- "Brittonic",
derived from "Briton" and also
earlier spelled "Britonic" and "
Britonnic",
emerged later in the 19th century. "Brittonic"
became more prominent...
-
represented his diocese,
referred to as the
Britonensis ecclesia or "
Britonnic church", at the
Second Council of
Braga in 572.
Records of the council...
-
Owain (Owen) and Ouen. However,
these may be
older names derived from
Britonnic language words referring to yew
trees or ovines.
Another possible more...
- Gradually,
Anglian settlers pushed west from the
kingdom of Deira. A
Britonnic presence within the
Sheffield area is
evidenced by two
settlements called...
-
Britain around the year 540. Anglo-Saxon kingdoms'
names are
coloured red.
Britonnic kingdoms'
names are
coloured black. Common languages Old
English Demonym(s)...
- Europe,
among them many Franks, Frisians, Anglo-Saxons, and both
Irish and
Britonnic Celts. Many
Irish slaves travelled in
expeditions for the colonization...
-
different cultures inhabiting the land at the time,
including Celtic,
Britonnic,
Irish and Anglo-Saxon customs. The
legal tract, the
Leges inter Brettos...
-
Ceretic of
Elmet (or
Ceredig ap Gwallog) was the last king of Elmet, a
Britonnic kingdom that
existed in the West
Yorkshire area of
Northern England in...
- Blessed"), is a
figure in
British tradition, a son of the 5th-century
Britonnic ruler Vortigern. He is
remembered for his
fierce opposition to his father's...
-
generic term
Brythoniaid continued to be used to
describe any of the
Britonnic peoples (including the Welsh) and was the more
common literary term until...