Commemorating the Past: The Breton Church and its Irish Element, c.800-1100
Citation:
Yhuel, Elysée Natalie, Commemorating the Past: The Breton Church and its Irish Element, c.800-1100, Trinity College Dublin, School of Histories & Humanities, History, 2023Download Item:

Abstract:
Brittany's beginnings as a refuge for British migrants meant that, historically, Brittany
seemed looked to the Insular world for its culture, language, and religion. Beginning in the
ninth century, Brittany faced several ruptures which affected the Breton church directly.
These ruptures not only included the increased Carolingian hegemony over the region, but the
adoption of Benedictine reform, the nascence of a Breton royal dynasty, and the viking
invasions. In the midst of these developments, Breton monastic centres produced
hagiographies to remember the lives and deeds of their founder saints, and particularly, their
insular origins and careers. Wales, and to a lesser extent, Cornwall, play a key role in these
hagiographies, which is unsurprising due to the Welsh and Cornish origins of Brittany.
However, Breton hagiographers also recalled a past in which Ireland and Brittany had close
links, although the evidence to support this is not always straightforward. This thesis studies
Breton hagiographies c.800-1100 through the lens of cultural
memory to examine to how Ireland and the Irish were represented in a Breton monastic
context. It measures to what extent the Irish influence on the Breton church affected the
manner in which Breton monastic communities navigated the historical ruptures mentioned
earlier. Looking at a dossier of ten Breton saints, this thesis argues that there was a significant
Irish influence in Breton hagiographies produced in the west of Brittany. With the exception
of the hagiographies of the abbey of Land?vennec, which shows evidence for a direct
connection with Ireland, the Irish influence on other hagiographies was mediated through
Wales. Moreover, the commemoration of these saints and their Irish connections suggests
that Breton monastic identity in the west of Brittany was shaped by spiritual ideologies
shared with Ireland.
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Author: Yhuel, Elysée Natalie
Other Titles:
Commemorating the Past: The Breton Church and its Irish Element, c.800-1100Advisor:
Duffy, SeanPublisher:
Trinity College Dublin. School of Histories & Humanities. Discipline of HistoryType of material:
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