British

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British is the adjectival form of Britain. In terms of etymology, it is derived from the ancient Greek Pretannic, a term once used as collective description for both Great Britain and Ireland, via the Latin Britannic, which until the 17th century more commonly referred only to Great Britain, especially the territories under Roman control or influence which included Southern Scotland as far as Dumbarton and the Stirling area.[1][2]

The term can be seen in the following contexts:

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[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Snyder, Christopher A. (2003). The Britons. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 0-631-22260-X.: Bede refers to Dumbarton as "civitas Brettonum munitissima", a most fortified place of the Britons, and Snyder notes that the Gododdin territories in the east of Scotland included the area around Stirling.
  2. ^ Britannia is so widely used in this period to indicate solely the region of modern-day Great Britain under Roman control that a definition of the term is nearly impossible to come across. However, the following sources identify it in their work: I. Cunningham, C. Fleet & C.W.J. Withers, Putting Scotland on view: Joan Blaeu’s 1654 Atlas Novus, Folio, Issue 9, Autumn 2004 ("Yet in 1577, Ortelius had met the man who would provide an historical and geographical account of Britain – or, to use its correct title as a Roman province, ‘Britannia’."), or F.N.Lee, 1997, Common Law: Roots and Fruits ("The distinguished (530 A.D.) Brythonic historian Gildas says that around A.D. 420 – many parties of "Scots and Picts crossed the Scythian Valley" into the Roman Province of Britannia alias South Britain"). In most cases literature on Roman Britain accepts as matter-of-fact that the reader will understand that Britannia in this period refers to Roman Britain.
  3. ^ "Constitutional Change and Identidy", Institute of Governance, 2006