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Encyclopedia > Legendary Dukes of Cornwall

Duke of Cornwall here refers to the legendary dukes of Cornwall in Celtic Britain as established by such pseudo-historical authors as Nennius, Gildas, and above all Geoffrey of Monmouth. The list is extremely patchy, and it must not be assumed that every succession was unbroken. Indeed, Geoffroi repeatedly introduces Dukes of Cornwall only to promote them to the Kingship of the Britons and thus put an end to their line as (merely) dukes. As adjuncts or supporting roles to the kings of the Britons, the dukes of Cornwall are considered part of the vast Matter of Britain.


The list is more often thought of as a conglomeration of various Celtic rulers, Celtic warlords, and mythical heroes. If the lists of kings of Britain are mythological and apocryphal (though extraordinarily influential in mediaeval historiography), then the list of dukes must be considered still more a genealogical and historical myth with no solid basis to most historians.


Even within Geoffrey, the title of these rulers fluctuates between "duke" (dux Cornubiae) and "king" (rex Cornubiae).

king or duke title notes approximate time frame
Corineus   in the time of Brutus c. 1100 BCE
Henwinus duke in the time of Leir c. 750 BCE
Cunedagius duke in the time of Queen Cordelia c. 715 BCE
Cloten king during pentarchy after Ferrex and Porrex c. 450 BCE
Dunvallo Molmutius king then king of Britain c. 420 BCE
Belinus   simultaneously king of Britain c. 390 BCE
Tenvantius duke in time of Cassivelaunus c. 55 BCE
Asclepiodotus duke becomes king of Britain c. 295 CE
Caradocus duke becomes king of Britain c. 380 CE
Dionotus duke simultaneously king of Britain c. 390 CE
Gorlois duke step-father of Arthur c. 510 CE
Cador duke, then king   c. 530 CE
Constantine duke subsequently king of Britain 542 CE
Blederic duke at the time Augustine arrives 597 CE


For a list of Kings of Cornwall from the fifth century to the Saxon conquest, see King of Cornwall.


For a list of Dukes of Cornwall from 1337 to the present, see Duke of Cornwall.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Cornwall - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography (3330 words)
Cornwall (Cornish: Kernow) is a county at the extreme South-West of England on the peninsula that lies to the west of the River Tamar.
Cornwall's population is 513,527, and population density 144 people per square kilometre, ranking it 40th and 41st respectively compared to the other 47 counties of England.
Cornwall has a relatively high level of population growth, however, at 11.2% in the 1980s and 5.3% in the 1990s, giving it the fifth highest population growth of the English counties.Office for National Statistics, 2001.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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