Nennius
Encyclopedia : N : NE : NEN : Nennius
- For the pre-Roman British hero, see Nennius of Britain.
The other Nemnivus, or Nennius, is mentioned in a Welsh manuscript of the 9th century. In response to the snide accusation of a Saxon scholar that the Britons had no alphabet of their own, this Nemnivus is said to have invented an alphabet on the fly in order to refute this insult. The alphabet Nemnivus is said to have invented is preserved in this manuscript, and according to Nora K. Chadwick it is derived from the Old English futhark or runic writing. "Indeed the names given to some of his letters seem to show evidence of an actual knowledge of their Saxon names," Chadwick concludes.
Some conclude that these two figures are the same individual. Others argue that drawing such a conclusion is not warranted, since Nennius, the student of Elvodugus, is arguably fictional, and since the histories of both Wales and Britain over the period in question are quite incomplete.
See also
References
- David N. Dumville, "'Nennius and the Historia Brittonum," Studia Celtica, 10/11 (1975/6), 78-95
- Nora K. Chadwick, "Early Culture and Learning in North Wales" in Studies in the Early British Church (1958).
External links
- [Historia Brittonum] at the Avalon Project.
- [Nennius and Historia Brittonum] commentary from The Cambridge History of English and American Literature, Volume 1, 1907–21.
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
