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Encyclopedia > Ancient Britons

The term Briton may have the following meanings:

  • in a historical context:
  • in a modern context, a resident of the British but human habitation in Britain goes back more than 10,000 years. These first Britons were hunter_gatherers and crossed to Britain by the land bridge from mainland Europe during the end of the last Ice age. There are conflicting accounts as to the physical appearance of these first Britons and their influence in modern British culture is questionable, although river names such as Thames, Tamar, Severn, Tyne, etc., are attributed to the culture of these earliest ancestors of the British. One modern view is that the Britons of today accurately reflect the physical appearances of the Britons of the past in the areas in which they reside, such as tall and blonde in the south of England, tall and dark in Northumbria and southern Scotland, and short and dark in north Wales.


    Welsh connection

    Modern genetic evidence indicates that in parts of remote Wales are those with the most similar genetic connection to the earliest inhabitants of Britain, and have a genetic connection to the Basque. 3000 years ago, Britain was invaded by Celts who brought with them superior fighting skills and whose culture dominated the indigenous people. Ancient Kings of the Britons written by Nennius, Gildas, and Geoffrey of Monmouth helped make rich histories of these people. Over time, they became Celtic in culture, and it is in this time that the Picts became noted as a separate cultural entity in the north and east of what is now Scotland.


    Foreign conquest

    Britain was later conquered by other peoples, such as the Romans, the Irish Scots, various Germanic peoples (see Anglo-Saxons) and finally the Normans, each of which brought a definite cultural change in Great Britain that was markedly different from before.


    Prior to the Second World War, it was believed that the Anglo_Saxons had driven the Britons into Wales, Cornwall, and Brittany and wiped out the remaining inhabitants. This romanticised view, popular with 'Celtic Nationalists', fails to take into consideration the complexities of a few thousand Germanic warriors against millions of, albeit disunited, Britons. While many of those that would have had the means to, such as the elite classes of Romano_British, would have fled from the Anglo_Saxon advance, the majority of the population, as with the Roman invasion, remained and became absorbed into the developing English culture. Over the course of several centuries, Germanic culture and influence dominated over most of what is now England and south eastern Scotland. It is also seldom commented upon but at the time of the Germanic advance into England, the Irish advance into Scotland was resulting in a similar situation, with Gaelic invaders causing many Britons in Scotland to move south into Cumbria and east to eastern Scotland, with the remainder becoming absorbed into the fledgling Scottish nation.


    About 150 million people world-wide refer to their ethnic heritage as British or as having a strong British influence. The largest concentration of ethnic Britons living outside of the United Kingdom is in the Australia and British, Alternate words for British.


    The use of the word Briton in a modern context is a historically recent development. Prior to the Act of Union, nationalistic and cultural differences were such that few inhabitants of what is now the United Kingdom would identify themselves as 'Britons'.


    External links

    • BBC article on genetic evidence supporting a Welsh-Basque connection (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/1256894.stm)
    • BBC article on genetic disparity between modern Welsh and English (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/wales/2076470.stm)



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Ancient Britons and Nennius (1798 words)
Moreover, he ordered it to be made between the Britons, and the Picts and Scots; for the Scots from the west, and the Picts from the north, unanimously made war against the Britons; but were at peace among themselves.
After this, the Britons despised the authority of the Romans, equally refusing to pay them tribute, or to receive their kings; nor durst the Romans any longer attempt the government of a country, the natives of which massacred their deputies.
After the above-said war between the Britons and Romans, the assassination of their rulers, and the victory of Maximus, who slew Gratian, and the termination of the Roman power in Britain, they were in alarm forty years.
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