lords often overlapped and there was no specific Breton unity. For example, Brittany replaced Latin with French as its official language in the 13th century, 300 years before France did so, and the Breton language didn't have formal status.

The foreign policy of the Duchy changed many times; the Dukes were usually independent, but they often contracted alliances with England or France depending on who was threatening them at that point. Their support for each nation became very important during the 14th century because the English kings had started to claim the French throne.

The Breton War of Succession, a local episode of the Hundred Years' War, saw the House of Blois, backed by the French, fighting with the House of Montfort, backed by the English. The Montforts won in 1364 and enjoyed a period of total independence until the end of the Hundred Years' War, because France was weakened and stopped sending royal envoys to the Court of Brittany.

English diplomatic failures led to the Breton cavalry commanders Arthur, Comte de Richemont (later to become Arthur III, Duke of Brittany) and his nephew Peter II, Duke of Brittany playing key roles on the French side during the deciding stages of the war (including the battles of Patay, Formigny and Castillon and the Treaty of Arras).

Brittany importantly lost the Mad War against France in 1488, mostly because of its internal divisions that were exacerbated by the corruption at the court of Francis II, Duke of Brittany. Indeed, some rebel Breton lords were fighting on the French side.

Union with the French Crown and modern period

 
Anne of Brittany is regarded in Brittany as a conscientious ruler who defended the duchy against France.

As a result of the Mad War, the Duke Francis II could not have his daughter Anne married without the king of France's consent. Nonetheless, she married the Holy Roman Emperor in 1490, leading to a crisis with France. Charles VIII of France besieged Rennes and had the marriage cancelled. He eventually married Anne of Brittany. After he died childless, the duchess had to marry his heir and cousin Louis XII. Anne unsuccessfully tried to preserve Breton independence, but she died in 1514, and the union between the two crowns was formally carried out by Francis I in 1532. He granted several privileges to Brittany, such as exemption from the gabelle, a tax on salt that was very unpopular in France.[29] Under the Ancien Régime, Brittany and France were governed as separate countries but under the same crown, so Breton aristocrats in the French royal court were classed as Princes étrangers (foreign princes).

From the 15th to the 18th century, Brittany reached an economic golden age.[d] The region was located on the seaways near Spain, England and the Netherlands and it greatly benefited from the creation of a French colonial empire. Local seaports like Brest and Saint-Brieuc quickly expanded, and Lorient, first spelled "L'Orient", was founded in the 17th century. Saint-Malo then was known for its corsairs, Brest was a major base for the French Navy and Nantes flourished with the Atlantic slave trade. On its side, the inland provided hemp ropes and canvas and linen sheets. However, Colbertism, which encouraged the creation of many factories, did not favour the Breton industry because most of the royal factories were opened in other provinces. Moreover, several conflicts between France and England led the latter to restrain its trade, and the Breton economy went into recession during the 18th century.

The centralisation problem

Two significant revolts occurred in the 17th and 18th centuries: the Revolt of the papier timbré (1675) and the Pontcallec conspiracy (1719). Both arose from attempts to resist centralisation and assert Breton constitutional exceptions to tax.[30]

Breton exodus

Many Bretons crossed the Atlantic to support the American War of Independence.[31] These included many sailors such as Armand de Kersaint and soldiers such as Charles Armand Tuffin, marquis de la Rouërie.

The French Revolution of 1789 – Division of Brittany into five departments

 
Province of Brittany (1789) - showing internal borders of five new departments: Côtes-du-Nord (now Côtes-d'Armor), Finistère, Ille-et-Villaine, Loire-Inférieure (now Loire-Atlantique) and Morbihan.

The Duchy was legally abolished with the French Revolution that began in 1789 - and in 1790 the province of Brittany was divided into five departments: Côtes-du-Nord (later Côtes-d'Armor), Finistère, Ille-et-Villaine, Loire-Inférieure (later Loire-Atlantique) and Morbihan. Brittany essentially lost all its special privileges that existed under the Duchy. Three years later, the area became a centre of royalist and Catholic resistance to the Revolution during the Chouannerie.

During the 19th century, Brittany remained in economic recession, and many Bretons emigrated to other French regions, particularly to Paris. This trend remained strong until the beginning of the 20th century. Nonetheless, the region was also modernising, with new roads and railways being built, and some places being industrialised. Nantes specialised in shipbuilding and food processing (sugar, exotic fruits and vegetables, fish...), Fougères in glass and shoe production, and metallurgy was practised in small towns such as Châteaubriant and Lochrist, known for its labour movements.

 
The mutineers of Fouesnant arrested by the National Guard of Quimper in 1792

The region remained deeply Catholic, and during the Second Empire, the conservative values were strongly reasserted. When the Republic was re-established in 1871, there were rumours that Breton troops were mistrusted and mistreated at Camp Conlie during the Franco-Prussian War because of fears that they were a threat to the Republic.[32]

 
A Royal Air Force attack on Saint-Malo in 1942

During the 19th century, the Breton language started to decline precipitously, mainly because of the Francization policy conducted under the Third Republic. On one hand, children were not allowed to speak Breton at school, and were punished by teachers if they did. Famously, signs in schools read: "It is forbidden to speak Breton and to spit on the floor" ("Il est interdit de parler Breton et de cracher par terre").[33]

 
The Amoco Cadiz oil spill in 1978 significantly affected the Breton coast

At the same time, the Celtic Revival led to the foundation of the Breton Regionalist Union (URB) and later to independence movements linked to Irish, Welsh, and Scottish and Cornish independence parties in the UK, and to pan-Celticism. However, the audience of these movements remained very low and their ideas did not reach a large public until the 20th century. The Seiz Breur movement, created in 1923, permitted a Breton artistic revival[34] but its ties with Nazism and the collaborationism of the Breton National Party during World War II weakened Breton nationalism in the post-war period.

Brittany lost 240,000 men during the First World War.[35] The Second World War was also catastrophic for the region. It was invaded by Nazi Germany in 1940 and freed after Operation Cobra in August 1944. However, the areas around Saint-Nazaire and Lorient only surrendered on 10 and 11 May 1945, several days after the German capitulation. The two port towns had been virtually destroyed by Allied air raids, like Brest and Saint-Malo, and other towns, such as Nantes and Rennes, had also suffered.

In 1956, Brittany was legally reconstituted as the Region of Brittany, although the region excluded the ducal capital of Nantes and the surrounding area. Nevertheless, Brittany retained its cultural distinctiveness, and a new cultural revival emerged during the 1960s and 1970s. Bilingual schools were opened, singers started to write songs in Breton, and ecological catastrophes such as the Amoco Cadiz oil spill or the Erika oil spill and water pollution from intensive pig farming favoured new movements to protect the natural heritage.

Government and politics

Traditional subdivisions

Brittany as a political entity disappeared in 1790, when it was divided into five départements. The Breton départements more or less correspond to the nine Catholic dioceses that appeared at the beginning of the Middle Ages. They were often called "pays" or "bro" ("country" in French and Breton) and they also served as fiscal and military districts.[36] Brittany is also divided between Lower Brittany ("Basse Bretagne" and "Breizh Izel"), corresponding to the western half, where Breton is traditionally spoken, and Upper Brittany ("Haute Bretagne" and "Breizh Uhel"), corresponding to the eastern half, where Gallo is traditionally spoken. The historical Breton dioceses were:

During the French Revolution, four dioceses were suppressed and the five remaining ones were modified to have the same administrative borders as the départements.

Capital cities

 
The Château des ducs de Bretagne in Nantes, permanent residence of the last dukes

Brittany has several historical capital cities. When it was an independent duchy, the Estates of Brittany, which can be compared to a parliament, met in various towns: Dinan, Ploërmel, Redon, Rennes, Vitré, Guérande, and, most of all, Vannes, where they met 19 times, and Nantes, 17 times. The Court and the government were also very mobile, and each dynasty favoured its own castles and estates. The dukes mostly lived in Nantes, Vannes, Redon, Rennes, Fougères, Dol-de-Bretagne, Dinan and Guérande. All these towns except Vannes are located in Upper Brittany, thus not in the Breton speaking area.

Among all these towns, only Nantes, Rennes and Vannes, which were the biggest ones, could really pretend to the capital status. The dukes were crowned in Rennes and they had a large castle there; it was however destroyed during the 15th century. Vannes, on its side, was the seat of the Chamber of Accounts and of the Parliament until the union with France. The Parliament was then transferred to Rennes, and the Chamber of Accounts to Nantes. Nantes, nicknamed "the city of the Dukes of Brittany", was also the permanent residence of the last dukes. The Château des ducs de Bretagne still stands in the city centre. Nowadays, Rennes is the only official capital of the region of Brittany. It is also the seat of an ecclesiastical province encompassing Brittany and the Pays de la Loire region.

Present subdivisions

 
The region Brittany comprises four historical Breton départements. Loire-Atlantique, in light blue, is part of the Pays de la Loire region.

During the French Revolution, Brittany was divided into five départements, each made up of three or four arrondissements. The arrondissements are further divided in cantons, which are themselves made up of one or several communes. The communes and the départements have a local council elected by their citizens, but arrondissements and cantons are not run by elected officials. The cantons serve as an electoral district for the election of the département councils and arrondissements are run by a subprefect appointed by the French president. The president also appoints a prefect in each département.

Because the départements are small and numerous, the French government tried to create wider regions during the 20th century. For the Breton nationalists, it was an occasion to recreate Brittany as a political and administrative entity, but the new region had to be economically efficient. Nantes and its département, Loire-Atlantique, raised concerns because they were off-centered, more integrated with the Loire Valley than with the Breton peninsula. The French government and local politicians also feared that Nantes, because of its population and its former Breton capital status, would have maintained a harmful competition with Rennes to get the regional institutions and investments.

Several drafts for French regions had been proposed since the 1920s, and the definitive regions were drawn in 1956. The new Brittany had four départements, and Loire-Atlantique formed the Pays de la Loire region together with parts of Anjou, Maine and Poitou. In 1972, the regions received their present competencies, with an elected regional council. Since then, the region of Brittany has had its own council and administrative bodies.

Reunification

 
This Loire-Atlantique road sign reads "welcome to historical Brittany".

When the region of Brittany was created, several local politicians opposed the exclusion of Loire-Atlantique, and the question still remains.

The obstacles to reunification are the same as in 1956: having Nantes in Brittany could harm the position of Rennes and create an economic imbalance between Lower and Upper Brittany. Moreover, the Pays de la Loire region could not exist without Loire-Atlantique, because it would lose its political and economic capital. Without Loire-Atlantique, the other départements would not form an efficient region any more, and would have to integrate neighbouring regions such as the Centre-Val de Loire and Nouvelle-Aquitaine.

However, several institutions have backed the reunification, such as the regional council of Brittany since 2008 and the Loire-Atlantique council since 2001. Some politicians like Jean-Marc Ayrault, the former French prime minister and former mayor of Nantes, favour instead the creation of a "Greater West region", which would encompass Brittany and the Pays de la Loire region. Polls show that 58% of the Bretons and 62% of the inhabitants in Loire-Atlantique favour the reunification.[37]

Political tendencies

Until the end of the 20th century, Brittany had been characterised by a strong Catholic and conservative influence. However, some areas such as the industrial region around Saint-Nazaire and Lorient and the surroundings of Tréguier are traditional Socialist and Communist strongholds. Left-wing parties, mainly the Socialist party and the Greens, have become more and more powerful after the 1970s and they have formed a majority in the Regional Council of Brittany since 2004. The Loire-Atlantique and Ille-et-Vilaine councils have also been held by the left since 2004.

The Socialist party has held the Côtes-d'Armor council since 1976, and the Finistère council since 1998. On its side, Morbihan remains a right-wing stronghold. The local parties have a very small audience, except the Union Démocratique Bretonne which has seats at the Regional Council and in other local assemblies. It advocates more autonomy for the region and its positions are very close to the Socialist parties. It also has a strong ecological orientation. The audience of far-right parties is lower in Brittany than in the rest of France.[38]

Geography and natural history

Brittany is the largest French peninsula. It is around 34,030 km2 (13,140 sq mi) and stretches toward the northwest and the Atlantic Ocean. It is bordered to the north by the English Channel, to the south by the Bay of Biscay and the waters located between the western coast and Ushant Island form the Iroise Sea.

The Breton coast is very indented, with many cliffs, rias and capes. The Gulf of Morbihan is a vast natural harbour with some forty islands that is almost a closed sea. In total, around 800 islands lie off the mainland; the largest being Belle Île, in the south. Brittany has over 2,860 km (1,780 mi) of coastline; it represents a third of the total French coastline.

The region is generally hilly because it corresponds to the western end of the Armorican Massif, a very old range that also extends in Normandy and the Pays de la Loire region. Because of this continuity, the Breton border with the rest of France is not marked by any strong geographical landmark, apart from the river Couesnon, which separates Brittany from Normandy.

 
A bog around the Monts d'Arrée

The Armorican Massif reaches its maximum elevation outside of Brittany, in neighbouring Mayenne, at 417 m, and slopes towards the west before straightening on its western extremity, with the Montagnes Noires and the Monts d'Arrée. The highest hill in Brittany is the Roc'h Ruz in the Monts d'Arrée, at 385 m (1,263 ft). It is closely followed by several neighbouring hills culminating at around 384 m above sea level.[39]

Coastal areas are usually named Armor or Arvor ("by the sea" in Breton), and the inland is called Argoat ("by the forest"). The best soils were primitively covered by large forests which had been progressively replaced by bocage during the Middle Ages. The Breton bocage, with its small fields enclosed by thick hedgerows, has almost disappeared since the 1960s to fit the modern agricultural needs and methods, particularly mechanisation.

Several forests still exist, such as the Paimpont forest, sometimes said to be the Arthurian Brocéliande. The poor and rocky areas are covered by large heathland and moorlands, and Brittany has several marshes, like the Brière, included in a regional natural park. Another regional park encompasses the Monts d'Arrée and the Iroise seacoast. The Iroise Sea is also a UNESCO biosphere reserve.

Geology

 
The Pointe du Raz, one of the westernmost extents of both Brittany and Metropolitan France

The Breton peninsula appeared during the Cadomian Orogeny, which formed its northern coastline, between Guingamp and Fougères. The southern part emerged during the Hercynian orogeny. At the same time, an intense volcanic activity left large quantities of granite. Between the Cadomian and Hercynian periods, the region was submerged several times and the sea left fossils and sedimentary rocks, mostly schist and sandstone. Because of the absence of limestone, soils in Brittany are usually acid.

The Armorican massif straightened and flattened several times during the formation of the Pyrenees and the Alps. Changes in sea levels and climate led to a strong erosion and to the formation of more sedimentary rocks. Metamorphism is responsible for the distinctive local blue schist and for the rich subsoil of the Groix island, which comprises glaucophane and epidote.[40]

During the Quaternary glaciations, Brittany was covered by loess and rivers started to fill the valleys with alluvial deposits. The valleys themselves were a result of a strong tectonic activity between the African and the Eurasian plate. The present Breton landscape did not acquire its final shape before one million years ago. The Breton subsoil is characterised by a huge amount of fractures that form a large aquifer containing several millions square meters of water.[40]

Climate

Brittany lies within the north temperate zone. It has a changeable, maritime climate, similar to Cornwall. Rainfall occurs regularly but sunny, cloudless days are also common. In the summer months, temperatures in the region can reach 30 °C (86 °F), yet the climate remains comfortable, especially when compared to the French regions located south of the Loire. The temperature difference between summer and winter is about 15 degrees, but it varies depending on the proximity of the sea. The weather is generally milder on the seacoast than inland but rainfall occurs with the same intensity on both. The Monts d'Arrée, despite their low elevation, have much more rainfall than the rest of the region. The south coast, between Lorient and Pornic, enjoys more than 2,000 hours of sunshine per year.[41]

Flora and fauna

 
An ocean sunfish exhibiting its characteristic horizontal basking behaviour several miles off Penmarch

Brittany's wildlife is typical of France with several distinctions. On one hand, the region, due to its long coastline, has a rich oceanic fauna, and some birds cannot be seen in other French regions. On the other hand, the species found in the inland are usually common for France, and because Brittany is a peninsula, the number of species is lower in its western extremity than in the eastern part.

A variety of seabirds can be seen close to the seaside, which is home to colonies of cormorants, gulls, razorbills, northern gannets, common murres and Atlantic puffins. Most of these birds breed on isolated islands and rocks and thus are hard to observe. The inland is home to common European species including pheasants, barn swallows, woodcocks, common swifts, partridges...[42]

Like Cornwall, Wales and Ireland, the waters of Brittany attract marine animals including basking sharks, grey seals, leatherback turtles, dolphins, porpoises, jellyfish, crabs and lobsters. Bass is common along the coast, small-spotted catsharks live on the continental shelf, rattails and anglerfish populate the deep waters. River fish of note include trout, Atlantic salmon, pikes, shades and lampreys. The Breton rivers are also home to beavers and otters and to some invasive American species, such as the coypu which destroys the ecosystem and accelerated the extinction of the European mink.[43]

Among the invertebrates, Brittany is notably home to the escargot de Quimper, the freshwater pearl mussel and the white-clawed crayfish.[44] The larger Breton mammals died out during the modern period, including the wolf. Today, mammals of note include roe deer, wild boar, foxes, hares and several species of bat.[45]

Brittany is widely known for the Breton horse, a local breed of draft horse, and for the Brittany gun dog. The region also has its own breeds of cattle, some of which are on the brink of extinction: the Bretonne Pie Noir, the Froment du Léon, the Armorican and the Nantaise.

The Breton forests, dunes, moorlands and marshes are home to several iconic plants, such as endemic cistus, aster and linaria varieties, the horseshoe vetch and the lotus maritimus.[46]

Education

Brittany has the same education system as the rest of France. As in other French regions, formal education before the 19th century was the preserve of the elite. Before 1460, Brittany did not have a university, and Breton students had to go to Angers, Poitiers or Caen. The University of Nantes was founded under the duke Francis II, who wanted to affirm the Breton independence from France. All the traditional disciplines were taught here: arts, theology, law and medicine. During the 17th century, it had around 1,500 students. It declined during the 18th century, mostly because Nantes was flourishing with the Atlantic slave trade and paid no attention to its cultural institutions.

A mayor eventually asked the university to be relocated to Rennes, more devoted to culture and science, and the faculties progressively moved there after 1735.[47] The transfer was interrupted by the French Revolution, and all the French universities were dissolved in 1793.

Napoleon reorganised the French education system in 1808. He created new universities and invented two secondary education institutions: the "collèges" and the "lycées" which were opened in numerous towns to educate boys and form a new elite. A new University of Rennes was progressively recreated during the 19th century. In the meantime, several laws were promoted to open schools, notably for girls. In 1882, Jules Ferry succeeded in passing a law which made primary education in France free, non-clerical (laïque) and mandatory. Thus, free schools were opened in almost every villages of Brittany. Jules Ferry also promoted education policies establishing French language as the language of the Republic, and mandatory education was a mean to eradicate regional languages and dialects. In Brittany, it was forbidden for the pupils to speak Breton or Gallo, and the two were strongly depreciated. Humiliating practices aimed at stamping out the Breton language and culture prevailed in state schools until the late 1960s.[48] In response, the Diwan schools were founded in 1977 to teach Breton by immersion. They have taught a few thousand young people from elementary school to high school, and they have gained more and more fame owing to their high level of results in school exams.[49] A bilingual approach has also been implemented in some state schools after 1979, and some Catholic schools have done the same after 1990. Besides, Brittany, with the neighbouring Pays de la Loire region, remains a stronghold for Catholic private education with around 1,400 schools.[50]

During the 20th century, tertiary education was developed with the creation of the École centrale de Nantes in 1919, the University of Nantes in 1961, the ESC Bretagne Brest in 1962, the University of Western Brittany in 1971, the École Nationale Supérieure des Télécommunications de Bretagne in 1977 and the University of Southern Brittany in 1995. The Catholic University of the West, based in Angers, also opened classes in several Breton towns. In 1969, the University of Rennes was divided between the University of Rennes 1 and the University of Rennes 2 – Upper Brittany. After the Second World War, the Ecole Spéciale Militaire de Saint-Cyr, the foremost French military academy, settled in Coëtquidan.

Economy

 
RMS Queen Mary 2, once the world's largest passenger ship, was built in Saint-Nazaire.

Brittany, apart from some areas such as Lorient, Nantes and Saint-Nazaire, has never been heavily industrialised. Today, fishing and agriculture remain important activities. Brittany has more than 40,000 farms, mostly oriented towards cattle, pig and poultry breeding, as well as cereal and vegetable production. The number of farms tends to diminish, but as a result, they are merged into very large estates. Brittany is the first producer in France for vegetables (green beans, onions, artichokes, potatoes, tomatoes...). Cereals are mostly grown for cattle feeding. Wine, especially muscadet, is made in a small region south of Nantes. Brittany is the first region in France for fishing. The activity employs around 15,000 people, and more than 2500 firms work in fish and seafood processing.[51][52]

Although relatively new, the Breton industry has been constantly growing since 1980. Food processing (meat, vegetables...) represents a third of the industrial jobs, but other activities are also important for the local economy. Shipbuilding, both commercial and military, is implanted in Saint-Nazaire (Chantiers de l'Atlantique), Lorient and Brest; Airbus has plants in Saint-Nazaire and Nantes; and Peugeot has a large factory in Rennes. Brittany is the second French region for telecommunication and the fifth for electronics, two activities mainly developed in Rennes, Lannion and Brest. Tourism is particularly important for the seacoast and Brittany is one of the most visited regions in France.[52] In April 2019, The Guardian's travel section included two Brittany locations in its list of 20 of the most beautiful villages in France. The two were Rochefort-en-Terre with "its covered market, 12th-century church, medieval castle, 19th-century chateau, and 16th- and 17th-century mansions" and Locronan, where "East India Company's offices still stand on the village square, as well as 17th-century merchants' dwellings".[53]

The unemployment rate in Brittany is lower than in other French regions and it is usually around 6 or 7% of the active population.[54] Because of the global financial crisis started in 2007, unemployment rose to 8.7% in the Region Brittany and 8.4% in Loire-Atlantique in late 2012. However, these figures remain under the French national rate (9.9% at the same period).[55][56] Some industries, such as construction, industry, catering or transport, usually have difficulties finding employees.[54]

In 2018, Region Brittany's gross domestic product reached 99 billion euros. It was the ninth richest region in France and it produced 4% of the national GDP. The Breton GDP per capita was around 29,694 euros in 2018.[57] It was lower than the French result, 30,266 euros, below the European one, 30,900 euros. The GDP of the Loire-Atlantique département is around 26 billion euros, and the GDP of the five historical Breton départements would be at around 108 billion euros.[58]

Demographics

 
Rennes, the most populated city in Region Brittany and the second in historical Brittany, behind Nantes

In 2017, the population in Region Brittany was estimated to 3,318,904 and Loire-Atlantique had around 1,394,909 inhabitants, thus historical Brittany's population can be estimated at 4,713,813, the highest in its history.[59] The population in Region Brittany had grown by 0.9% between 1999 and 2000, and the growth rate reached more than 1% in Ille-et-Vilaine and Morbihan. The region around Rennes and the south are the more attractive areas, whereas the population is declining in the centre and in the westernmost parts. While most of the metropolitan areas are growing, the cities themselves tend to stagnate or regress, such as for Brest, Lorient, Saint-Brieuc and Saint-Malo. In 2017, Ille-et-Vilaine had 1,060,199 inhabitants, it was followed by Finistère 909,028 inhabitants, Morbihan 750,863 inhabitants, and Côtes-d'Armor, with 598,814 inhabitants.[60]

The largest cities in Region Brittany as of 2017 were Rennes, with 216,815 inhabitants, Brest 140,064, Quimper 62,985, Lorient 57,149, Vannes 53,352, Saint-Malo 46,097 and Saint-Brieuc 44,372. All the other communes had under 25,000 inhabitants.[60] Brittany is also characterised by a great number of small towns, such as Vitré, Concarneau, Morlaix or Auray. Loire-Atlantique has two major cities, Nantes, with 309,346 inhabitants and an urban area encompassing 972,828, and Saint-Nazaire, with 69,993 inhabitants.[60] Loire-Atlantique's population is more rapidly growing than Region Brittany's and it is the 12th most populated French département.[61] Nevertheless, since the 1990s, Rennes has consistently ranked as one of France's fastest growing metropolitan areas.

In 1851, Brittany had around 2.7 million inhabitants and the demographic growth stayed low until the second half of the 20th century, mainly because of an important emigration. Brittany had 3.2 million inhabitants in 1962 and the growth was mainly due to Loire-Atlantique and the steady growth of Nantes. Without the Loire-Atlantique's figures, the Breton population only numbered 2.4 million in 1962, nearly unchanged from its population of 2.3 million in 1851.[62][63] After the 1960s, the whole region has had a strong demographic growth because of the decline of the traditional emigration to richer French regions. Instead, Brittany has become attractive, particularly for families, young retired persons and active people over 35 years old.[64]

Regional identity

 
Breton women wearing the Bigouden distinctive headdress, one of the symbols of Breton identity

Breton political parties do not have wide support and their electoral success is small. However, Bretons have a strong cultural identity. According to a poll made in 2008, 50% of the inhabitants of the Region Brittany consider themselves as much Breton as French, 22.5% feel more Breton than French, and 15.4% more French than Breton. A minority, 1.5%, considers themselves Breton but not French, while 9.3% do not consider themselves to be Breton at all.[65]

51.9% of the poll respondents agreed that Brittany should have more political power, and 31.1% thought that it should stay the same. Only 4.6% favoured independence, and 9.4% were undecided.[65]

A 2012 poll taken in the five departments of historical Brittany showed that 48% of the respondents considered themselves belonging first to France, 37% to Brittany, and 10% to Europe. It also showed that Breton identity is stronger among people younger than 35. 53% of them considering themselves to belong first to Brittany. 50% of the older respondents considered themselves belonging first to France. Primary Breton identity is at its lowest among the respondents over 65: 58% consider themselves to belong first to France, with European identify secondary. 21% of the respondents over 65 considering themselves to be European first. Breton self-identification is stronger among people who vote left-wing. It is stronger among employees than employers.[66]

Regional languages

 
Lower Brittany (in colours), where the Breton language is traditionally spoken and Upper Brittany (in shades of grey), where the Gallo language is traditionally spoken. The changing shades indicate the advance of Gallo and French, and retreat of Breton from 900 AD.

French, the only official language of the French Republic, is spoken today by the vast majority in Brittany, and it is the mother tongue of most people. Nonetheless, French was not widely known before the 19th century, and two regional languages exist in Brittany: Breton and Gallo. They are separated by a language border that has constantly moved back since the Middle Ages.

The current border runs from Plouha on the English Channel to the Rhuys Peninsula on the Bay of Biscay. Because of their origins and practice, Breton and Gallo can be compared to Scottish Gaelic and Scots language in Scotland[citation needed]. Both have been recognised as "Langues de Bretagne" (languages of Brittany) by the Regional Council of Brittany since 2004.

Breton

 
Bilingual road signs can be seen in traditional Breton-speaking areas.

Breton is a Celtic language derived from the historical Common Brittonic language, and is most closely related to Cornish and Welsh. It was imported to Western Armorica during the 5th century by Britons fleeing the Anglo-Saxon invasion of Britain. Breton remained the language of the rural population, but since the Middle Ages the bourgeoisie, the nobility, and the higher clergy have spoken French.

A Breton speaker, recorded in Canada.

Government policies in the 19th and 20th centuries made education compulsory and, at the same time, forbade the use of Breton in schools to push non-French speakers into adopting the French language. Nevertheless, until the 1960s Breton was spoken or understood by many of the inhabitants of western Brittany. During the 1970s, Breton schools were opened and the local authorities started to promote the language, which was on the brink of extinction because parents had stopped teaching it to their children.

Having declined from more than one million speakers around 1950 to about 200,000 in the first decade of the 21st century, of whom 61% are more than 60 years old, Breton is classified as "severely endangered" by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger. However, the number of children attending bilingual classes has risen 33% between 2006 and 2012 to 14,709.[67][68]

The Breton language has several dialects which have no precise limits but rather form a continuum. Most of them are very similar to each other, with only some phonetic and lexical differences. The three main dialects spoken in the western end of Brittany are:

in opposition to the Vannetais, spoken around Vannes, which is the most differentiated Breton dialect.

According to a 1999 INSEE survey, 12% of the adults of Brittany speak Breton.[69]

Gallo

 
Signs in Gallo are very rare and the writing systems they use are unknown by most of the speakers.

Gallo is spoken on the eastern half of Brittany. It is not itself a Celtic language. Like French, it is also descended from Latin (and is classified in the Langues d'oïl branch), but has some Celtic influences, particularly in its vocabulary, whereas French has influences from both Celtic (Gaulish) and Frankish (the Germanic language which arrived after Latin in much of the rest of France).

Unlike Breton, Gallo does not have a long promotion history and it is still often perceived as a poor rural dialect. Moreover, because of its linguistic relationship with Gallo, French imposed itself more easily as the main language in Upper Brittany than in Breton speaking areas. Gallo was simply felt to be an incorrect way of speaking French rather than a separate language. Gallo transmission from parents to children is extremely low and efforts to standardise and publish books in Gallo did not reverse the decline of the language and its lack of prestige.[70]

Gallo is also threatened by the Breton language revival, because Breton is gaining ground in territories that were not previously part of the main Breton-speaking area, and most of all because Breton appears as the national language of Brittany, thus leaving no place for Gallo.[70]

Gallo had never been written before the 20th century, and several writing systems were created. They are however rarely known by the population and signs in Gallo are often unreadable, even for fluent speakers. In Loire-Atlantique, where Gallo is not promoted at all by the local authorities, many people do not even know the word "Gallo" and have no idea that it has writing systems and publications.[70]

The Gallo community is estimated at between 28,300[71] and 200,000[70] speakers. The language is taught on a non-compulsory basis in some schools, high-schools and universities, particularly in Ille-et-Vilaine.[70]

Religion

 
Sculpted "calvaries" can be found in many villages in Lower Brittany.

Bretons are mainly Catholic and the Christianisation occurred during the Roman Gaul and Frank era. During the Briton emigration to Brittany, several Christian missionaries, mostly Welsh, came in the region and founded dioceses. They are known as the "Seven founder saints":

Other notable early missionaries are Gildas and the Irish saint Columbanus. In total, Brittany numbers more than 300 "saints" (only a few recognised by the Catholic Church) and, since the 19th century at least, it has been known as one of the most devoutly Catholic regions in France, together with the neighbouring Pays de la Loire region. The proportion of students attending Catholic private schools is the highest in France. The patron saint of Brittany is Saint Anne, the Virgin's mother, but Ivo of Kermartin, a 13th-century priest, called Saint-Yves in French and Sant-Erwan in Breton, can also be considered as a patron saint. His feast, 19 May, is Brittany's national day.

 
A chapel and a calvary in Locronan, Finistère

Many distinctive traditions and customs have also been preserved in Brittany. Among them, the "Pardons" are one of the most traditional demonstrations of popular Catholicism. These penitential ceremonies occur in some villages in Lower Brittany on the feast day of the parish's saint. The penitents form a procession and they walk together to a shrine, a church or any sacred place. Some Pardons are reputed for their length, and they all finish by large meals and popular feasts.

 
A sculpted Ankou in Ploudiry

There is a very old pilgrimage called the Tro Breizh (tour of Brittany), where the pilgrims walk around Brittany from the grave of one of the seven founder saints to another. Historically, the pilgrimage was made in one trip (a total distance of around 600 km) for all seven saints. Nowadays, however, pilgrims complete the circuit over the course of several years. In 2002, the Tro Breizh included a special pilgrimage to Wales, symbolically making the reverse journey of the Welshmen Sant Paol, Sant Brieg, and Sant Samzun.[72]

The most powerful folk figure is the Ankou or the "Reaper of Death". Sometimes a skeleton wrapped in a shroud with the Breton flat hat, sometimes described as a real human being (the last dead of the year, devoted to bring the dead to Death), he makes his journeys by night carrying an upturned scythe which he throws before him to reap his harvest. Sometimes he is on foot but mostly he travels with a cart, the Karrig an Ankou, drawn by two oxen and a lean horse. Two servants dressed in the same shroud and hat as the Ankou pile the dead into the cart, and to hear it creaking at night means you have little time left to live.[73]

As official religious statistics are forbidden in France, there are no official figures about religious practices in Brittany. However, successive polls show that the region tends to be more and more nonreligious. Catholic religion has started to decline after the Second World War, during the urbanisation of Brittany. A poll conducted in 2006 showed that Morbihan was the only département to have a strong Catholic population, around 70% of its inhabitants belonging to that religion. Loire-Atlantique and Côtes-d'Armor were among the least Catholic French départements, with only 50% of Catholics, while Ille-et-Vilaine and Finistère were at around 65%. Other religions are almost non-existent, apart from Islam which gathers between 1 and 3% of the inhabitants in Ille-et-Vilaine and Loire-Atlantique.[74]

Culture

Architecture

Brittany is home to many megalithic monuments; the words menhir and dolmen come from the Breton language. The largest menhir alignments are the Carnac stones. Other major sites include the Barnenez cairn, the Locmariaquer megaliths, the Menhir de Champ-Dolent, the Mane Braz tumulus and the Gavrinis tomb. Monuments from the Roman period are rare, but include a large temple in Corseul and scarce ruins of villas and city walls in Rennes and Nantes.

Brittany has a large number of medieval buildings. They include numerous Romanesque and French Gothic churches, usually built in local sandstone and granite, castles and half-timbered houses visible in villages, towns and cities. Several Breton towns still have their medieval walls, such as Guérande, Concarneau, Saint-Malo, Vannes, Fougères and Dinan. Major churches include Saint-Pol-de-Léon Cathedral, Tréguier Cathedral, Dol Cathedral, Nantes Cathedral and the Kreisker chapel. Most of the Breton castles were rebuilt between the 13th and the 15th century, such as the Château de Suscinio, the Château de Dinan, the Château de Combourg, the Château de Largoët, the Château de Tonquédec, the Josselin Castle and the Château de Trécesson. The most impressive castles can be seen along the border with France, where stand the Château de Fougères, the Château de Vitré, the Château de Châteaubriant and the Château de Clisson.

 
A traditional house in Plougoumelen

The French Renaissance occurred when Brittany lost its independence. The Renaissance architecture is almost absent in the region, except in Upper Brittany, close to the border with France. Major sites include the Château des ducs de Bretagne, the last permanent residence of the dukes, which displays the transition from late Gothic to Renaissance style. The Château de Châteaubriant, a former fortress, was transformed into a vast palace in the Italian style.

 
An Art Deco villa in Bénodet

In Lower Brittany, the medieval style never totally disappeared. However, local innovations permitted some changes and the birth of a particular style. Its most distinctive feature is the parish close, which displays an elaborately decorated church surrounded by an entirely walled churchyard. Many villages still have their closes, they date from the 16th and 17th centuries and sometimes include an elaborately carved calvary sculpture.

During the 17th and the 18th centuries, the main seaports and towns obtained a typical French look, with baroque and neoclassical buildings. Nantes, which was at the time the biggest French harbour, received a theatre, large avenues and quays, and Rennes was redesigned after a fire in 1720. At the same period, the wealthy ship-owners from Saint-Malo built many mansions called "Malouinières" around their town. Along the coast, Vauban and other French architects designed several citadels, such as in Le Palais and Port-Louis. In rural areas, Breton houses remained simple, with a single floor and a longhouse pattern. They were built with local materials: mostly granite in Lower Brittany and schist in Upper Brittany. Slates and reeds were usually used for roofing. During the 19th century, the Breton architecture was mainly characterised by the Gothic Revival and Eclecticism. Clisson, the southernmost Breton town, was rebuilt in an Italian Romantic style around 1820. The Breton lighthouses were mostly built during the 19th century. The most famous are Ar Men, Phare d'Eckmühl, La Vieille and La Jument. The lighthouse on the Île Vierge is, with 77 meters, the highest in Europe.

At the end of the 19th century, several seaside resorts were created along the coast and villas and hotels were built in historicist, Art Nouveau, and later in the Art Deco styles. These architectures are particularly present in Dinard, La Baule and Bénodet. Architecture from the 20th century can be seen in Saint-Nazaire, Brest and Lorient, three cities destroyed during the Second World War and rebuilt afterwards, and in the works of the Breton nationalist architects like James Bouillé and Olier Mordrel.

Fine arts

 
The Beautiful Angèle by Paul Gauguin

Until the 19th century, Catholicism had been the main inspiration for Breton artists. The region has a great number of baroque retables, made between the 17th and the 19th century. Breton sculptors were also famous for their ship models that served as ex-votos and for their richly decorated furniture, which features naïve Breton characters and traditional patterns. The box-bed is the most famous Breton piece of furniture. The Breton style had a strong revival between 1900 and the Second World War and it was used by the Seiz Breur movement. The Seiz Breur artists also tried to invent a modern Breton art by rejecting French standards and mixing traditional techniques with new materials. The leading artists of that period were the designer René-Yves Creston, the illustrators Jeanne Malivel and Xavier Haas, and the sculptors Raffig Tullou, Francis Renaud, Georges Robin, Joseph Savina, Jules-Charles Le Bozec and Jean Fréour.

Brittany is also known for its needlework, which can be seen on its numerous headdress models, and for its faience production, which started at the beginning of the 18th century. Quimper faience is known worldwide for its bowls and plates painted by hand, and other towns, such as Pornic, also maintain a similar tradition. The potteries usually feature naïve Breton characters in traditional clothing and daily scenes. The designs have a strong traditional Breton influence, but Orientalism and Art Deco have also been used.

Because of its distinct culture and natural landscape, Brittany has inspired many French artists since the 19th century. The Pont-Aven School, which started to emerge in the 1850s and lasted until the beginning of the 20th century, had a decisive influence on modern painting. The artists who settled in Pont-Aven wanted to break away from the Academic style of the École des Beaux-Arts and later from Impressionism when it began to decline. Among them were Paul Gauguin, Paul Signac, Marc Chagall, Paul Sérusier and Raymond Wintz. Before them, Brittany had also been visited by Academic and Romantic painters like Jean Antoine Théodore de Gudin and Jules Achille Noël who were looking for dramatic seascapes and storms.

Music

Since the early 1970s, Brittany has experienced a tremendous revival of its folk music. Numerous festivals were created, along with smaller fest-noz (popular feasts). The bagadoù, bands composed of bagpipes, bombards and drums (including snare), are also a modern creation, inspired by the Scottish pipe bands. The Lann-Bihoué bagad, one of the most well-known, belongs to the French Navy. It is the only one that does not take part to the annual bagadoù competitions. Celtic harp is also common, as are vocals and dances. The Kan ha diskan is the most common type of singing. The performers sing calls and responses while dancing. Breton dances usually imply circles, chains or couples and they are different in every region. The oldest dances seem to be the passepied and the gavotte, and the newest ones derive from the quadrille and French Renaissance dances.

In the 1960s, several Breton artists started to use contemporary patterns to create a Breton pop music. Among them, Alan Stivell contributed most in popularising the Celtic harp and Breton music in the world. He also used American rock and roll in his works and influenced 1970s Breton bands such as Kornog, Gwerz (band) [fr] and Tri Yann, who revived traditional songs and made them popular across France. Soldat Louis is the main Breton rock band,[citation needed] and Breton singers include Gilles Servat, Glenmor, Dan Ar Braz, Yann-Fañch Kemener, Denez Prigent, Nolwenn Korbell and Nolwenn Leroy. The Manau Hip hop group from Paris has strong Breton and Celtic inspirations.

Yann Tiersen, who composed the soundtrack for Amélie, the Electro band Yelle and the avant-garde singer Brigitte Fontaine are also from Brittany. The 19th-century composer Louis-Albert Bourgault-Ducoudray was one of the first western European composers to be influenced by what is now known as world music.

In 2022, Alvan and Ahez have been selected to represent France in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022. Their song, Fulenn, is sung entirely in Breton and is about the legend of Katel Kollet, a lady who dances with the devil.

Legends and literature

 
The singer-songwriter Théodore Botrel dressed in traditional Breton costume

Brittany is closely associated with the Matter of Britain and King Arthur. According to Wace, Brocéliande is located in Brittany and it is nowadays considered to be Paimpont forest. There, ruins of a castle surrounded by a lake are associated with the Lady of the Lake, a dolmen is said to be Merlin's tomb and a path is presented as Morgan le Fay's Val sans Retour. Tristan and Iseult are also said to have lived in Brittany. Another major Breton legend is the story about Ys, a city swallowed by the ocean.

Breton literature before the 19th century was mostly oral. The oral tradition entertained by medieval poets died out during the 15th century and books in Breton were very rare before 1850. At that time, local writers started to collect and publish local tales and legends and wrote original works. Published between 1925 and the Second World War, the literary journal Gwalarn favoured a modern Breton literature and helped translating widely known novels into Breton. After the war, the journal Al Liamm pursued that mission. Among the authors writing in Breton are Auguste Brizeux, a Romantic poet, the neo-Druidic bard Erwan Berthou, Théodore Hersart de La Villemarqué, who collected the local legends about King Arthur, Roparz Hemon, founder of Gwalarn, Pêr-Jakez Helias, Glenmor, Pêr Denez and Meavenn.

Breton literature in French includes 19th-century historical novels by Émile Souvestre, travel journals by Anatole Le Braz, poems and novels by Charles Le Goffic, the works of the singer-songwriter Théodore Botrel and of the maritime writer Henri Queffélec. Brittany is also the birthplace of many French writers like François-René de Chateaubriand, Jules Verne, Ernest Renan, Félicité Robert de Lamennais and Pierre Abélard Max Jacob, Alfred Jarry, Victor Segalen, Xavier Grall, Jean Rouaud, Irène Frain, Herve Jaouen,[75] Alain Robbe-Grillet, Pierre-Jakez Hélias, Tristan Corbière, Paul Féval, Jean Guéhenno, Arthur Bernède, André Breton, Patrick Poivre d'Arvor

The Asterix comics, set during the time of Julius Caesar and written in the second half of the twentieth century, are set in Armorica, now Brittany.

Museums

The Museum of Brittany, located in Rennes, was founded in 1856. Its collections are mainly dedicated to the history of the region. Museums dedicated to Prehistory and local megaliths are located in Carnac and Penmarch, while several towns like Vannes and Nantes have a museum presenting their own history.

The Museum of Fine Arts of Rennes owns a large collection of Egyptian, Greek and Roman antiquities as well as drawings and engravings by Domenico Ghirlandaio, Parmigianino, Albrecht Dürer and Rembrandt. Its French art collection gathers works by Georges de La Tour, François Boucher, Paul Gauguin, Auguste Rodin, Camille Corot and Robert Delaunay. It has also works by Pablo Picasso, Rubens, Peter Lely and Paolo Veronese. The collections of the Museum of Fine Arts of Nantes are more dedicated to modern and contemporary art and contain works by Edward Burne-Jones, Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, Eugène Delacroix, Gustave Courbet, Paul Signac, Tamara de Lempicka, Wassily Kandinsky, Max Ernst, Pierre Soulages and Piero Manzoni. The Museums of Fine Arts of Brest and Quimper offer similar collections, with large quantities of French painting together with the works of some Italian and Dutch artists. The Museum of Fine Arts Pont-Aven is dedicated to the School of Pont-Aven. Contemporary sculptures can be seen in the park around the Château de Kerguéhennec, in Bignan.

Museums in Saint-Malo, Lorient and Douarnenez are dedicated to ships and maritime traditions and history. The Musée national de la Marine has a large annex in Brest and a submarine is opened to visitors in Lorient. In the same town, it is also possible to visit the Keroman Submarine Museum, and the Cité de la voile Éric Tabarly, a museum dedicated to sailing. In Saint-Nazaire, where many transatlantic ships were built, including SS Normandie and SS France, a museum showing transatlantic interiors was installed in a Second World War base. Nantes has a museum dedicated to Jules Verne, a Natural History Museum and a museum of archaeology and design, the Musée Dobrée.

Festivals

 
The Götheborg ship replica at the Brest tall ship meeting in 2012

Brittany has a vibrant calendar of festivals and events. It hosts some of France's biggest contemporary music festivals, such as La Route du Rock in Saint-Malo, the Vieilles Charrues in Carhaix, the Rencontres Trans Musicales in Rennes, the Festival du Bout du Monde in Crozon, the Hellfest in Clisson and the Astropolis in Brest. The Festival Interceltique de Lorient welcomes each year participants all the Celtic nations and their diasporas. La Folle Journée, in Nantes, is the largest classical music festival in France.

The Breton culture is highlighted during the Fête de la Bretagne, which occurs in many places around Saint-Yves's day (19 May), and during the Festival de Cornouaille in Quimper. Several towns also organise historical re-enactments and events celebrating local traditions, such as the Filets Bleus in Concarneau which celebrates fishing.

Brittany also has some film festivals like the Three Continents Festival in Nantes. The Utopiales international science fiction festival is held in the same city. Brest and Douarnenez both organise large tall ship meetings (See Brest Maritime Festival).

Sport

Football, cycling and sailing are the three most popular sports in Brittany. Major football teams are the FC Nantes, the Stade Rennais F.C., the FC Lorient, the Stade Brestois 29, the Vannes OC and the En Avant de Guingamp. Professional footballers coming from the region also form the Brittany national football team which sometimes plays with national teams.

Several Bretons have won the Tour de France: Bernard Hinault, Louison Bobet, Jean Robic and Lucien Petit-Breton as riders, and Cyrille Guimard as a directeur sportif.

Sailing is particularly important for sea-resorts like La Trinité-sur-Mer, Pornichet, Concarneau, Lorient and the îles de Glénan, where a prestigious school is located. A great number of Bretons have become acclaimed sailors, such as: Éric Tabarly, Loïck Peyron, Jean Le Cam, Michel Desjoyeaux, Olivier de Kersauson, Thomas Coville, Vincent Riou and Marc Pajot. The Route du Rhum, the Transat Québec-Saint-Malo, the Jules Verne Trophy are the main Breton sailing competitions. The Solitaire du Figaro stages often start in Brittany.

Gouren, a style of folk wrestling, is the most popular Breton sport. The Boule bretonne is related to pétanque. The Palets, common in Upper Brittany and in other French regions, is also related to pétanque, but players use iron disks instead of balls and they have to throw them on a wooden board.

Gaelic football is also a growing sport in the region,[76] with club teams and a 'county' GAA team representing Brittany against other European 'counties' such as Galicia.

Cuisine

 
Galettes served with eggs and sausages

Although Muscadet and Gros Plant white wines are produced south of the Loire, the traditional drink of Brittany is cider. Brittany is the second-largest cider-producing region in France.[77] Breton cider is traditionally served in a bowl or a cup. Brittany also has a long beer-brewing tradition, tracing its roots back to the 17th century. Young artisanal brewers are keeping a variety of beer types alive,[78] such as Coreff de Morlaix, Tri Martolod and Britt. Stronger alcohols include the chouchen, a sort of mead made with wild honey, and an apple eau de vie called lambig.

Crêpes and galettes are the two most well-known Breton dishes. The crêpes, made and served with butter, are eaten for dessert and the galettes are usually salty and made with buckwheat. They traditionally replaced bread as basic food and they can be served with cheese, sausages, bacon, mushrooms or eggs. They can be accompanied by Breton buttermilk called lait ribot. Brittany also has a dish similar to the pot-au-feu known as the kig ha farz, which consists of stewed pork or beef with buckwheat dumplings.[citations needed]

Surrounded by the sea, Brittany offers a wide range of fresh seafood and fish, especially mussels and oysters. Among the seafood specialities is a fish stew called cotriade. The beurre blanc sauce, invented in Saint-Julien-de-Concelles, close to Nantes, is often served with fish. Brittany is also known for its salt, mainly harvested around Guérande and used in butter and milk caramels. The region is notable for its biscuit factories, many towns having their own: Quimper, Lorient, Pont-Aven, Saint-Brieuc, BN and LU in Nantes, La Trinitaine in La Trinité-sur-Mer, and Galettes Saint-Michel in Saint-Michel-Chef-Chef. They usually make their biscuits with salted butter and sell them in iron boxes. Famous Breton pastries include the kouign amann ("butter cake" in Breton) made with bread dough and high quantities of butter and sugar, and the far, a sort of sweet Yorkshire pudding usually made with plums.[citations needed]

Transport

Road

 
An old road sign on the Route Nationale 786 in Tréveneuc

Until the 1970s, the Breton road network was poor because maritime and rail transport prevailed. The French president Charles de Gaulle implemented a major road construction plan in the 1970 and Brittany received over 10 billion francs of investments during 25 years.[79] More than 10,000 km of motorways were built, permitting Breton road transport to multiply by four. The Breton motorways are not toll roads, contrarily to the usual French highways.[80][81]

The main road artery linking cities and other settlements along the north coast is the Route nationale 12 which connects the cities of Rennes, Saint-Brieuc, Morlaix and Brest. It also provides a link to southern Normandy, terminating in Paris. In south Brittany the Route nationale 165 performs a similar role along the south coast providing connections between Nantes, Vannes, Lorient, Quimper and Brest. The Route nationale 164 crosses the centre of the peninsula and connects Rennes to Loudéac, Carhaix and Châteaulin, and the Route nationale 166 links Rennes to Vannes. The Route nationale 137 provides connections between Saint-Malo, Rennes and Nantes and terminates in Bordeaux.[citations needed]

Nantes is linked to Paris by the A11 autoroute, and Rennes is both on the A81 autoroute to Paris and the A84 autoroute to Caen. These highways are standard French toll roads.[citations needed]

Air

 
The Morlaix railway viaduct is one of the highest in France.

The biggest Breton airport is Nantes Atlantique Airport. Destination served include the United Kingdom, Italy, Germany, Ireland and Morocco. The Brest Bretagne Airport is the second airport in Brittany. It is followed by Rennes – Saint-Jacques, Lorient South Brittany and Dinard – Saint-Malo. The Saint-Brieuc – Armor airport serves flights between Brittany and the Channel Islands. Others smaller airport operates domestic flights in Quimper, and Lannion.

Rail

 
The Brittany Ferries MS Bretagne off Saint-Malo

Brittany is on two major TGV lines, one linking Paris to Nantes and Le Croisic, on the south coast, and another linking Paris to Rennes and Brest. An extension of the LGV Atlantique, which stops at Le Mans, was completed in 2017, bringing the line to Rennes. This extension is known as the LGV Bretagne-Pays de la Loire. TGV services also link the region with major cities in France such as Lyon, Strasbourg, Marseille, and Lille. Regional services are operated by TER Bretagne providing connections between small towns such as Vannes, Carhaix, Roscoff and Paimpol. TER Bretagne also manages coach lines and connections between Rennes and Nantes. TER Pays de la Loire operates trains between Nantes and smaller towns in Loire-Atlantique.

Sea

There are ferry services that take passengers, vehicles and freight to Ireland, the United Kingdom and the Channel Islands. The main companies are Brittany Ferries which operates lines between Plymouth and Roscoff, Portsmouth and Saint-Malo, and Roscoff and Cork. Irish Ferries operates the route Rosslare-Roscoff and Condor Ferries link Saint-Malo with Jersey.

Cycling

Cycling has always been one of the main sports of Brittany, but leisure cycling and the infrastructure to support it have been growing extremely rapidly. An extensive network of cycle paths and recommended cycle routes has opened up all over the region. Some of these are routes using mainly smaller roads and both signposted and maintained by communes individually, but many are based on dedicated cycle paths often formed by converting disused railway tracks. These help form routes such as 'Vélodyssée' from Roscoff to Nantes and several major routes under the 'V' label (following signs V1, V2 etc.).[82] The old tow-path of the Nantes-Brest canal is now open to cyclists along its entire 385 km length though in places (unlike rail-based cycle paths) it is very meandering and leaving the path will both shorten the distance and provide variety.[83]

As a general rule cyclists are very well respected in the region and many larger towns have cycle-lanes – however traffic is 'cycle-friendly' even in their absence.

Symbols

 
The modern flag of Brittany

The modern flag of Brittany was designed in 1923. It is called Gwenn ha Du ("white and black" in Breton) and it features eleven ermine spots (their number may vary) and nine stripes, the black ones represent the Breton speaking historical dioceses, and the white ones symbolise the gallo speaking dioceses. The flag was created to replace the traditional ermine plain standard, considered too aristocratic and royalist. It was inspired by the American flag and the British Red Ensign.[84] Since the 1920s, the flag has become very popular and it is flown from a large number of institutions. Apart from the ermine flag, Breton historic banners include the Kroaz Du, a white flag with a black cross, the perfect negative of the Cornish flag.

 
The ermine was the badge of several dukes of Brittany.

The coat of arms of Brittany, ermine plain, was adopted by John III in 1316. Ermine had been used in Brittany long before, and there is no clue to its origin. It was probably chosen by the dukes because of its similarity with the French fleur-de-lis. The ermine, or stoat, as an animal became the badge of John IV at the end of the 14th century. It appeared later on numerous locations, including churches and castles. According to popular traditions, Anne of Brittany was hunting with her court when she saw a white ermine who preferred to die than to cross a dirty marsh. This episode would have inspired the duchess' motto : "Potius mori quam foedari" ("rather death than dishonour").[85] The motto has later been reused by Breton regiments, local World War II Resistants and cultural movements.

The Breton anthem, although not official, is Bro Gozh ma Zadoù – ("Old Land of My Fathers"). It re-employs both the Welsh anthem's music and that of "Bro Goth agan Tasow" (the national anthem of Cornwall; its lyrics were written at the end of the 19th century).

Colloquial Breton emblems include the Celtic triskelion, the menhirs and dolmens, local dishes such as the galettes, the Bigouden headdress and the traditional black round hat, the fisherman and his yellow raincoat, etc. BZH is a common abbreviation for "Breizh" ("Brittany" in Breton) and people often put BZH stickers on their car-plates, although it is forbidden under French laws.[86] .bzh is an approved Internet top level domain for the Breton culture and languages.[87][88]

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Magnus Maximus was a native of Galicia in Spain, being born on the estate of Count Theodosius.
  2. ^ Presumably this soldier was in the employ of Gratian.
  3. ^ The Visigoths' version of events was that they had saved the Roman empire from a British invasion.
  4. ^ Brittany was proverbially wealthy throughout much of its history: it prospered from trade before and during Roman rule, mid-ninth century legal documents reveal peasant landowners suing lords for trespass. The House of Penthièvre was wealthy, Breton dowries raised impoverished nobles such as Jean II de Brosse to riches, and Duchess Anne's fortune contributed to the French Renaissance, to palaces such as Fontainebleau and to the Châteaux of the Loire Valley

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External links

  • – Official French website (in English)
  • Brittany at Curlie
  • The official website for Brittany Tourism – Brittany Regional Tourist Board
  • The official Région Bretagne website

brittany, this, article, about, cultural, region, northwest, france, current, french, administrative, region, administrative, region, given, name, name, other, uses, disambiguation, coordinates, french, bretagne, bʁətaɲ, listen, breton, breizh, pronounced, bʁɛ. This article is about the cultural region in the northwest of France For the current French administrative region see Brittany administrative region For the given name see Brittany name For other uses see Brittany disambiguation Coordinates 48 00 N 3 00 W 48 000 N 3 000 W 48 000 3 000 Brittany ˈ b r ɪ t en i French Bretagne bʁetaɲ listen Breton Breizh pronounced bʁɛjs or bʁɛx 2 Gallo Bertaeyn beʁtaɛɲ is a peninsula historical country and cultural area in the west of modern France covering the western part of what was known as Armorica during the period of Roman occupation It became an independent kingdom and then a duchy before being united with the Kingdom of France in 1532 as a province governed as a separate nation under the crown Brittany Bretagne French Breizh Breton Bertaeyn Gallo Historical provinceFlagCoat of armsMotto s None de jure Historical Kentoc h mervel eget bezan saotretRather death than dishonour de facto Anthem Bro Gozh ma Zadou Old Land of Our Fathers Official in the Brittany Region since 2021 1 CountryFranceLargest settlementsList NantesRennesBrestSaint NazaireQuimperLorientVannesSaint MaloSaint BrieucLannionArea Total34 023 km2 13 136 sq mi Population 2021 Total4 829 968DemonymBretonsTime zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST ISO 3166 codeFR EBrittany has also been referred to as Little Britain as opposed to Great Britain with which it shares an etymology 3 It is bordered by the English Channel to the north Normandy to the northeast eastern Pays de la Loire to the southeast the Bay of Biscay to the south and the Celtic Sea and the Atlantic Ocean to the west Its land area is 34 023 km2 13 136 sq mi Brittany is the site of some of the world s oldest standing architecture home to the Cairn of Barnenez the Tumulus Saint Michel and others which date to the early 5th millennium BC 4 5 Today the historical province of Brittany is split among five French departments Finistere in the west Cotes d Armor in the north Ille et Vilaine in the northeast Morbihan in the south and Loire Atlantique in the southeast Loire Atlantique now belongs to the Pays de la Loire region while the other four departments make up the Brittany region At the 2010 census the population of historic Brittany was estimated to be 4 475 295 In 2017 the largest metropolitan areas were Nantes 934 165 inhabitants Rennes 733 320 inhabitants and Brest 321 364 inhabitants 6 Brittany is the traditional homeland of the Breton people and is one of the six Celtic nations 7 8 9 10 retaining a distinct cultural identity that reflects its history A nationalist movement seeks greater autonomy within the French Republic or independence from it 11 12 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Prehistoric origins 2 2 Gallic era 2 3 Gallo Roman era 2 4 Immigration of Britons 2 4 1 The Romano Britons 2 4 2 The refugee Britons 2 4 3 Resistance 2 5 Battle of the Catalaunian Plains 2 6 Riothamus 2 7 Middle Ages 2 7 1 The Kingdom of Brittany 2 7 2 Viking occupation 2 7 3 The Duchy of Brittany 2 7 4 Norman allies 2 7 5 Internal disputes 2 8 Union with the French Crown and modern period 2 8 1 The centralisation problem 2 8 2 Breton exodus 2 9 The French Revolution of 1789 Division of Brittany into five departments 3 Government and politics 3 1 Traditional subdivisions 3 2 Capital cities 3 3 Present subdivisions 3 4 Reunification 3 5 Political tendencies 4 Geography and natural history 4 1 Geology 4 2 Climate 4 3 Flora and fauna 5 Education 6 Economy 7 Demographics 7 1 Regional identity 7 2 Regional languages 7 2 1 Breton 7 2 2 Gallo 7 3 Religion 8 Culture 8 1 Architecture 8 2 Fine arts 8 3 Music 8 4 Legends and literature 8 5 Museums 8 6 Festivals 8 7 Sport 8 8 Cuisine 9 Transport 9 1 Road 9 2 Air 9 3 Rail 9 4 Sea 9 5 Cycling 10 Symbols 11 Gallery 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 External linksEtymology EditThe word Brittany along with its French Breton and Gallo equivalents Bretagne Breizh and Bertaeyn derive from the Latin Britannia which means land of the Britons This word had been used by the Romans since the 1st century to refer to Great Britain and more specifically the Roman province of Britain This word derives from a Greek word Prettanikh Prettanike or Brettaniai Brettaniai used by Pytheas an explorer from Massalia who visited the British Isles around 320 BC The Greek word itself comes from the common Brythonic ethnonym reconstructed as Pritani itself from Proto Celtic kʷritanoi ultimately from Proto Indo European kʷer to cut make The Romans called Brittany Armorica It was a quite indefinite region that extended along the English Channel coast from the Seine estuary then along the Atlantic coast to the Loire estuary and according to several sources maybe to the Garonne estuary This term probably comes from a Gallic word aremorica which means close to the sea 13 Another name Letauia in English Litavis was used until the 12th century It possibly means wide and flat or to expand and it gave the Welsh name for Brittany Llydaw 14 After the fall of the Western Roman Empire many Britons settled in western Armorica and the region started to be called Britannia although this name only replaced Armorica in the sixth century or perhaps by the end of the fifth 15 Breton speaking people may pronounce the word Breizh in two different ways according to their region of origin Breton can be divided into two main dialects the KLT Kerne Leon Tregor and the dialect of Vannes KLT speakers pronounce it brɛjs and would write it Breiz while the Vannetais speakers pronounce it brɛx and would write it Breih The official spelling is a compromise between both variants with a z and an h together In 1941 efforts to unify the dialects led to the creation of the so called Breton zh a standard which has never been widely accepted 2 On its side Gallo has never had a widely accepted writing system and several ones coexist For instance the name of the region in that language can be written Bertaeyn in ELG script or Bertegn in MOGA and a couple of other scripts also exist 16 History EditMain article History of Brittany Prehistoric origins Edit The Carnac stones Brittany has been inhabited by humans since the Lower Palaeolithic This population was scarce and very similar to the other Neanderthals found in the whole of Western Europe Their only original feature was a distinct culture called Colombanian 17 One of the oldest hearths in the world has been found in Plouhinec Finistere Homo sapiens settled in Brittany around 35 000 years ago They replaced or absorbed the Neanderthals and developed local industries similar to the Chatelperronian or to the Magdalenian After the last glacial period the warmer climate allowed the area to become heavily wooded At that time Brittany was populated by relatively large communities who started to change their lifestyles from a life of hunting and gathering to become settled farmers Agriculture was introduced during the 5th millennium BC by migrants from the south and east However the Neolithic Revolution in Brittany did not happen due to a radical change of population but by slow immigration and exchange of skills 18 Neolithic Brittany is characterised by important megalithic production and sites such as Quelfennec it is sometimes designated as the core area of megalithic culture 19 The oldest monuments cairns were followed by princely tombs and stone rows The Morbihan departement on the southern coast comprises a large share of these structures including the Carnac stones and the Broken Menhir of Er Grah in the Locmariaquer megaliths the largest single stone erected by Neolithic people citation needed Gallic era Edit The five Gallic tribes of Brittany During the protohistorical period Brittany was inhabited by five Celtic tribes 20 The Curiosolitae who lived around the present town of Corseul Their territory encompassed parts of Cotes d Armor Ille et Vilaine and Morbihan departements The Namnetes who lived in the current Loire Atlantique departement in today s administrative region of Pays de la Loire north of the Loire They gave their name to the city of Nantes The south bank of the river was occupied by an allied tribe the Ambilatres 21 whose existence and territory remain unsure 20 The Osismii who lived in the western part of Brittany Their territory comprised the Finistere departement and the western extremity of Cotes d Armor and Morbihan The Redones or Rhedones who lived in the eastern part of the Ille et Vilaine departement They gave their name to the city of Rennes Roazhon in Breton language in the center of the departement and to the town of Redon in the south of the departement bordering the departement of Loire Atlantique in the administrative region of Pays de la Loire where its suburb town of Saint Nicolas de Redon is located however the city of Redon was founded around AD 832 under the initial name of Riedones long after the Redones people were assimilated to Bretons the cultural link between Riedones and the former Redones people is highly probable but difficult to recover and the name of Riedones may have been written from a local usage preserving the name of the former people in the vernacular oral language from a reading of an ancient Greek orthography The Veneti who lived in the present Morbihan departement and gave their name to the city of Vannes Despite confusion by the classical scholar Strabo they were unrelated to the Adriatic Veneti Those people had strong economic ties to the Insular Celts especially for the tin trade citation needed Several tribes also belonged to an Armorican confederation which according to Julius Caesar gathered the Curiosolitae the Redones the Osismii the Unelli the Caletes the Lemovices and the Ambibarii 22 The last four peoples mentioned by Caesar were respectively located in Cotentin Lower Normandy pays de Caux Upper Normandy Limousin Aquitany and the location of the Ambibarii is unknown The Caletes are sometimes also considered as Belgians and Lemovices is probably a mistake for Lexovii Lower Normandy citation needed Gallo Roman era Edit The temple of Mars in Corseul The region became part of the Roman Republic in 51 BC It was included in the province of Gallia Lugdunensis in 13 BC Gallic towns and villages were redeveloped according to Roman standards and several cities were created These cities are Condate Rennes Vorgium Carhaix Darioritum Vannes and Condevincum or Condevicnum Nantes Together with Fanum Martis Corseul they were the capitals of the local civitates They all had a grid plan and a forum and sometimes a temple a basilica thermae or an aqueduct like Carhaix The Romans also built three major roads through the region However most of the population remained rural The free peasants lived in small huts whereas the landowners and their employees lived in proper villae rusticae The Gallic deities continued to be worshiped and were often assimilated to the Roman gods Only a small number of statues depicting Roman gods were found in Brittany and most of the time they combine Celtic elements 23 During the 3rd century AD the region was attacked several times by Franks Alamanni and pirates At the same time the local economy collapsed and many farming estates were abandoned To face the invasions many towns and cities were fortified like Nantes Rennes and Vannes 23 A French map of the traditional regions of Brittany in Ancien Regime France The earlier state of Domnonia or Domnonee that united Brittany comprised the counties along the north coast Immigration of Britons Edit Toward the end of the 4th century the Britons of what is now Wales and the South Western peninsula of Great Britain began to emigrate to Armorica citation needed The Romano Britons Edit The history behind such an establishment is unclear but medieval Breton Angevin and Welsh sources connect it to a figure known as Conan Meriadoc Welsh literary sources assert that Conan came to Armorica on the orders of the Roman usurper Magnus Maximus a who sent some of his British troops to Gaul to enforce his claims and settled them in Armorica This account was supported by the Counts of Anjou who claimed descent from a Roman soldier b expelled from Lower Brittany by Conan on Magnus s orders citation needed The refugee Britons Edit Regardless of the truth of this story Brythonic British Celtic settlement probably increased during the Anglo Saxon invasion of Britain in the 5th and 6th centuries citation needed Scholars such as Leon Fleuriot have suggested a two wave model of migration from Britain which saw the emergence of an independent Breton people and established the dominance of the Brythonic Breton language in Armorica 24 Their petty kingdoms are now known by the names of the counties that succeeded them Domnonee Devon Cornouaille Cornwall Leon Caerleon but these names in Breton and Latin are in most cases identical to their British homelands In Breton and French however Gwened or Vannetais continued the name of the indigenous Veneti Although the details remain confused these colonies consisted of related and intermarried dynasties which repeatedly unified as by the 7th century Saint Judicael before splintering again according to Celtic inheritance practices citation needed Resistance Edit The area was finally consolidated in the 840s under Nominoe in resistance to Frankish control 25 Among the immigrant Britons there were some clergymen who helped the evangelisation of the region which was still pagan particularly in rural areas citation needed The Brythonic community around the 6th century The sea was a communication medium rather than a barrier Battle of the Catalaunian Plains Edit The army recruited for Flavius Aetius to combat Attila the Hun at the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains included Romans Visigoths Franks Alans and Armoricans amongst others The Alans were placed front and centre opposite the Huns The Armoricans supplied archers who attacked the Huns front lines during the main battle and thwarted Attila s night assault on the Roman camp with a hail of arrows like rain After the battle was won Aetius sent the Alans to Armorica and Galicia Riothamus Edit The late 5th century Brittonic leader Riothamus received correspondence from the eminent Roman jurist Sidonius Apollinaris and was called King of the Britons by Jordanes Some suggest that he was a Breton though others believe that he was from Britain pointing to the passage that he arrived in the land of the Biturges by way of Ocean which would hardly have been efficient or required for a Breton Both historians describe Riothamus s losing battle against King Euric of the Visigoths at Deols around the year 470 In response to a plea from the Roman Emperor Anthemius Riothamus had led twelve thousand men to establish a military presence in Bourges in central Gaul but was betrayed by Arvandus the Praetorian Prefect of Gaul and subsequently ambushed by Euric s army c After a long battle the Armorican survivors escaped to Avallon in Burgundy after which they are lost to history According to Breton king lists Riotham survived and reigned as Prince of Domnonia until his death sometime between 500 and 520 though this may have been a different person Middle Ages Edit The Kingdom of Brittany Edit A 1922 nationalist engraving of Nominoe first king of Brittany Battle of Ar Roc h Derrien during the War of the Breton Succession At the beginning of the medieval era Brittany was divided among three kingdoms Domnonea Cornouaille and Broerec These realms eventually merged into a single state during the 9th century 26 27 The unification of Brittany was carried out by Nominoe king between 845 and 851 and considered as the Breton Pater Patriae His son Erispoe secured the independence of the new kingdom of Brittany and won the Battle of Jengland against Charles the Bald The Bretons won another war in 867 and the kingdom reached then its maximum extent It received parts of Normandy Maine and Anjou and the Channel Islands Viking occupation Edit Brittany was heavily attacked by the Vikings at the beginning of the 10th century The kingdom lost its eastern territories including Normandy and Anjou and the county of Nantes was given to Fulk I of Anjou in 909 However Nantes was seized by the Vikings in 914 At this time Brittany was also called Lydwiccum 28 The Duchy of Brittany Edit Nantes was eventually liberated by Alan II of Brittany in 937 with the support of his godbrother King AEthelstan of England Alan II totally expelled the Vikings from Brittany and recreated a strong Breton state For aiding in removing the problem Alan paid homage to Louis IV of France who was AEthelstan s nephew and had returned from England in the same year as Alan II and thus Brittany ceased to be a kingdom and became a duchy Norman allies Edit Several Breton lords helped William the Conqueror to invade England and received large estates there e g William s double second cousin Alan Rufus and the latter s brother Brian of Brittany Some of these lords were powerful rivals Internal disputes Edit Medieval Brittany was far from being a united nation The French king maintained envoys in Brittany alliances contracted by local lords often overlapped and there was no specific Breton unity For example Brittany replaced Latin with French as its official language in the 13th century 300 years before France did so and the Breton language didn t have formal status The foreign policy of the Duchy changed many times the Dukes were usually independent but they often contracted alliances with England or France depending on who was threatening them at that point Their support for each nation became very important during the 14th century because the English kings had started to claim the French throne The Breton War of Succession a local episode of the Hundred Years War saw the House of Blois backed by the French fighting with the House of Montfort backed by the English The Montforts won in 1364 and enjoyed a period of total independence until the end of the Hundred Years War because France was weakened and stopped sending royal envoys to the Court of Brittany English diplomatic failures led to the Breton cavalry commanders Arthur Comte de Richemont later to become Arthur III Duke of Brittany and his nephew Peter II Duke of Brittany playing key roles on the French side during the deciding stages of the war including the battles of Patay Formigny and Castillon and the Treaty of Arras Brittany importantly lost the Mad War against France in 1488 mostly because of its internal divisions that were exacerbated by the corruption at the court of Francis II Duke of Brittany Indeed some rebel Breton lords were fighting on the French side Union with the French Crown and modern period Edit Main article Union of Brittany and France Anne of Brittany is regarded in Brittany as a conscientious ruler who defended the duchy against France As a result of the Mad War the Duke Francis II could not have his daughter Anne married without the king of France s consent Nonetheless she married the Holy Roman Emperor in 1490 leading to a crisis with France Charles VIII of France besieged Rennes and had the marriage cancelled He eventually married Anne of Brittany After he died childless the duchess had to marry his heir and cousin Louis XII Anne unsuccessfully tried to preserve Breton independence but she died in 1514 and the union between the two crowns was formally carried out by Francis I in 1532 He granted several privileges to Brittany such as exemption from the gabelle a tax on salt that was very unpopular in France 29 Under the Ancien Regime Brittany and France were governed as separate countries but under the same crown so Breton aristocrats in the French royal court were classed as Princes etrangers foreign princes From the 15th to the 18th century Brittany reached an economic golden age d The region was located on the seaways near Spain England and the Netherlands and it greatly benefited from the creation of a French colonial empire Local seaports like Brest and Saint Brieuc quickly expanded and Lorient first spelled L Orient was founded in the 17th century Saint Malo then was known for its corsairs Brest was a major base for the French Navy and Nantes flourished with the Atlantic slave trade On its side the inland provided hemp ropes and canvas and linen sheets However Colbertism which encouraged the creation of many factories did not favour the Breton industry because most of the royal factories were opened in other provinces Moreover several conflicts between France and England led the latter to restrain its trade and the Breton economy went into recession during the 18th century The centralisation problem Edit Two significant revolts occurred in the 17th and 18th centuries the Revolt of the papier timbre 1675 and the Pontcallec conspiracy 1719 Both arose from attempts to resist centralisation and assert Breton constitutional exceptions to tax 30 Breton exodus Edit Many Bretons crossed the Atlantic to support the American War of Independence 31 These included many sailors such as Armand de Kersaint and soldiers such as Charles Armand Tuffin marquis de la Rouerie The French Revolution of 1789 Division of Brittany into five departments Edit Province of Brittany 1789 showing internal borders of five new departments Cotes du Nord now Cotes d Armor Finistere Ille et Villaine Loire Inferieure now Loire Atlantique and Morbihan The Duchy was legally abolished with the French Revolution that began in 1789 and in 1790 the province of Brittany was divided into five departments Cotes du Nord later Cotes d Armor Finistere Ille et Villaine Loire Inferieure later Loire Atlantique and Morbihan Brittany essentially lost all its special privileges that existed under the Duchy Three years later the area became a centre of royalist and Catholic resistance to the Revolution during the Chouannerie During the 19th century Brittany remained in economic recession and many Bretons emigrated to other French regions particularly to Paris This trend remained strong until the beginning of the 20th century Nonetheless the region was also modernising with new roads and railways being built and some places being industrialised Nantes specialised in shipbuilding and food processing sugar exotic fruits and vegetables fish Fougeres in glass and shoe production and metallurgy was practised in small towns such as Chateaubriant and Lochrist known for its labour movements The mutineers of Fouesnant arrested by the National Guard of Quimper in 1792 The region remained deeply Catholic and during the Second Empire the conservative values were strongly reasserted When the Republic was re established in 1871 there were rumours that Breton troops were mistrusted and mistreated at Camp Conlie during the Franco Prussian War because of fears that they were a threat to the Republic 32 A Royal Air Force attack on Saint Malo in 1942 During the 19th century the Breton language started to decline precipitously mainly because of the Francization policy conducted under the Third Republic On one hand children were not allowed to speak Breton at school and were punished by teachers if they did Famously signs in schools read It is forbidden to speak Breton and to spit on the floor Il est interdit de parler Breton et de cracher par terre 33 The Amoco Cadiz oil spill in 1978 significantly affected the Breton coast At the same time the Celtic Revival led to the foundation of the Breton Regionalist Union URB and later to independence movements linked to Irish Welsh and Scottish and Cornish independence parties in the UK and to pan Celticism However the audience of these movements remained very low and their ideas did not reach a large public until the 20th century The Seiz Breur movement created in 1923 permitted a Breton artistic revival 34 but its ties with Nazism and the collaborationism of the Breton National Party during World War II weakened Breton nationalism in the post war period Brittany lost 240 000 men during the First World War 35 The Second World War was also catastrophic for the region It was invaded by Nazi Germany in 1940 and freed after Operation Cobra in August 1944 However the areas around Saint Nazaire and Lorient only surrendered on 10 and 11 May 1945 several days after the German capitulation The two port towns had been virtually destroyed by Allied air raids like Brest and Saint Malo and other towns such as Nantes and Rennes had also suffered In 1956 Brittany was legally reconstituted as the Region of Brittany although the region excluded the ducal capital of Nantes and the surrounding area Nevertheless Brittany retained its cultural distinctiveness and a new cultural revival emerged during the 1960s and 1970s Bilingual schools were opened singers started to write songs in Breton and ecological catastrophes such as the Amoco Cadiz oil spill or the Erika oil spill and water pollution from intensive pig farming favoured new movements to protect the natural heritage Government and politics EditSee also Politics of France Traditional subdivisions Edit Brittany as a political entity disappeared in 1790 when it was divided into five departements The Breton departements more or less correspond to the nine Catholic dioceses that appeared at the beginning of the Middle Ages They were often called pays or bro country in French and Breton and they also served as fiscal and military districts 36 Brittany is also divided between Lower Brittany Basse Bretagne and Breizh Izel corresponding to the western half where Breton is traditionally spoken and Upper Brittany Haute Bretagne and Breizh Uhel corresponding to the eastern half where Gallo is traditionally spoken The historical Breton dioceses were Upper Brittany The Pays nantais around Nantes corresponding to the Loire Atlantique departement The Pays rennais around Rennes forming part of the Ille et Vilaine departement The Pays de Dol around Dol de Bretagne corresponding to the northern part of the Ille et Vilaine departement The Pays de Saint Brieuc around Saint Brieuc forming part of the Cotes d Armor departement The Pays de Saint Malo around Saint Malo divided between Ille et Vilaine Cotes d Armor and Morbihan Lower Brittany The Pays vannetais around Vannes corresponding to the Morbihan departement The Cornouaille around Quimper divided between Finistere and Cotes d Armor The Leon around Saint Pol de Leon corresponding to the northern part of the Finistere departement The Tregor around Treguier forming part of the Cotes d Armor departement During the French Revolution four dioceses were suppressed and the five remaining ones were modified to have the same administrative borders as the departements Capital cities Edit The Chateau des ducs de Bretagne in Nantes permanent residence of the last dukes Brittany has several historical capital cities When it was an independent duchy the Estates of Brittany which can be compared to a parliament met in various towns Dinan Ploermel Redon Rennes Vitre Guerande and most of all Vannes where they met 19 times and Nantes 17 times The Court and the government were also very mobile and each dynasty favoured its own castles and estates The dukes mostly lived in Nantes Vannes Redon Rennes Fougeres Dol de Bretagne Dinan and Guerande All these towns except Vannes are located in Upper Brittany thus not in the Breton speaking area Among all these towns only Nantes Rennes and Vannes which were the biggest ones could really pretend to the capital status The dukes were crowned in Rennes and they had a large castle there it was however destroyed during the 15th century Vannes on its side was the seat of the Chamber of Accounts and of the Parliament until the union with France The Parliament was then transferred to Rennes and the Chamber of Accounts to Nantes Nantes nicknamed the city of the Dukes of Brittany was also the permanent residence of the last dukes The Chateau des ducs de Bretagne still stands in the city centre Nowadays Rennes is the only official capital of the region of Brittany It is also the seat of an ecclesiastical province encompassing Brittany and the Pays de la Loire region Present subdivisions Edit See also Administrative divisions of France Brittany administrative region and Loire Atlantique The region Brittany comprises four historical Breton departements Loire Atlantique in light blue is part of the Pays de la Loire region During the French Revolution Brittany was divided into five departements each made up of three or four arrondissements The arrondissements are further divided in cantons which are themselves made up of one or several communes The communes and the departements have a local council elected by their citizens but arrondissements and cantons are not run by elected officials The cantons serve as an electoral district for the election of the departement councils and arrondissements are run by a subprefect appointed by the French president The president also appoints a prefect in each departement Because the departements are small and numerous the French government tried to create wider regions during the 20th century For the Breton nationalists it was an occasion to recreate Brittany as a political and administrative entity but the new region had to be economically efficient Nantes and its departement Loire Atlantique raised concerns because they were off centered more integrated with the Loire Valley than with the Breton peninsula The French government and local politicians also feared that Nantes because of its population and its former Breton capital status would have maintained a harmful competition with Rennes to get the regional institutions and investments Several drafts for French regions had been proposed since the 1920s and the definitive regions were drawn in 1956 The new Brittany had four departements and Loire Atlantique formed the Pays de la Loire region together with parts of Anjou Maine and Poitou In 1972 the regions received their present competencies with an elected regional council Since then the region of Brittany has had its own council and administrative bodies Reunification Edit See also Bretagne Reunie This Loire Atlantique road sign reads welcome to historical Brittany When the region of Brittany was created several local politicians opposed the exclusion of Loire Atlantique and the question still remains The obstacles to reunification are the same as in 1956 having Nantes in Brittany could harm the position of Rennes and create an economic imbalance between Lower and Upper Brittany Moreover the Pays de la Loire region could not exist without Loire Atlantique because it would lose its political and economic capital Without Loire Atlantique the other departements would not form an efficient region any more and would have to integrate neighbouring regions such as the Centre Val de Loire and Nouvelle Aquitaine However several institutions have backed the reunification such as the regional council of Brittany since 2008 and the Loire Atlantique council since 2001 Some politicians like Jean Marc Ayrault the former French prime minister and former mayor of Nantes favour instead the creation of a Greater West region which would encompass Brittany and the Pays de la Loire region Polls show that 58 of the Bretons and 62 of the inhabitants in Loire Atlantique favour the reunification 37 Political tendencies Edit Main article Politics of Brittany Until the end of the 20th century Brittany had been characterised by a strong Catholic and conservative influence However some areas such as the industrial region around Saint Nazaire and Lorient and the surroundings of Treguier are traditional Socialist and Communist strongholds Left wing parties mainly the Socialist party and the Greens have become more and more powerful after the 1970s and they have formed a majority in the Regional Council of Brittany since 2004 The Loire Atlantique and Ille et Vilaine councils have also been held by the left since 2004 The Socialist party has held the Cotes d Armor council since 1976 and the Finistere council since 1998 On its side Morbihan remains a right wing stronghold The local parties have a very small audience except the Union Democratique Bretonne which has seats at the Regional Council and in other local assemblies It advocates more autonomy for the region and its positions are very close to the Socialist parties It also has a strong ecological orientation The audience of far right parties is lower in Brittany than in the rest of France 38 Geography and natural history Edit The Pink Granite Coast around Tregastel Brittany is the largest French peninsula It is around 34 030 km2 13 140 sq mi and stretches toward the northwest and the Atlantic Ocean It is bordered to the north by the English Channel to the south by the Bay of Biscay and the waters located between the western coast and Ushant Island form the Iroise Sea The Breton coast is very indented with many cliffs rias and capes The Gulf of Morbihan is a vast natural harbour with some forty islands that is almost a closed sea In total around 800 islands lie off the mainland the largest being Belle Ile in the south Brittany has over 2 860 km 1 780 mi of coastline it represents a third of the total French coastline The region is generally hilly because it corresponds to the western end of the Armorican Massif a very old range that also extends in Normandy and the Pays de la Loire region Because of this continuity the Breton border with the rest of France is not marked by any strong geographical landmark apart from the river Couesnon which separates Brittany from Normandy A bog around the Monts d Arree The Armorican Massif reaches its maximum elevation outside of Brittany in neighbouring Mayenne at 417 m and slopes towards the west before straightening on its western extremity with the Montagnes Noires and the Monts d Arree The highest hill in Brittany is the Roc h Ruz in the Monts d Arree at 385 m 1 263 ft It is closely followed by several neighbouring hills culminating at around 384 m above sea level 39 Coastal areas are usually named Armor or Arvor by the sea in Breton and the inland is called Argoat by the forest The best soils were primitively covered by large forests which had been progressively replaced by bocage during the Middle Ages The Breton bocage with its small fields enclosed by thick hedgerows has almost disappeared since the 1960s to fit the modern agricultural needs and methods particularly mechanisation Several forests still exist such as the Paimpont forest sometimes said to be the Arthurian Broceliande The poor and rocky areas are covered by large heathland and moorlands and Brittany has several marshes like the Briere included in a regional natural park Another regional park encompasses the Monts d Arree and the Iroise seacoast The Iroise Sea is also a UNESCO biosphere reserve Geology Edit The Pointe du Raz one of the westernmost extents of both Brittany and Metropolitan France The Breton peninsula appeared during the Cadomian Orogeny which formed its northern coastline between Guingamp and Fougeres The southern part emerged during the Hercynian orogeny At the same time an intense volcanic activity left large quantities of granite Between the Cadomian and Hercynian periods the region was submerged several times and the sea left fossils and sedimentary rocks mostly schist and sandstone Because of the absence of limestone soils in Brittany are usually acid The Armorican massif straightened and flattened several times during the formation of the Pyrenees and the Alps Changes in sea levels and climate led to a strong erosion and to the formation of more sedimentary rocks Metamorphism is responsible for the distinctive local blue schist and for the rich subsoil of the Groix island which comprises glaucophane and epidote 40 During the Quaternary glaciations Brittany was covered by loess and rivers started to fill the valleys with alluvial deposits The valleys themselves were a result of a strong tectonic activity between the African and the Eurasian plate The present Breton landscape did not acquire its final shape before one million years ago The Breton subsoil is characterised by a huge amount of fractures that form a large aquifer containing several millions square meters of water 40 Climate Edit Brittany lies within the north temperate zone It has a changeable maritime climate similar to Cornwall Rainfall occurs regularly but sunny cloudless days are also common In the summer months temperatures in the region can reach 30 C 86 F yet the climate remains comfortable especially when compared to the French regions located south of the Loire The temperature difference between summer and winter is about 15 degrees but it varies depending on the proximity of the sea The weather is generally milder on the seacoast than inland but rainfall occurs with the same intensity on both The Monts d Arree despite their low elevation have much more rainfall than the rest of the region The south coast between Lorient and Pornic enjoys more than 2 000 hours of sunshine per year 41 Flora and fauna Edit An ocean sunfish exhibiting its characteristic horizontal basking behaviour several miles off Penmarch Brittany s wildlife is typical of France with several distinctions On one hand the region due to its long coastline has a rich oceanic fauna and some birds cannot be seen in other French regions On the other hand the species found in the inland are usually common for France and because Brittany is a peninsula the number of species is lower in its western extremity than in the eastern part A variety of seabirds can be seen close to the seaside which is home to colonies of cormorants gulls razorbills northern gannets common murres and Atlantic puffins Most of these birds breed on isolated islands and rocks and thus are hard to observe The inland is home to common European species including pheasants barn swallows woodcocks common swifts partridges 42 A Breton horse Like Cornwall Wales and Ireland the waters of Brittany attract marine animals including basking sharks grey seals leatherback turtles dolphins porpoises jellyfish crabs and lobsters Bass is common along the coast small spotted catsharks live on the continental shelf rattails and anglerfish populate the deep waters River fish of note include trout Atlantic salmon pikes shades and lampreys The Breton rivers are also home to beavers and otters and to some invasive American species such as the coypu which destroys the ecosystem and accelerated the extinction of the European mink 43 Among the invertebrates Brittany is notably home to the escargot de Quimper the freshwater pearl mussel and the white clawed crayfish 44 The larger Breton mammals died out during the modern period including the wolf Today mammals of note include roe deer wild boar foxes hares and several species of bat 45 Brittany is widely known for the Breton horse a local breed of draft horse and for the Brittany gun dog The region also has its own breeds of cattle some of which are on the brink of extinction the Bretonne Pie Noir the Froment du Leon the Armorican and the Nantaise The Breton forests dunes moorlands and marshes are home to several iconic plants such as endemic cistus aster and linaria varieties the horseshoe vetch and the lotus maritimus 46 Education EditSee also Education in France A battalion of the Saint Cyr Coetquidan military academy Brittany has the same education system as the rest of France As in other French regions formal education before the 19th century was the preserve of the elite Before 1460 Brittany did not have a university and Breton students had to go to Angers Poitiers or Caen The University of Nantes was founded under the duke Francis II who wanted to affirm the Breton independence from France All the traditional disciplines were taught here arts theology law and medicine During the 17th century it had around 1 500 students It declined during the 18th century mostly because Nantes was flourishing with the Atlantic slave trade and paid no attention to its cultural institutions A mayor eventually asked the university to be relocated to Rennes more devoted to culture and science and the faculties progressively moved there after 1735 47 The transfer was interrupted by the French Revolution and all the French universities were dissolved in 1793 Napoleon reorganised the French education system in 1808 He created new universities and invented two secondary education institutions the colleges and the lycees which were opened in numerous towns to educate boys and form a new elite A new University of Rennes was progressively recreated during the 19th century In the meantime several laws were promoted to open schools notably for girls In 1882 Jules Ferry succeeded in passing a law which made primary education in France free non clerical laique and mandatory Thus free schools were opened in almost every villages of Brittany Jules Ferry also promoted education policies establishing French language as the language of the Republic and mandatory education was a mean to eradicate regional languages and dialects In Brittany it was forbidden for the pupils to speak Breton or Gallo and the two were strongly depreciated Humiliating practices aimed at stamping out the Breton language and culture prevailed in state schools until the late 1960s 48 In response the Diwan schools were founded in 1977 to teach Breton by immersion They have taught a few thousand young people from elementary school to high school and they have gained more and more fame owing to their high level of results in school exams 49 A bilingual approach has also been implemented in some state schools after 1979 and some Catholic schools have done the same after 1990 Besides Brittany with the neighbouring Pays de la Loire region remains a stronghold for Catholic private education with around 1 400 schools 50 During the 20th century tertiary education was developed with the creation of the Ecole centrale de Nantes in 1919 the University of Nantes in 1961 the ESC Bretagne Brest in 1962 the University of Western Brittany in 1971 the Ecole Nationale Superieure des Telecommunications de Bretagne in 1977 and the University of Southern Brittany in 1995 The Catholic University of the West based in Angers also opened classes in several Breton towns In 1969 the University of Rennes was divided between the University of Rennes 1 and the University of Rennes 2 Upper Brittany After the Second World War the Ecole Speciale Militaire de Saint Cyr the foremost French military academy settled in Coetquidan Economy Edit RMS Queen Mary 2 once the world s largest passenger ship was built in Saint Nazaire Brittany apart from some areas such as Lorient Nantes and Saint Nazaire has never been heavily industrialised Today fishing and agriculture remain important activities Brittany has more than 40 000 farms mostly oriented towards cattle pig and poultry breeding as well as cereal and vegetable production The number of farms tends to diminish but as a result they are merged into very large estates Brittany is the first producer in France for vegetables green beans onions artichokes potatoes tomatoes Cereals are mostly grown for cattle feeding Wine especially muscadet is made in a small region south of Nantes Brittany is the first region in France for fishing The activity employs around 15 000 people and more than 2500 firms work in fish and seafood processing 51 52 A fishing trawler from Le Guilvinec Although relatively new the Breton industry has been constantly growing since 1980 Food processing meat vegetables represents a third of the industrial jobs but other activities are also important for the local economy Shipbuilding both commercial and military is implanted in Saint Nazaire Chantiers de l Atlantique Lorient and Brest Airbus has plants in Saint Nazaire and Nantes and Peugeot has a large factory in Rennes Brittany is the second French region for telecommunication and the fifth for electronics two activities mainly developed in Rennes Lannion and Brest Tourism is particularly important for the seacoast and Brittany is one of the most visited regions in France 52 In April 2019 The Guardian s travel section included two Brittany locations in its list of 20 of the most beautiful villages in France The two were Rochefort en Terre with its covered market 12th century church medieval castle 19th century chateau and 16th and 17th century mansions and Locronan where East India Company s offices still stand on the village square as well as 17th century merchants dwellings 53 The unemployment rate in Brittany is lower than in other French regions and it is usually around 6 or 7 of the active population 54 Because of the global financial crisis started in 2007 unemployment rose to 8 7 in the Region Brittany and 8 4 in Loire Atlantique in late 2012 However these figures remain under the French national rate 9 9 at the same period 55 56 Some industries such as construction industry catering or transport usually have difficulties finding employees 54 In 2018 Region Brittany s gross domestic product reached 99 billion euros It was the ninth richest region in France and it produced 4 of the national GDP The Breton GDP per capita was around 29 694 euros in 2018 57 It was lower than the French result 30 266 euros below the European one 30 900 euros The GDP of the Loire Atlantique departement is around 26 billion euros and the GDP of the five historical Breton departements would be at around 108 billion euros 58 Demographics EditSee also Demography of France Rennes the most populated city in Region Brittany and the second in historical Brittany behind Nantes In 2017 the population in Region Brittany was estimated to 3 318 904 and Loire Atlantique had around 1 394 909 inhabitants thus historical Brittany s population can be estimated at 4 713 813 the highest in its history 59 The population in Region Brittany had grown by 0 9 between 1999 and 2000 and the growth rate reached more than 1 in Ille et Vilaine and Morbihan The region around Rennes and the south are the more attractive areas whereas the population is declining in the centre and in the westernmost parts While most of the metropolitan areas are growing the cities themselves tend to stagnate or regress such as for Brest Lorient Saint Brieuc and Saint Malo In 2017 Ille et Vilaine had 1 060 199 inhabitants it was followed by Finistere 909 028 inhabitants Morbihan 750 863 inhabitants and Cotes d Armor with 598 814 inhabitants 60 The largest cities in Region Brittany as of 2017 were Rennes with 216 815 inhabitants Brest 140 064 Quimper 62 985 Lorient 57 149 Vannes 53 352 Saint Malo 46 097 and Saint Brieuc 44 372 All the other communes had under 25 000 inhabitants 60 Brittany is also characterised by a great number of small towns such as Vitre Concarneau Morlaix or Auray Loire Atlantique has two major cities Nantes with 309 346 inhabitants and an urban area encompassing 972 828 and Saint Nazaire with 69 993 inhabitants 60 Loire Atlantique s population is more rapidly growing than Region Brittany s and it is the 12th most populated French departement 61 Nevertheless since the 1990s Rennes has consistently ranked as one of France s fastest growing metropolitan areas In 1851 Brittany had around 2 7 million inhabitants and the demographic growth stayed low until the second half of the 20th century mainly because of an important emigration Brittany had 3 2 million inhabitants in 1962 and the growth was mainly due to Loire Atlantique and the steady growth of Nantes Without the Loire Atlantique s figures the Breton population only numbered 2 4 million in 1962 nearly unchanged from its population of 2 3 million in 1851 62 63 After the 1960s the whole region has had a strong demographic growth because of the decline of the traditional emigration to richer French regions Instead Brittany has become attractive particularly for families young retired persons and active people over 35 years old 64 Regional identity Edit Breton women wearing the Bigouden distinctive headdress one of the symbols of Breton identity Breton political parties do not have wide support and their electoral success is small However Bretons have a strong cultural identity According to a poll made in 2008 50 of the inhabitants of the Region Brittany consider themselves as much Breton as French 22 5 feel more Breton than French and 15 4 more French than Breton A minority 1 5 considers themselves Breton but not French while 9 3 do not consider themselves to be Breton at all 65 51 9 of the poll respondents agreed that Brittany should have more political power and 31 1 thought that it should stay the same Only 4 6 favoured independence and 9 4 were undecided 65 A 2012 poll taken in the five departments of historical Brittany showed that 48 of the respondents considered themselves belonging first to France 37 to Brittany and 10 to Europe It also showed that Breton identity is stronger among people younger than 35 53 of them considering themselves to belong first to Brittany 50 of the older respondents considered themselves belonging first to France Primary Breton identity is at its lowest among the respondents over 65 58 consider themselves to belong first to France with European identify secondary 21 of the respondents over 65 considering themselves to be European first Breton self identification is stronger among people who vote left wing It is stronger among employees than employers 66 Regional languages Edit Lower Brittany in colours where the Breton language is traditionally spoken and Upper Brittany in shades of grey where the Gallo language is traditionally spoken The changing shades indicate the advance of Gallo and French and retreat of Breton from 900 AD Main article Linguistic boundary of Brittany French the only official language of the French Republic is spoken today by the vast majority in Brittany and it is the mother tongue of most people Nonetheless French was not widely known before the 19th century and two regional languages exist in Brittany Breton and Gallo They are separated by a language border that has constantly moved back since the Middle Ages The current border runs from Plouha on the English Channel to the Rhuys Peninsula on the Bay of Biscay Because of their origins and practice Breton and Gallo can be compared to Scottish Gaelic and Scots language in Scotland citation needed Both have been recognised as Langues de Bretagne languages of Brittany by the Regional Council of Brittany since 2004 Breton Edit Main article Breton language Bilingual road signs can be seen in traditional Breton speaking areas Breton is a Celtic language derived from the historical Common Brittonic language and is most closely related to Cornish and Welsh It was imported to Western Armorica during the 5th century by Britons fleeing the Anglo Saxon invasion of Britain Breton remained the language of the rural population but since the Middle Ages the bourgeoisie the nobility and the higher clergy have spoken French source source source source source source source source source source source source A Breton speaker recorded in Canada Government policies in the 19th and 20th centuries made education compulsory and at the same time forbade the use of Breton in schools to push non French speakers into adopting the French language Nevertheless until the 1960s Breton was spoken or understood by many of the inhabitants of western Brittany During the 1970s Breton schools were opened and the local authorities started to promote the language which was on the brink of extinction because parents had stopped teaching it to their children Having declined from more than one million speakers around 1950 to about 200 000 in the first decade of the 21st century of whom 61 are more than 60 years old Breton is classified as severely endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World s Languages in Danger However the number of children attending bilingual classes has risen 33 between 2006 and 2012 to 14 709 67 68 The Breton language has several dialects which have no precise limits but rather form a continuum Most of them are very similar to each other with only some phonetic and lexical differences The three main dialects spoken in the western end of Brittany are the Cornouillais around Quimper the Leonard around Saint Pol de Leon and the Tregorrois around Treguier are grouped into the KLT group Kerne Leon Treger in opposition to the Vannetais spoken around Vannes which is the most differentiated Breton dialect According to a 1999 INSEE survey 12 of the adults of Brittany speak Breton 69 Gallo Edit Main article Gallo language Signs in Gallo are very rare and the writing systems they use are unknown by most of the speakers Gallo is spoken on the eastern half of Brittany It is not itself a Celtic language Like French it is also descended from Latin and is classified in the Langues d oil branch but has some Celtic influences particularly in its vocabulary whereas French has influences from both Celtic Gaulish and Frankish the Germanic language which arrived after Latin in much of the rest of France Unlike Breton Gallo does not have a long promotion history and it is still often perceived as a poor rural dialect Moreover because of its linguistic relationship with Gallo French imposed itself more easily as the main language in Upper Brittany than in Breton speaking areas Gallo was simply felt to be an incorrect way of speaking French rather than a separate language Gallo transmission from parents to children is extremely low and efforts to standardise and publish books in Gallo did not reverse the decline of the language and its lack of prestige 70 Gallo is also threatened by the Breton language revival because Breton is gaining ground in territories that were not previously part of the main Breton speaking area and most of all because Breton appears as the national language of Brittany thus leaving no place for Gallo 70 Gallo had never been written before the 20th century and several writing systems were created They are however rarely known by the population and signs in Gallo are often unreadable even for fluent speakers In Loire Atlantique where Gallo is not promoted at all by the local authorities many people do not even know the word Gallo and have no idea that it has writing systems and publications 70 The Gallo community is estimated at between 28 300 71 and 200 000 70 speakers The language is taught on a non compulsory basis in some schools high schools and universities particularly in Ille et Vilaine 70 Religion Edit Sculpted calvaries can be found in many villages in Lower Brittany Bretons are mainly Catholic and the Christianisation occurred during the Roman Gaul and Frank era During the Briton emigration to Brittany several Christian missionaries mostly Welsh came in the region and founded dioceses They are known as the Seven founder saints Paol Aoreliann in Saint Pol de Leon Tudwal in Treguier Brieg in Saint Brieuc Malou in Saint Malo Samsun of Dol in Dol de Bretagne Padarn in Vannes Kaourintin in Quimper Other notable early missionaries are Gildas and the Irish saint Columbanus In total Brittany numbers more than 300 saints only a few recognised by the Catholic Church and since the 19th century at least it has been known as one of the most devoutly Catholic regions in France together with the neighbouring Pays de la Loire region The proportion of students attending Catholic private schools is the highest in France The patron saint of Brittany is Saint Anne the Virgin s mother but Ivo of Kermartin a 13th century priest called Saint Yves in French and Sant Erwan in Breton can also be considered as a patron saint His feast 19 May is Brittany s national day A chapel and a calvary in Locronan Finistere Many distinctive traditions and customs have also been preserved in Brittany Among them the Pardons are one of the most traditional demonstrations of popular Catholicism These penitential ceremonies occur in some villages in Lower Brittany on the feast day of the parish s saint The penitents form a procession and they walk together to a shrine a church or any sacred place Some Pardons are reputed for their length and they all finish by large meals and popular feasts A sculpted Ankou in Ploudiry There is a very old pilgrimage called the Tro Breizh tour of Brittany where the pilgrims walk around Brittany from the grave of one of the seven founder saints to another Historically the pilgrimage was made in one trip a total distance of around 600 km for all seven saints Nowadays however pilgrims complete the circuit over the course of several years In 2002 the Tro Breizh included a special pilgrimage to Wales symbolically making the reverse journey of the Welshmen Sant Paol Sant Brieg and Sant Samzun 72 The most powerful folk figure is the Ankou or the Reaper of Death Sometimes a skeleton wrapped in a shroud with the Breton flat hat sometimes described as a real human being the last dead of the year devoted to bring the dead to Death he makes his journeys by night carrying an upturned scythe which he throws before him to reap his harvest Sometimes he is on foot but mostly he travels with a cart the Karrig an Ankou drawn by two oxen and a lean horse Two servants dressed in the same shroud and hat as the Ankou pile the dead into the cart and to hear it creaking at night means you have little time left to live 73 As official religious statistics are forbidden in France there are no official figures about religious practices in Brittany However successive polls show that the region tends to be more and more nonreligious Catholic religion has started to decline after the Second World War during the urbanisation of Brittany A poll conducted in 2006 showed that Morbihan was the only departement to have a strong Catholic population around 70 of its inhabitants belonging to that religion Loire Atlantique and Cotes d Armor were among the least Catholic French departements with only 50 of Catholics while Ille et Vilaine and Finistere were at around 65 Other religions are almost non existent apart from Islam which gathers between 1 and 3 of the inhabitants in Ille et Vilaine and Loire Atlantique 74 Culture EditArchitecture Edit Josselin Castle Brittany is home to many megalithic monuments the words menhir and dolmen come from the Breton language The largest menhir alignments are the Carnac stones Other major sites include the Barnenez cairn the Locmariaquer megaliths the Menhir de Champ Dolent the Mane Braz tumulus and the Gavrinis tomb Monuments from the Roman period are rare but include a large temple in Corseul and scarce ruins of villas and city walls in Rennes and Nantes Brittany has a large number of medieval buildings They include numerous Romanesque and French Gothic churches usually built in local sandstone and granite castles and half timbered houses visible in villages towns and cities Several Breton towns still have their medieval walls such as Guerande Concarneau Saint Malo Vannes Fougeres and Dinan Major churches include Saint Pol de Leon Cathedral Treguier Cathedral Dol Cathedral Nantes Cathedral and the Kreisker chapel Most of the Breton castles were rebuilt between the 13th and the 15th century such as the Chateau de Suscinio the Chateau de Dinan the Chateau de Combourg the Chateau de Largoet the Chateau de Tonquedec the Josselin Castle and the Chateau de Trecesson The most impressive castles can be seen along the border with France where stand the Chateau de Fougeres the Chateau de Vitre the Chateau de Chateaubriant and the Chateau de Clisson A traditional house in Plougoumelen The French Renaissance occurred when Brittany lost its independence The Renaissance architecture is almost absent in the region except in Upper Brittany close to the border with France Major sites include the Chateau des ducs de Bretagne the last permanent residence of the dukes which displays the transition from late Gothic to Renaissance style The Chateau de Chateaubriant a former fortress was transformed into a vast palace in the Italian style An Art Deco villa in Benodet In Lower Brittany the medieval style never totally disappeared However local innovations permitted some changes and the birth of a particular style Its most distinctive feature is the parish close which displays an elaborately decorated church surrounded by an entirely walled churchyard Many villages still have their closes they date from the 16th and 17th centuries and sometimes include an elaborately carved calvary sculpture During the 17th and the 18th centuries the main seaports and towns obtained a typical French look with baroque and neoclassical buildings Nantes which was at the time the biggest French harbour received a theatre large avenues and quays and Rennes was redesigned after a fire in 1720 At the same period the wealthy ship owners from Saint Malo built many mansions called Malouinieres around their town Along the coast Vauban and other French architects designed several citadels such as in Le Palais and Port Louis In rural areas Breton houses remained simple with a single floor and a longhouse pattern They were built with local materials mostly granite in Lower Brittany and schist in Upper Brittany Slates and reeds were usually used for roofing During the 19th century the Breton architecture was mainly characterised by the Gothic Revival and Eclecticism Clisson the southernmost Breton town was rebuilt in an Italian Romantic style around 1820 The Breton lighthouses were mostly built during the 19th century The most famous are Ar Men Phare d Eckmuhl La Vieille and La Jument The lighthouse on the Ile Vierge is with 77 meters the highest in Europe At the end of the 19th century several seaside resorts were created along the coast and villas and hotels were built in historicist Art Nouveau and later in the Art Deco styles These architectures are particularly present in Dinard La Baule and Benodet Architecture from the 20th century can be seen in Saint Nazaire Brest and Lorient three cities destroyed during the Second World War and rebuilt afterwards and in the works of the Breton nationalist architects like James Bouille and Olier Mordrel Fine arts Edit The Beautiful Angele by Paul Gauguin Until the 19th century Catholicism had been the main inspiration for Breton artists The region has a great number of baroque retables made between the 17th and the 19th century Breton sculptors were also famous for their ship models that served as ex votos and for their richly decorated furniture which features naive Breton characters and traditional patterns The box bed is the most famous Breton piece of furniture The Breton style had a strong revival between 1900 and the Second World War and it was used by the Seiz Breur movement The Seiz Breur artists also tried to invent a modern Breton art by rejecting French standards and mixing traditional techniques with new materials The leading artists of that period were the designer Rene Yves Creston the illustrators Jeanne Malivel and Xavier Haas and the sculptors Raffig Tullou Francis Renaud Georges Robin Joseph Savina Jules Charles Le Bozec and Jean Freour Brittany is also known for its needlework which can be seen on its numerous headdress models and for its faience production which started at the beginning of the 18th century Quimper faience is known worldwide for its bowls and plates painted by hand and other towns such as Pornic also maintain a similar tradition The potteries usually feature naive Breton characters in traditional clothing and daily scenes The designs have a strong traditional Breton influence but Orientalism and Art Deco have also been used Because of its distinct culture and natural landscape Brittany has inspired many French artists since the 19th century The Pont Aven School which started to emerge in the 1850s and lasted until the beginning of the 20th century had a decisive influence on modern painting The artists who settled in Pont Aven wanted to break away from the Academic style of the Ecole des Beaux Arts and later from Impressionism when it began to decline Among them were Paul Gauguin Paul Signac Marc Chagall Paul Serusier and Raymond Wintz Before them Brittany had also been visited by Academic and Romantic painters like Jean Antoine Theodore de Gudin and Jules Achille Noel who were looking for dramatic seascapes and storms Music Edit Main articles Music of Brittany and Breton dance The Lann Bihoue bagad Since the early 1970s Brittany has experienced a tremendous revival of its folk music Numerous festivals were created along with smaller fest noz popular feasts The bagadou bands composed of bagpipes bombards and drums including snare are also a modern creation inspired by the Scottish pipe bands The Lann Bihoue bagad one of the most well known belongs to the French Navy It is the only one that does not take part to the annual bagadou competitions Celtic harp is also common as are vocals and dances The Kan ha diskan is the most common type of singing The performers sing calls and responses while dancing Breton dances usually imply circles chains or couples and they are different in every region The oldest dances seem to be the passepied and the gavotte and the newest ones derive from the quadrille and French Renaissance dances Nolwenn Leroy and Alan Stivell 2012 In the 1960s several Breton artists started to use contemporary patterns to create a Breton pop music Among them Alan Stivell contributed most in popularising the Celtic harp and Breton music in the world He also used American rock and roll in his works and influenced 1970s Breton bands such as Kornog Gwerz band fr and Tri Yann who revived traditional songs and made them popular across France Soldat Louis is the main Breton rock band citation needed and Breton singers include Gilles Servat Glenmor Dan Ar Braz Yann Fanch Kemener Denez Prigent Nolwenn Korbell and Nolwenn Leroy The Manau Hip hop group from Paris has strong Breton and Celtic inspirations Yann Tiersen who composed the soundtrack for Amelie the Electro band Yelle and the avant garde singer Brigitte Fontaine are also from Brittany The 19th century composer Louis Albert Bourgault Ducoudray was one of the first western European composers to be influenced by what is now known as world music In 2022 Alvan and Ahez have been selected to represent France in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022 Their song Fulenn is sung entirely in Breton and is about the legend of Katel Kollet a lady who dances with the devil Legends and literature Edit The singer songwriter Theodore Botrel dressed in traditional Breton costume Brittany is closely associated with the Matter of Britain and King Arthur According to Wace Broceliande is located in Brittany and it is nowadays considered to be Paimpont forest There ruins of a castle surrounded by a lake are associated with the Lady of the Lake a dolmen is said to be Merlin s tomb and a path is presented as Morgan le Fay s Val sans Retour Tristan and Iseult are also said to have lived in Brittany Another major Breton legend is the story about Ys a city swallowed by the ocean Breton literature before the 19th century was mostly oral The oral tradition entertained by medieval poets died out during the 15th century and books in Breton were very rare before 1850 At that time local writers started to collect and publish local tales and legends and wrote original works Published between 1925 and the Second World War the literary journal Gwalarn favoured a modern Breton literature and helped translating widely known novels into Breton After the war the journal Al Liamm pursued that mission Among the authors writing in Breton are Auguste Brizeux a Romantic poet the neo Druidic bard Erwan Berthou Theodore Hersart de La Villemarque who collected the local legends about King Arthur Roparz Hemon founder of Gwalarn Per Jakez Helias Glenmor Per Denez and Meavenn Breton literature in French includes 19th century historical novels by Emile Souvestre travel journals by Anatole Le Braz poems and novels by Charles Le Goffic the works of the singer songwriter Theodore Botrel and of the maritime writer Henri Queffelec Brittany is also the birthplace of many French writers like Francois Rene de Chateaubriand Jules Verne Ernest Renan Felicite Robert de Lamennais and Pierre Abelard Max Jacob Alfred Jarry Victor Segalen Xavier Grall Jean Rouaud Irene Frain Herve Jaouen 75 Alain Robbe Grillet Pierre Jakez Helias Tristan Corbiere Paul Feval Jean Guehenno Arthur Bernede Andre Breton Patrick Poivre d ArvorThe Asterix comics set during the time of Julius Caesar and written in the second half of the twentieth century are set in Armorica now Brittany Museums Edit The Museum of Brittany located in Rennes was founded in 1856 Its collections are mainly dedicated to the history of the region Museums dedicated to Prehistory and local megaliths are located in Carnac and Penmarch while several towns like Vannes and Nantes have a museum presenting their own history The Museum of Fine Arts of Rennes owns a large collection of Egyptian Greek and Roman antiquities as well as drawings and engravings by Domenico Ghirlandaio Parmigianino Albrecht Durer and Rembrandt Its French art collection gathers works by Georges de La Tour Francois Boucher Paul Gauguin Auguste Rodin Camille Corot and Robert Delaunay It has also works by Pablo Picasso Rubens Peter Lely and Paolo Veronese The collections of the Museum of Fine Arts of Nantes are more dedicated to modern and contemporary art and contain works by Edward Burne Jones Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres Eugene Delacroix Gustave Courbet Paul Signac Tamara de Lempicka Wassily Kandinsky Max Ernst Pierre Soulages and Piero Manzoni The Museums of Fine Arts of Brest and Quimper offer similar collections with large quantities of French painting together with the works of some Italian and Dutch artists The Museum of Fine Arts Pont Aven is dedicated to the School of Pont Aven Contemporary sculptures can be seen in the park around the Chateau de Kerguehennec in Bignan Museums in Saint Malo Lorient and Douarnenez are dedicated to ships and maritime traditions and history The Musee national de la Marine has a large annex in Brest and a submarine is opened to visitors in Lorient In the same town it is also possible to visit the Keroman Submarine Museum and the Cite de la voile Eric Tabarly a museum dedicated to sailing In Saint Nazaire where many transatlantic ships were built including SS Normandie and SS France a museum showing transatlantic interiors was installed in a Second World War base Nantes has a museum dedicated to Jules Verne a Natural History Museum and a museum of archaeology and design the Musee Dobree Festivals Edit The Gotheborg ship replica at the Brest tall ship meeting in 2012 Brittany has a vibrant calendar of festivals and events It hosts some of France s biggest contemporary music festivals such as La Route du Rock in Saint Malo the Vieilles Charrues in Carhaix the Rencontres Trans Musicales in Rennes the Festival du Bout du Monde in Crozon the Hellfest in Clisson and the Astropolis in Brest The Festival Interceltique de Lorient welcomes each year participants all the Celtic nations and their diasporas La Folle Journee in Nantes is the largest classical music festival in France The Breton culture is highlighted during the Fete de la Bretagne which occurs in many places around Saint Yves s day 19 May and during the Festival de Cornouaille in Quimper Several towns also organise historical re enactments and events celebrating local traditions such as the Filets Bleus in Concarneau which celebrates fishing Brittany also has some film festivals like the Three Continents Festival in Nantes The Utopiales international science fiction festival is held in the same city Brest and Douarnenez both organise large tall ship meetings See Brest Maritime Festival Sport Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Roazhon Park in Rennes Football cycling and sailing are the three most popular sports in Brittany Major football teams are the FC Nantes the Stade Rennais F C the FC Lorient the Stade Brestois 29 the Vannes OC and the En Avant de Guingamp Professional footballers coming from the region also form the Brittany national football team which sometimes plays with national teams Several Bretons have won the Tour de France Bernard Hinault Louison Bobet Jean Robic and Lucien Petit Breton as riders and Cyrille Guimard as a directeur sportif Sailing is particularly important for sea resorts like La Trinite sur Mer Pornichet Concarneau Lorient and the iles de Glenan where a prestigious school is located A great number of Bretons have become acclaimed sailors such as Eric Tabarly Loick Peyron Jean Le Cam Michel Desjoyeaux Olivier de Kersauson Thomas Coville Vincent Riou and Marc Pajot The Route du Rhum the Transat Quebec Saint Malo the Jules Verne Trophy are the main Breton sailing competitions The Solitaire du Figaro stages often start in Brittany Gouren a style of folk wrestling is the most popular Breton sport The Boule bretonne is related to petanque The Palets common in Upper Brittany and in other French regions is also related to petanque but players use iron disks instead of balls and they have to throw them on a wooden board Gaelic football is also a growing sport in the region 76 with club teams and a county GAA team representing Brittany against other European counties such as Galicia Cuisine Edit Galettes served with eggs and sausages Although Muscadet and Gros Plant white wines are produced south of the Loire the traditional drink of Brittany is cider Brittany is the second largest cider producing region in France 77 Breton cider is traditionally served in a bowl or a cup Brittany also has a long beer brewing tradition tracing its roots back to the 17th century Young artisanal brewers are keeping a variety of beer types alive 78 such as Coreff de Morlaix Tri Martolod and Britt Stronger alcohols include the chouchen a sort of mead made with wild honey and an apple eau de vie called lambig Crepes and galettes are the two most well known Breton dishes The crepes made and served with butter are eaten for dessert and the galettes are usually salty and made with buckwheat They traditionally replaced bread as basic food and they can be served with cheese sausages bacon mushrooms or eggs They can be accompanied by Breton buttermilk called lait ribot Brittany also has a dish similar to the pot au feu known as the kig ha farz which consists of stewed pork or beef with buckwheat dumplings citations needed Surrounded by the sea Brittany offers a wide range of fresh seafood and fish especially mussels and oysters Among the seafood specialities is a fish stew called cotriade The beurre blanc sauce invented in Saint Julien de Concelles close to Nantes is often served with fish Brittany is also known for its salt mainly harvested around Guerande and used in butter and milk caramels The region is notable for its biscuit factories many towns having their own Quimper Lorient Pont Aven Saint Brieuc BN and LU in Nantes La Trinitaine in La Trinite sur Mer and Galettes Saint Michel in Saint Michel Chef Chef They usually make their biscuits with salted butter and sell them in iron boxes Famous Breton pastries include the kouign amann butter cake in Breton made with bread dough and high quantities of butter and sugar and the far a sort of sweet Yorkshire pudding usually made with plums citations needed Transport EditRoad Edit An old road sign on the Route Nationale 786 in Treveneuc Until the 1970s the Breton road network was poor because maritime and rail transport prevailed The French president Charles de Gaulle implemented a major road construction plan in the 1970 and Brittany received over 10 billion francs of investments during 25 years 79 More than 10 000 km of motorways were built permitting Breton road transport to multiply by four The Breton motorways are not toll roads contrarily to the usual French highways 80 81 The main road artery linking cities and other settlements along the north coast is the Route nationale 12 which connects the cities of Rennes Saint Brieuc Morlaix and Brest It also provides a link to southern Normandy terminating in Paris In south Brittany the Route nationale 165 performs a similar role along the south coast providing connections between Nantes Vannes Lorient Quimper and Brest The Route nationale 164 crosses the centre of the peninsula and connects Rennes to Loudeac Carhaix and Chateaulin and the Route nationale 166 links Rennes to Vannes The Route nationale 137 provides connections between Saint Malo Rennes and Nantes and terminates in Bordeaux citations needed Nantes is linked to Paris by the A11 autoroute and Rennes is both on the A81 autoroute to Paris and the A84 autoroute to Caen These highways are standard French toll roads citations needed Air Edit The Morlaix railway viaduct is one of the highest in France The biggest Breton airport is Nantes Atlantique Airport Destination served include the United Kingdom Italy Germany Ireland and Morocco The Brest Bretagne Airport is the second airport in Brittany It is followed by Rennes Saint Jacques Lorient South Brittany and Dinard Saint Malo The Saint Brieuc Armor airport serves flights between Brittany and the Channel Islands Others smaller airport operates domestic flights in Quimper and Lannion Rail Edit The Brittany Ferries MS Bretagne off Saint Malo Brittany is on two major TGV lines one linking Paris to Nantes and Le Croisic on the south coast and another linking Paris to Rennes and Brest An extension of the LGV Atlantique which stops at Le Mans was completed in 2017 bringing the line to Rennes This extension is known as the LGV Bretagne Pays de la Loire TGV services also link the region with major cities in France such as Lyon Strasbourg Marseille and Lille Regional services are operated by TER Bretagne providing connections between small towns such as Vannes Carhaix Roscoff and Paimpol TER Bretagne also manages coach lines and connections between Rennes and Nantes TER Pays de la Loire operates trains between Nantes and smaller towns in Loire Atlantique Sea Edit There are ferry services that take passengers vehicles and freight to Ireland the United Kingdom and the Channel Islands The main companies are Brittany Ferries which operates lines between Plymouth and Roscoff Portsmouth and Saint Malo and Roscoff and Cork Irish Ferries operates the route Rosslare Roscoff and Condor Ferries link Saint Malo with Jersey Cycling Edit Cycling has always been one of the main sports of Brittany but leisure cycling and the infrastructure to support it have been growing extremely rapidly An extensive network of cycle paths and recommended cycle routes has opened up all over the region Some of these are routes using mainly smaller roads and both signposted and maintained by communes individually but many are based on dedicated cycle paths often formed by converting disused railway tracks These help form routes such as Velodyssee from Roscoff to Nantes and several major routes under the V label following signs V1 V2 etc 82 The old tow path of the Nantes Brest canal is now open to cyclists along its entire 385 km length though in places unlike rail based cycle paths it is very meandering and leaving the path will both shorten the distance and provide variety 83 As a general rule cyclists are very well respected in the region and many larger towns have cycle lanes however traffic is cycle friendly even in their absence Symbols Edit The modern flag of Brittany The modern flag of Brittany was designed in 1923 It is called Gwenn ha Du white and black in Breton and it features eleven ermine spots their number may vary and nine stripes the black ones represent the Breton speaking historical dioceses and the white ones symbolise the gallo speaking dioceses The flag was created to replace the traditional ermine plain standard considered too aristocratic and royalist It was inspired by the American flag and the British Red Ensign 84 Since the 1920s the flag has become very popular and it is flown from a large number of institutions Apart from the ermine flag Breton historic banners include the Kroaz Du a white flag with a black cross the perfect negative of the Cornish flag The ermine was the badge of several dukes of Brittany The coat of arms of Brittany ermine plain was adopted by John III in 1316 Ermine had been used in Brittany long before and there is no clue to its origin It was probably chosen by the dukes because of its similarity with the French fleur de lis The ermine or stoat as an animal became the badge of John IV at the end of the 14th century It appeared later on numerous locations including churches and castles According to popular traditions Anne of Brittany was hunting with her court when she saw a white ermine who preferred to die than to cross a dirty marsh This episode would have inspired the duchess motto Potius mori quam foedari rather death than dishonour 85 The motto has later been reused by Breton regiments local World War II Resistants and cultural movements The Breton anthem although not official is Bro Gozh ma Zadou Old Land of My Fathers It re employs both the Welsh anthem s music and that of Bro Goth agan Tasow the national anthem of Cornwall its lyrics were written at the end of the 19th century Colloquial Breton emblems include the Celtic triskelion the menhirs and dolmens local dishes such as the galettes the Bigouden headdress and the traditional black round hat the fisherman and his yellow raincoat etc BZH is a common abbreviation for Breizh Brittany in Breton and people often put BZH stickers on their car plates although it is forbidden under French laws 86 bzh is an approved Internet top level domain for the Breton culture and languages 87 88 Gallery Edit Merlin s tomb in the Broceliande forest Paimpont A dolmen in Plouharnel The city wall of Guerande Castle of Saint Malo Qui Qu en Grogne Tower Chateau de Suscinio Ile Vierge lighthouse Parlement of Brittany in Rennes Abbey and lighthouse of Saint Mathieu Ar Meilhou Glaz a Bagad from Quimper Festival du chant de marin sea songs festival in Paimpol A Breton headdress from Batz sur Mer Modern Brittany Illustration from Legends amp Romances of Brittany by Lewis Spence illustrated by W Otway Cannell Men Ruz lighthouse Ploumanac hSee also Edit France portalBrigantes Breton Celtic tribe associated with Northern England Politics of Brittany Great Britain in French as Grande BretagneNotes Edit Magnus Maximus was a native of Galicia in Spain being born on the estate of Count Theodosius Presumably this soldier was in the employ of Gratian The Visigoths version of events was that they had saved the Roman empire from a British invasion Brittany was proverbially wealthy throughout much of its history it prospered from trade before and during Roman rule mid ninth century legal documents reveal peasant landowners suing lords for trespass The House of Penthievre was wealthy Breton dowries raised impoverished nobles such as Jean II de Brosse to riches and Duchess Anne s fortune contributed to the French Renaissance to palaces such as Fontainebleau and to the Chateaux of the Loire ValleyReferences Edit Le Bro gozh ma zadou devient l hymne officiel de la Bretagne LeTelegramme Le T Letelegramme fr 24 November 2021 Retrieved 19 March 2022 a b Henriette Walter 2013 L aventure des langues en Occident Leur origine leur histoire leur geographie Robert Laffont p 113 Payne Malcolm Shardlow Steven 2002 Social Work in the British Isles UK Jessica Kingsley Publishers p 247 ISBN 978 1 8530 2833 5 Saint Michel tumulus www megalithes morbihan com Retrieved 6 November 2014 The world s 10 oldest ruins The Telegraph 4 February 2016 Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 29 June 2016 Tableaux de l economie francaise Edition 2020 Villes et communes de France INSEE Retrieved 11 December 2020 The Celtic League The Celtic League Retrieved 3 May 2011 Festival Interceltique de Lorient 2010 Festival Interceltique de Lorient Archived from the original on 12 June 2011 Retrieved 3 May 2011 Official website of the French Government Tourist Office Brittany Us franceguide com Archived from the original on 11 July 2011 Retrieved 3 May 2011 Price Glanville 30 March 1986 The Celtic connection ISBN 9780861402489 Retrieved 3 May 2011 Sharif Gemie 2007 Brittany 1750 1950 The Invisible Nation University of Wales Press Why Independance emgann chez com Retrieved 16 February 2022 Pierre Yves Lambert 1997 La Langue Gauloise p 34 Leon Fleuriot 1980 Les Origines de la Bretagne Payot pp 53 54 Leon Fleuriot 1980 Les Origines de la Bretagne Payot pp 52 53 Fabien Lecuyer 23 April 2013 Bertaeyn Galeizz change de nom Un evenement pas si anodin 7seizh Archived from the original on 7 September 2014 Retrieved 25 April 2014 Nathalie Molines and Jean Laurent Monnier 1993 Le Colombanien un facies regional du Paleolithique inferieur sur le littoral armoricano atlantique Vol 90 Bulletin de la Societe prehistorique francaise p 284 Thomas Julian 1 December 2004 Current debates on the Mesolithic Neolithic transition in Britain and Ireland Documenta Praehistorica 31 p 117 doi 10 4312 dp 31 8 ISSN 1854 2492 Mark Patton Statements in Stone Monuments and Society in Neolithic Brittany Routledge 1993 p 1 a b Venceslas Kruta 2000 Les Celtes Histoire et Dictionnaire Robert Laffont p 427 ISBN 2 7028 6261 6 Giot P R Briard J and Pape L 1995 Protohistoire de la Bretagne Ouest France Universite p 370 Julius Caesar Commentarii de Bello Gallico VII p 75 a b Universite de Rennes II ed Archeologie classique Archived from the original on 31 May 2004 Retrieved 26 February 2013 Leon Fleuriot Les origines de la Bretagne l emigration Paris Payot 1980 Smith Julia M H Province and Empire Brittany and the Carolingians Cambridge University Press 1992 pp 80 83 Christian Y M Kerboul 1997 Les Royaumes brittoniques au tres haut Moyen Age Editions du Pontig Coop Breizh pp 80 143 ISBN 2 9510310 3 3 Joel Cornette 2005 Histoire de la Bretagne et des Bretons Seuil ISBN 2 02 054890 9 Lewis Stephen M ottar s Story A Dublin Viking in Brittany England and Ireland A D 902 918 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Constance De La Warr A Twice Crowned Queen Anne of Brittany Peter Owen 2005 Joel Cornette Le marquis et le Regent Une conspiration bretonne a l aube des Lumieres Paris Tallandier 2008 Breton American History Archived from the original on 26 February 2015 Retrieved 26 February 2015 Rennes guide histoire PDF Archived from the original PDF on 18 July 2011 Retrieved 3 May 2011 Annales de Bretagne et des pays de l ouest Anjou Maine Poitou Touraine Universite d Angers 1976 J R Rotte Ar Seiz Breur Recherches et realisations pour un art Breton moderne 1923 1947 1987 Jean Markale and Patrice Pellerin 1994 Une histoire de la Bretagne Editions Ouest France p 46 ISBN 2 7373 1516 6 Mikael Bodlore Penlaez and Divi Kervella 2011 Atlas de Bretagne Atlas Breizh Coop Breizh p 100 ISBN 978 2 84346 496 6 Slate fr ed 20 December 2011 Bretagne la guerre des frontieres Rue89 ed 4 April 2012 La Bretagne terre de resistance a l extreme droite Ploumeour Menez ed Le Roc h RUZ point culminant de la Bretagne Archived from the original on 12 June 2013 Retrieved 28 February 2013 a b Emmanuele Savelli Portail de l information environnementale en Bretagne ed L histoire geologique de la Bretagne Archived from the original on 20 March 2013 Normales et records des stations meteo de France Infoclimat Retrieved 30 December 2016 Bretagne Environnement ed 2005 Les oiseaux marins des falaises des ilots des embruns et des plumes Archived from the original on 20 March 2013 Bretagne Environnement ed 2005 Les mammiferes semi aquatiques Archived from the original on 25 March 2013 Bretagne Environnement ed 2005 Que sait on des invertebres continentaux en Bretagne Archived from the original on 16 May 2013 Bretagne Environnement ed 2005 Les mammiferes Archived from the original on 25 January 2013 Bretagne Environnement ed 2006 Les plantes a fleur menacees en Bretagne Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 La Lente Mise en Place des Universites Bretonnes Archived 19 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Science Ouest N 93 ICBL information about Breton at breizh net in French Diwan FAQ 6 Ouest France ed 14 May 2011 En Bretagne l enseignement prive se rebiffe Renforcer les atouts de l economie maritime in French Region Bretagne Retrieved 1 April 2022 a b L economie bretonne editor Region Bretagne 20 of the most beautiful villages in France Guardian 13 April 2019 Retrieved 13 April 2019 From a fairytale fortress in the Loire to a clifftop stronghold in Provence these charming historic villages make perfect bases for exploring rural France a b Priscilla Franken Vocatis ed La Bretagne a un taux de chomage faible mais qui ne profite pas assez aux seniors Archived from the original on 12 April 2013 Retrieved 1 March 2013 INSEE ed 11 January 2013 Taux de chomage Pays de la Loire ed Taux de chomage trimestriel L essentiel sur la Bretagne INSEE 26 January 2022 Retrieved 2 April 2022 Linternaute villes ed Loire Atlantique Pays De Loire 44 Comparateur de territoire Region de Bretagne 53 Departement de la Loire Atlantique 44 in French INSEE Retrieved 11 December 2020 a b c Telechargement du fichier d ensemble des populations legales en 2017 INSEE Ouest France ed La bonne sante de la demographie bretonne date3 January 2011 Gecodia fr ed La demographie de la Bretagne depuis 1851 Archived from the original on 12 April 2013 Retrieved 1 March 2013 INSEE ed Demographie Population sans doubles comptes au recensement Loire Atlantique serie retropolee 1851 1962 serie arretee Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 7 July 2013 Chambre de commerce et d industrie de Bretagne ed Donnees thematiques Archived from the original on 9 February 2013 a b Sondage CNRS TMO Ouest Resultats Archived 17 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine commentes dans Ouest France 14 05 2009 page 7 Ifop and Bretons ed 18 December 2012 Les Bretons les habitants de Loire Atlantique et la question regionale PDF Archived from the original PDF on 10 October 2017 Retrieved 1 March 2013 Fanch Broudic 2009 Parler Breton au XXIe siecle Le nouveau sondage de TMO Regions including data from 2007 172 000 speakers in Lower Brittany slightly under 200 000 in whole Brittany 206 000 including students in bilingual education in French Donnees cles sur Breton Ofis ar Brezhoneg Langue bretonne et autres langues pratique et transmission PDF INSEE January 2003 Archived from the original PDF on 10 October 2017 Retrieved 28 May 2017 a b c d e Andre Le Coq amp Philippe Blanchet 2005 Centre de Recherche sur la DiversiteLinguistique de la Francophonie ed Pratiques et representations de la langue et de la culture regionales en Haute Bretagne PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2 October 2013 INSEE ed Langue bretonne et autres langues pratique et transmission PDF Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Bretagne poems in French by Amand Guerin Published by P Masgana 1842 page 238 Anatole le Braz La Legende de la Mort BiblioBazaar reprint LLC 2009 pp 430ff Ifop ed December 2006 Elements d analyse geographique de l implantation des religions en France PDF Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Herve Jaouen Brittany GAA s Mother Goose has a growing flock www gaa ie Retrieved 5 December 2021 Le Cidre Mediaoueg Ar Vediaoueg La Mediatheque Mediaoueg bzh Archived from the original on 10 September 2015 Retrieved 3 May 2011 bierbreizh Accueil Bierbreizh info Retrieved 3 May 2011 Plan routier Breton 2 Archived from the original on 5 November 2013 Plan routier Breton 3 Archived from the original on 5 November 2013 Plan routier Breton 4 Archived from the original on 5 November 2013 La Bretagne a velo Pres de 1500 km d itineraires velos velo tourismebretagne com Retrieved 24 March 2018 Cycling holidays in france FAQ page for all your questions Retrieved 30 December 2016 Francis Favereau Bretagne contemporaine Culture langue identite page 210 Skol Vreizh Morlaix 2005 ISBN 2 911447 72 7 Gwenc hlan Le Scouezec Guide de la Bretagne page 40 Coop Breizh Spezet 1987 and Le Journal de la Bretagne des origines a nos jours page 106 Larousse Paris 2001 Fac simile JO du 07 07 1967 page 06810 Legifrance Retrieved 30 December 2016 The domain www domainesinfo fr is registered by NetNames Archived from the original on 7 February 2013 Retrieved 30 December 2016 Delegated Strings ICANN New gTLDs Retrieved 30 December 2016 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Brittany Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Brittany Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Brittany Brittany in the West the end of the world Official French website in English Brittany at Curlie The official website for Brittany Tourism Brittany Regional Tourist Board The official Region Bretagne website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brittany amp oldid 1133161048, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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