Roman conquest of Gaul, the rough area of later Domnonée was held by the pagan Curiosolite Gauls. Domnonée is said[who?] to have been founded in the 4th...
4 KB (475 words) - 21:31, 16 October 2024
(Welsh:Ithel), also spelled Judhael (with many other variants), was the King of Domnonée, part of Brittany, in the mid-7th century and later revered as a Roman...
8 KB (933 words) - 04:34, 9 August 2024
Judicael (c. 590–657) - Breton high king, king of Domnonée; united the Breton kingdoms of Domnonée and Broërec; recognized Dagobert I and Eligius Morman...
12 KB (1,259 words) - 16:21, 10 August 2024
rulers in Gaul were styled "kings" of the small realms of Cornouaille and Domnonée. Some such kings may have had a form of hegemony over all of the Brythonic...
26 KB (661 words) - 07:17, 11 October 2024
the kingdom shares a linguistic relationship with the Breton region of Domnonée (Breton: Domnonea). The kingdom is named after the Dumnonii, a British...
30 KB (3,466 words) - 04:55, 14 June 2024
local ruling elites. Toward the end of the 4th century, the Britons of Domnonée (modern Devon and Cornwall) on the South-Western peninsula of Great Britain...
129 KB (14,709 words) - 12:06, 14 October 2024
Carnac. In the Early Middle Ages, Brittany was divided into three kingdoms—Domnonée, Cornouaille (Kernev), and Bro Waroc'h (Broërec)—which eventually were...
27 KB (2,858 words) - 19:55, 6 October 2024
now modern Devon had established the region of Domnonea (in Breton) or Domnonée (in French) in the north of the peninsula, taken from the Latin Dumnonia...
8 KB (908 words) - 13:04, 10 October 2024
Conomor, the 6th century continental (and probable insular) British King of Domnonée / Dumnonia, associated in later folklore with both Cormoran of St Michael's...
32 KB (4,244 words) - 02:17, 30 May 2024
the power of the Avars on the Balkan Peninsula. Judicaël, high king of Domnonée (Brittany), visits King Dagobert I at his palace in Clichy (northwest of...
4 KB (387 words) - 09:12, 23 February 2024