The Breton language is in danger, and it's France's fault | Raising voices

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  • čas přidán 7. 05. 2024
  • France's Eurovision song was in Breton -- a language whose existence the government doesn't even acknowledge. From a million speakers back in the 1950s to less than 200,000 today, Breton is at high risk of going extinct. Mostly because France tried to kill it off.
    Chapters:
    00:00 - 00:32 Intro
    00:32 - 01:27 What's the deal between France and Breton?
    01:27 - 02:50 Why bringing Breton to Eurovision
    02:51 - 04:18 France's suppression of Breton
    04:18 - 05:37 The Breton TikToker
    05:37 - 06:40 Breton-only schools
    06:40 - 07:20 The Constitutional Council's decision
    _______________________________________________________
    There are more than 7,000 languages in the world, and around 40% of them are disappearing. Unesco estimates show that every two weeks, a language disappears. Raising voices is ENTR's series about Europe's disappearing languages and the people fighting to save them.

Komentáře • 478

  • @jackieroberts7895
    @jackieroberts7895 Před rokem +304

    I hope our fellow Bretons are fighting for there cultural identity and their language keep fighting and never giveup love from wales

    • @_Twisty
      @_Twisty Před 11 měsíci +21

      hi from Naoned, we are still fighting even though its hard. thanks for your support ✊🏻

    • @Dogebro200
      @Dogebro200 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Yeah we're not

    • @saguntum-iberian-greekkons7014
      @saguntum-iberian-greekkons7014 Před 6 měsíci +5

      I am a Breizophile, im learning it, but also Celtophile as a whole.
      I have to admit the Celtic languages are very hard especially the 3 Gaelic ones and Welsh, the pronunciation (written vs pronounced) is a nightmare

    • @user-ol2fb9fo7r
      @user-ol2fb9fo7r Před 3 měsíci +2

      mae ein diwylliant Celtaidd yn wych!

    • @Quent5000
      @Quent5000 Před 2 měsíci

      We do somehow, academic breton anyway

  • @stephrichards4611
    @stephrichards4611 Před rokem +260

    Dont feel pressured to speak French. You are Breton. I am Welsh. I often hear the argument why bother to speak welsh when you can get the job done in English. But with Welsh the language affects the culture of the people and even the accent when speaking English. We do not use our language as a means to an end. We enjoy it (and we love confusing the English or saying stuff about them that they cant understand) 😄

    • @fransgreidanus5678
      @fransgreidanus5678 Před rokem +22

      I speak the minority language Frisian and I love to speak it. Just cool to speak something not many are able to :) I use it mostly as a secret language. Being a stranger in own country

    • @stephrichards4611
      @stephrichards4611 Před rokem +9

      @@fransgreidanus5678 oh wow. no one should ever feel like a stranger in their own country. Keep speaking Frisian!

    • @fransgreidanus5678
      @fransgreidanus5678 Před rokem +15

      @@stephrichards4611 I think I use the wrong word. More like: tourist! When I am in Amsterdam and I see the faces of the people there going like: huh? I really enjoy it. I really like Welsh too! Celtic languages are one of my favourite language branches. Question: how mamy people speak it? De lytse talen moatte we seker yn dizze wrâld hâlde!

    • @tultrapfighter
      @tultrapfighter Před 8 měsíci

      @@fransgreidanus5678 sa nuver om n oare frysk te fynen op t internet. der binne sa weinig haha.

    • @ayangdidi5524
      @ayangdidi5524 Před 5 měsíci

      Well it's more easier to speak like this in Wales , the British government is much more Liberal with other languages than English. The French politicians - all parties included- do are against plurality use of minorities 😢languages in France official life.

  • @ianworley8169
    @ianworley8169 Před rokem +298

    I met a Breton girl in Bretagne whilst on holiday. She told me she had penpals in Wales and Scotland who spoke Welsh and Gallic respectively. They would write to each other in their own languages, and could, more or less, understand each other, as their Celtic languages shared common origins.

    • @oscarosullivan4513
      @oscarosullivan4513 Před rokem +18

      While they have the same word order structure they are different families. Gàidhlig is closer to Gaeilge especially west Ulster and the extinct since the 1980’s East Ulster and Gaelg than Welsh,Cornish and Breton.

    • @ianworley8169
      @ianworley8169 Před rokem +8

      @@oscarosullivan4513 I bow to your linguistic knowledge. All I can say is, that's as explained to me by a pretty young girl on a Breton beach in the early 1980s. She spoke very little English and her pen pals in Wales and Scotland, no French. They each wrote in their own Celtic language, from which each was able to get the gist of what the other was saying. At least, that was my understanding, although I admit to being distracted at the time. Thinking on, Oscar, it might have been Welsh and Cornish, but so few people in Cornwall spoke Cornish back then. I'm pretty sure she said Welsh and Scottish, but perhaps memory serves me not so well after all these years.

    • @oscarosullivan4513
      @oscarosullivan4513 Před rokem +5

      @@ianworley8169 Fair enough

    • @antoni-olafsabater9729
      @antoni-olafsabater9729 Před rokem +2

      Magnificient !

    • @Alexander-vo4gv
      @Alexander-vo4gv Před 11 měsíci +13

      Welsh and Breton are similar, but Gaelic is far too different to understand

  • @hieratics
    @hieratics Před rokem +256

    France likes to cry how English is menacing to the French language (especially in Canada or in the international community) but has no pity for their own regional languages

    • @FairyCRat
      @FairyCRat Před rokem +26

      We don't care about what language Canadians speak, and we certainly have no problem with needing to learn English to better our professional lives, but it's certainly hard for many people here to feel any connection to our historical languages, when our elders were forced to forget them right upon entering primary school.

    • @LeJobastre1215
      @LeJobastre1215 Před rokem +7

      You're the only one crying here

    • @vragolanmali
      @vragolanmali Před rokem +4

      @@FairyCRat quebec is french😏

    • @BunnyAce
      @BunnyAce Před rokem +12

      Hard to take a comment seriously when it starts with "France likes to cry".

    • @naturazpolski9213
      @naturazpolski9213 Před rokem +5

      @@BunnyAce Why? Offended french-fry here?

  • @cipherx6334
    @cipherx6334 Před rokem +36

    I am a celt living in Wales and am on a mission to learn all of the celtic languages. In wales in the 18th and 19th century Welsh children had to endure the 'welsh knot' which was the same kind of thing as the symbol or hoof in Breton, the child left holding the item at the end of the day would be subjected to cruel and physical punishment. The fact that the celtic peoples have been oppressed and punished for speaking our minority languages is abhorrent. I live in hope that the celtic languages spread in popularity among the younger generations.

    • @-._A2._-
      @-._A2._- Před 5 měsíci +2

      I am on same mission. I'm starting with Gàidhlig. Then I will do Cymraeg. Saorsa!

  • @WalesTheTrueBritons
    @WalesTheTrueBritons Před rokem +71

    We know exactly how you feel Here in Wales, as your ancestral Brothers and Sisters we have suffered under England too. Yma O Hyd!

    • @enentr
      @enentr  Před rokem +11

      Coming soon to a community near you... stay tuned! 👀

    • @ianworley8169
      @ianworley8169 Před rokem +10

      As an English person, I hope one day the hated Union withers and each country lives in friendship and independence. As a person of working class origins, I know that the same people who brought suffering and dominion to Wales, Scotland and the island of Ireland, were no less brutal against the poor in England.

    • @Rynewulf
      @Rynewulf Před rokem +8

      @@ianworley8169 completely agree. Poor factory workers, farm hands and maids who couldnt understand each other as far apart as Nantes, Norfolk and Inverness all had and have more in common than our landlords that can speak to us

    • @stephrichards4611
      @stephrichards4611 Před rokem +7

      Cymru am byth, Bretagne am byth!

    • @hooverbaglegs
      @hooverbaglegs Před 8 měsíci +4

      Breizh da viken💪

  • @cardatshistoricament-marti9916

    All the support from Catalonia! Culture and languages are part of the human heritage and they must be conserved! Long life Breton!

    • @greenlamped2842
      @greenlamped2842 Před rokem +3

      I would rather everyone speak one language

    • @grassytramtracks
      @grassytramtracks Před rokem

      ​@@greenlamped2842 that would be so boring. It's erasure of culture

    • @zagozago9893
      @zagozago9893 Před 11 měsíci +22

      @@greenlamped2842 Thankfully, that won't happen.

    • @rolandscales9380
      @rolandscales9380 Před 7 měsíci +7

      @@greenlamped2842 I would rather that everyone could speak more than one language.

    • @Domina1190
      @Domina1190 Před měsícem

      @@greenlamped2842 No thank you.

  • @jorgedeanoperez2997
    @jorgedeanoperez2997 Před rokem +81

    Galician here. Our celtic language is all but lost to time sans for a few words surviving in our language, but our own Romance Galician is also walking towards extinction. You have a brother in your struggle in me, my dear Breton cousins. Keep up the fight for your identity!

    • @clouds2593
      @clouds2593 Před rokem +3

      Fala o português, meu amigo.

    • @stephrichards4611
      @stephrichards4611 Před rokem +1

      You should form a group or society to preserve the language.

    • @jorgedeanoperez2997
      @jorgedeanoperez2997 Před rokem +6

      @@rafael16759 that's... What I said? That we only have a few words from the celtic language from our region surviving to this day. The comparison wasn't drawn on the language family, but on how it is being snuffed out by its bigger, meaner dominant language from the people who conquered us

    • @jorgedeanoperez2997
      @jorgedeanoperez2997 Před rokem

      @@rafael16759 so...?

    • @Sergiovision
      @Sergiovision Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@nifelheirn In the twisted mind of some Spanish lusophobes, yes.

  • @fionaad858
    @fionaad858 Před rokem +71

    Great video, Trugarez bras. Thanks for mentioning how the French state actually tried to kill off the language and their different methods : the generation of my grandparents were beaten up at school for speaking Breton. They didn’t teach it to their children because they didn’t see a future for the language, they were shamed, excluded and physically assaulted by the clergy teaching at school if they spoke Breton. Even nowadays they carry these scars and hide to speak Breton between them, my grand mother still refuses to speak Breton with me even though it is my native language, like hers.

    • @enentr
      @enentr  Před rokem +4

      Hi Fiona! Thanks for sharing your experience, we're glad you liked the video.

    • @bernezBzh29
      @bernezBzh29 Před rokem +5

      Sadly true but it is not the clergy who have been most guilty, but the lay teachers. Because the priests, on the contrary, used Breton a little, with an interest, of course, that of being understood in the church. The "Breton priest" was also the name of the bad Breton and gave rise to misunderstandings at mass.

    • @KingMidas1983
      @KingMidas1983 Před rokem +8

      Thank you. My grandfather had the same stories. He grew up in Carhaix-Plougher and was beaten as well. He was an intelligent man, learning French (obviously,) English, and Spanish. Unfortunately, he lost all knowledge of Breton by the time he was in his 80s. I bought a small English-Breton dictionary that he thumbed through, and he recognized some words as well as how to count.
      Videos like this give me hope that others will pick up the language, if not to learn about the travesty committed by the French in their own country and colonies.

    • @zagozago9893
      @zagozago9893 Před 11 měsíci

      The Brits did it in Cymru. "'The Welsh Not''. Physically assaulting kids for speaking their own language.

  • @MrFearDubh
    @MrFearDubh Před 8 měsíci +23

    The history of the "symbol" being passed to Breton speakers in school reminds me of the “tally sticks”, referred to as “an bata scoir”, which were used to beat children caught speaking Irish in Ireland. School children were expected to wear this stick on a piece of string around their necks, and whenever they spoke in Irish, a notch was cut into the stick. And when enough notches were made into the sticks they were beaten for speaking Irish instead of English in the school.

  • @thejackal9834
    @thejackal9834 Před rokem +31

    I admire them for trying to preserve their cultural roots and heritage.

  • @tibsky1396
    @tibsky1396 Před rokem +13

    Not just Breton, Most of Historical languages in Modern France are in danger (EX: Occitan/Provençal spoken in the South, the language of the troubadours in Medieval era).

  • @sgt.mcgillicuddy2948
    @sgt.mcgillicuddy2948 Před rokem +11

    The French gouvernement should look at what happened in Louisiana in the US as an example. French itself is almost eradicated completely due to similar measures that took place in the 20s. Now it’s primarily the old folks who still speak Cajun French (although there are efforts from the younger generation to learn)

  • @jobig65
    @jobig65 Před rokem +90

    Thanks a lot for your video 🙂 However, one thing about your map of Brittany : the departement of Loire-Atlantique is historically part of Brittany (taken out of Brittany in the 50's) but overall people used to speak breton in some part of this departement, of nowadays a lot of people is learning breton around Nantes for example.

    • @enentr
      @enentr  Před rokem +10

      Thanks for this! That's true, and we were told this during our report. The reason why we used an official map of France - among other reasons - is to keep things clearer for non-French speakers. We're so glad you like the video!

    • @oscarosullivan4513
      @oscarosullivan4513 Před rokem +1

      @@enentr The we have never spoken Breton in Renne sounds like Irish has not been spoken in Dublin or the east coast for 800 years

    • @biereforte2569
      @biereforte2569 Před rokem +7

      44 = bzh

    • @bernezBzh29
      @bernezBzh29 Před rokem +4

      Totally. It is also in Nantes that the famous castle of the Dukes of Brittany is located. And there are also many Diwan schools in Loire-Atlantique as well as a college in Nantes

    • @bernezBzh29
      @bernezBzh29 Před rokem +1

      There are also several diwan schools in Rennes and soon, normally, a college as well

  • @jessicavitale3408
    @jessicavitale3408 Před rokem +70

    Another problem is lack of resources for non French speakers. If an English speaker like myself wants to learn Breton like I am doing now, I feel like I have to learn both French and Breton at the same time. I have to look up a word in Breton and resort to Google translate to find the meaning from French to English.

    • @enentr
      @enentr  Před rokem +15

      How interesting Jessica! What made you want to lear Breton?

    • @jessicavitale3408
      @jessicavitale3408 Před rokem +20

      @@enentr I love languages. I had no idea that Brittany was a Celtic Country, so it was like discovering a magical language and culture that I never knew existed.

    • @zeuzeul
      @zeuzeul Před rokem +3

      Just ask to Breton, we'll be glad to help you, and it's the best way to learn a language.

    • @jessicavitale3408
      @jessicavitale3408 Před rokem +5

      @@zeuzeul Ask Where ?🤔. I'd be grateful for the help.

    • @giuseppedelfino8246
      @giuseppedelfino8246 Před rokem +2

      There is the course published by Routledge, "Colloquial Breton".

  • @telahquemere6100
    @telahquemere6100 Před rokem +34

    thank you! my heritage is Breton and i grew up with a Breton speaking grandfather with his siblings! i love my people. Its a strong Celtic heritage with a connection to earth and sea.

    • @Amad-AshtaanMadison
      @Amad-AshtaanMadison Před 27 dny +1

      my grandfather was fluent in Breton and my town is bringing back programs to teach kids in Breton so the language can keep going. i wished back in 2002 there were programs and schools that only taught in breton. i grew up learning french. learning the language is definitely on my bucket list.

  • @alesia4309
    @alesia4309 Před rokem +57

    I'm Belarusian, I have no roots in Breizh but I understand and absolutely can relate to the struggle of Brezhoneg speakers so trugarez for making this video and raising awareness!

    • @jalbert9851
      @jalbert9851 Před rokem +2

      Unfortunately the Belarusian language is also about to die, if it is not dead already. Very beautiful Slavic language.

    • @oscarosullivan4513
      @oscarosullivan4513 Před rokem

      As can I

    • @alesia4309
      @alesia4309 Před rokem +8

      @@jalbert9851 yes, i know, that's why i wrote this comment, but i want to reassure you that more and more people start to understand the importance of speaking Belarusian, like i did, and so I'm positive that the Belarusian language won't dissapear any time soon

    • @wipemeoff8388
      @wipemeoff8388 Před rokem

      @@alesia4309 As a non Byelorussian member of the r/Belarus and revolution I can say that I see what you mean. But still lots of Russian bots and agents in the sub reddit lol.
      People always get mad when a post is written in Russian or the name of Belorussian guy is spelled in Russian.
      Hope you guys get to keep your culture man.

    • @h3994
      @h3994 Před rokem +5

      You have brest in beliorussia, we have the city with the same name in britanny

  • @jorgitoviejoamigo2736
    @jorgitoviejoamigo2736 Před rokem +9

    The more languages you know, is the best for people, and good for brain, like a mental gym, and you make friends. My humble point of view.

  • @Sergiovision
    @Sergiovision Před 9 měsíci +7

    Breton became so weak that even when it's spoken today, it has a very strong French accent and lost the original phonetics which were much closer to Welsh and Cornish.

  • @fri5728
    @fri5728 Před rokem +11

    I mean, to me as a speaker of neither Breton nor French Breton does sound somewhat "Frenchy". But on the other hand Welsh also sounds a bit "Englishy", I guess neighboring languages just do kind of colour off onto each other.

    • @enentr
      @enentr  Před rokem +6

      They do! Also -- one has to think that most modern speakers have an "accent", as there are very few native Breton speakers, making the language sound... "Frenchier"!

    • @lmnll2742
      @lmnll2742 Před 10 měsíci

      The breton spoken today is a kind of newspeak created in 1941.

  • @theChaosKe
    @theChaosKe Před 7 měsíci +4

    The EU should pressure france a bit to respect its minorities.

  • @fdghn4567
    @fdghn4567 Před 7 měsíci +4

    You are right, France did try to kill the Breton Language. My brother in law and his brothers got caned if they were heard talking in Breton to each other in school.

  • @AristizabalixGrimm
    @AristizabalixGrimm Před měsícem +2

    I'm Colombian but am currently working on a historical fantasy novel wherein the main character is and speaks Breton. Please, keep fighting and don't let your language be extinguished.

  • @killiancohara
    @killiancohara Před rokem +16

    Would love to see the Celtic nations align.
    Tá ár lá ag teacht ☘️

  • @thibault4211
    @thibault4211 Před rokem +31

    Breton is not the only language that was spoken in Brittany, gallo is the other one. Gallo comes from Latin contrary to Breton. My ancestors spoke gallo and were from Higher Brittany, around Rennes. Today Breton is seeing a huge raise in interest in Brittany, however gallo does not. The region of Brittany, an administrative division of France that does not encompass all parts of Brittany, shows way more interest in protecting breton compared to gallo which is a shame. Both languages should be protected. My ancestors were as Breton as someone from Lower Brittany where Breton was heavenly spoken. In a country, France, where everything is centralized in Paris, changes will be difficult to put in place. Recognizing Breton and Gallo, or regional differences, go against the very ideas of the French Revolution which were to unify different people as one, the French, with one culture and one language, French.

    • @enentr
      @enentr  Před rokem +9

      Thank you for this, that's very insightful and yes -- Gallo is incredibly fascinating in itself, and just as deserving of protection. This is only the first episode of our series on endangered languages, so stay tuned
      !

    • @MorganOfGlencoeOfficiel
      @MorganOfGlencoeOfficiel Před rokem +1

      From Gallo-speaking part of Brittany here too ! high five !

    • @lmnll2742
      @lmnll2742 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@enentr 'Gallo' is a breton word that mean 'french', it was never used by people of Haute Bretagne back then because it's not their language.

    • @amaeliss7827
      @amaeliss7827 Před 4 měsíci +2

      ​@@enentr one of my friends says Gallo is to breton what modern scotts is to Scottish Gaelic, and I think it's brilliant.

    • @ninab.4540
      @ninab.4540 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@enentrPlease talk about Brasilla too!

  • @grassytramtracks
    @grassytramtracks Před rokem +7

    Regional languages can and should be revived. Welsh was nearly wiped off the map but it has made a good resurgence. In Wales, there was a similar thing that used to be used where anyone who spoke Welsh had a Welsh sign, and the last person wearing it got beaten

  • @alistairmcelwee7467
    @alistairmcelwee7467 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Constitutionally, French is the only language that can be used officially in the whole country. France adopted the 5th Republic's constitution in 1958, a time at which only 25% of the French spoke what is modern French. About 50% of French could understand it. (Info from Wikipedia). Many other French languages exist. My favourite is Occitan, which, like Breton, has been strongly suppressed by official French authorities. Also, like Breton, the speakers in the French part of the Occitan region are almost all senior citizens, and it has been younger people - seeing that they are about to lose their history and culture - who have started teaching Occitan again. I think it is reprehensible that France should deprive people of their native languages for the sake of speaking one language as their primary language. This is the kind of thing which modern China is doing with Mandarin - and now even pushing to suppress Cantonese. An amendment to the constitution could be considered to allow the teaching of languages like Breton and Occitan, etc., especially now that almost everybody born in France can speak it. In my country, the New Zealand government went through a period of squashing the Māori language before Māoris reasserted themselves and made their language an official language of New Zealand. Now it's part of schools. When you kill a language, you kill a culture. How is that French?

  • @victoro6829
    @victoro6829 Před 11 měsíci +3

    I thought the French Revolution eradicated all languages and dialects in France. Until today I did not know that had another language in French territory.

  • @patrickcarragher6774
    @patrickcarragher6774 Před rokem +26

    The damage done by the liberal revolution and the Jacobins in particular on France’s regional cultures is one of the greatest tragedies in Western European history.

    • @ninab.4540
      @ninab.4540 Před 4 měsíci

      Do something about it? Why are you still ruled over by dead people?

  • @BuckDanny2314
    @BuckDanny2314 Před 11 měsíci +9

    While it is true France holds a responsability in Breton's disappearance, this is a relatively new phenomenon, whose responsability rests mainly on the Third French Republic. Moreover, it is definitely true Breton was never spoken in Rennes, since this City is part of Upper Britanny, where people speak Gallo instead of Breton.

    • @ohlavash543
      @ohlavash543 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Totally true, also because of a huge misunderstanding, I’ve meet many people who’s family was from Brittany, and thus thought they were brittons and learnt it. While in truth they were from historically Gallo speaking area.

  • @camwillsmusic7153
    @camwillsmusic7153 Před 2 měsíci +3

    I’ve just started learning my Celtic language Cornish, got a book of Cornish translated to Breton, it’s so similar, apparently more similar to each other than Cornish is to Welsh

  • @yezholein9252
    @yezholein9252 Před rokem +26

    There is breton speakers in "Loire atlantique" too 😉 (a part of Brittany that has been separated by french government and put in an other region, but it's still Brittany (just not in "région bretagne" ) 💪

    • @Morvaout
      @Morvaout Před 7 měsíci

      You are right, this is not understandable, that such a fine video made use of french administrative maps, and not use of real Brittany maps (excepted for the first one).
      Such as giving the pourcentage of breton speakers in France, as breton is not spoken in France, only in Brittany.
      This is like giving the pourcentage of welsh speakers in the population of the UK.
      Or the apache langue in all US !

  • @rsdtknqr
    @rsdtknqr Před 9 měsíci +5

    What I've noticed in many videos where French people speak Breton, is they speak the words, but with a French accent. Their Breton sounds French, not Celtic. If you listen to all the other Celtic languages that exist, they sound very distinct. They also sound like each other, roughly. I suspect that authentic Breton sounds different. What's therefore REALLY urgent, is to find old Breton's who still speak with the original pronunciation, record it and use if in the instruction of Breton at schools. Before it is too late! Maybe it's already too late...

    • @enentr
      @enentr  Před 9 měsíci +3

      Thanks for your comment and for a very good point! While finding native Breton speakers is still possible, the language is now a second language for most people, and it's therefore influenced heavily by the French accent. Then again, languages are constantly changing and adapting to the territories they're spoken in so this is a fairly normal evolution!

    • @bertoldriesenteil1430
      @bertoldriesenteil1430 Před 7 měsíci +1

      I am Breton. I know how you feel. English sounds french to me too. In fact 41% of english words are french words spellt and/or pronounced wrong. Breton has far less french words than english does. The idea that other celtic languages have their own character but not breton is not true. Breton is closely related to welsh and cornish which means that they sound similar. They have the common character of P celtic languages. That is what language groups are defined by, their shared traits or character. Finding old people who might speak a more 'authentic' breton, whatever that means, as you suggest has been done for years, and continues today. Thousands of recordings are exstant. I am not sure that they will tell you what you want to hear though. French too is continuously evolving. What sounds french to you might not have sounded french to many french people 100 years ago. Nasalisation is on the decline in some regions both in french and in breton. But what sounds french or breton? Who decides the answer to that question? Let's leave that very difficult question to linguists. And lastly french and celtic are not diametical opposites like black and white. French has a celtic but also germanic component. It isn't just degenerated latin.

    • @rsdtknqr
      @rsdtknqr Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​@@bertoldriesenteil1430 thanks for your reply. I think there is a slight misunderstanding, we are actually agreeing on the part that all celtic languages have their own character, inCLUDING Breton. Indeed it is closely related to Welsh and Cornish. I might want to add a bit more to expand on my point. As it so happens, I am a university trained linguist, so I trust that will give me some background to make my point.
      It's true that languages evolve over time naturally, which is often due to the influence of other dominant languages. Such as Dutch (I'm Dutch) has adopted a lot of English vocabulary since 1945, when the USA became a dominant factor in our (and Western) culture. Before that, French words were included in our language due to the influence of the French Revolution. However, Dutch mostly sounds Dutch: most French and English words are 'Dutchified' in their pronunciation. Same goes for English: they adopted French vocabulary, but even these words are 'Englishified' in their pronunciation.
      My point with the Celtic languages is that originally they had/have a very distinct pronunciation, distinct from their Germanic and Romance language influencers, mainly English and French. I find the pronunciation of Celtic languages by English people who learned these languages as a second language, tends to sound very English. This is also the critique of Welsh speakers for example! Many Bretons learn Breton as a second language and don't pick up on the subtleties of how Breton is 'supposed' to sound. Who are the sources of this 'original Breton'? The people who learned Breton as a FIRST language, and these are/have died out rapidly by now.
      So in all Celtic languages, the original pronunciation is under threat, because the amount of native speakers on all sides has nearly died out. And Manx and Cornish already died out, they have no native speakers left. Good that they are trying to revive it though.
      So in conclusion, I think it would be great if Breton people make a very rigorous effort to train themselves in the pronunciation of their native speaking forefathers. And to include this fact in school. Whether the pronunciation of Breton of their native speaking forefathers is the real deal is not easy to answer. But it sounds more authentic than the Breton as pronounced by young French people learning Breton as a 2nd language.
      Finally, you are right that all languages evolve over time and influence each other. But just as in geo-politics, some languages are too dominant and some are too weakened. Ideally, the weakened languages beef themselves up, restore themselves, before allowing the neighboring dominant language to butt in too much.

    • @davidperrott5743
      @davidperrott5743 Před 6 měsíci

      That's because they are French speakers who have learnt Breton as a foreign language. You have to search for recordings of native speakers to hear how it originally sounded. One example is Anjela Duval who also spoke French with a strong Breton accent.

  • @eikthyrnirodinson9662
    @eikthyrnirodinson9662 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Trugarez vras deoc'h 'vit an abadenn-mañ a-zivout Brezhoneg. Ar yezh zo a-bouez. Pouezusoc'h da sikourañ anzhi. Thanks for this video about Breton. This is an important language. Very important to preserve it.

  • @amaeliss7827
    @amaeliss7827 Před 4 měsíci +3

    My dad grew up in Paris, so he has avoided a lot of trauma from his generation, but people his age around me have similar stories of being punished for knowing breton, and many of his cousins have different names on their ID because breton names werent accepted.
    Even I, at some point, felt embarrassed and weird for speaking my language, because everyone around me treated it like i was a circus attraction

  • @victorwild3188
    @victorwild3188 Před rokem +13

    From a galician speaker, from galicia, a region with celtic heritage, in the northwest of its "country", with a region in it called finisterre (what?? I might search for these similarities), I just have to say that the frech did a lot of damage to the now regional languages "thanks" to their ideas of modern nations created in their revolution and its centralism. Galician its an oficial language, so I just have to say, keep fighting, keep fighting in every aspect to not lose your heritage and culture that have been given to you by your ancerstors and that you deserve to have 💙🖤

    • @jessicavitale3408
      @jessicavitale3408 Před rokem

      Galicia should be classified as a Celtic country...I think of it as such.

    • @autumnphillips151
      @autumnphillips151 Před 20 dny

      Finisterre is from Latin. “The name Finisterre, like that of Finistère in France, derives from the Latin finis terrae, meaning "end of the earth".” It’s because Spanish and French both came from Latin. How could you not notice that? It has nothing to do with the Celts.

  • @yezholein9252
    @yezholein9252 Před rokem +7

    Thanks for this this video, as a breton speaker (an teacher) this kind of vidéo is important ! Pleasure to see all this people.
    (I have some vidéo in breton langage on my Channel fi if you want to hear more)

  • @ayangdidi5524
    @ayangdidi5524 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Tell the French government they have to complain with international laws and treaties protecting Breton language and it's speakers. French are speaking loudly out France is the land of liberty: the inside reality is quite different.It's a jobinism country, republican authoritarian monarchy.
    Tiern e peb Amzer.

  • @shadikhaled1730
    @shadikhaled1730 Před rokem +32

    Loire-Atlantique is part of Brittany too, only separate administratively by the French state. There were native speakers of breton there until the middle of the last century, and there are also Diwan schools today. It would have been cool to talk about that too ! Anyway, nice video 😉

    • @eddybabas3889
      @eddybabas3889 Před rokem +1

      Le peuple de Loire Atlantique ne se sent pas breton.
      Eddy de Bretagne 😜

    • @h3994
      @h3994 Před rokem +1

      Et la corse c'est en Bretagne aussi tant que tu y es

    • @eddybabas3889
      @eddybabas3889 Před rokem

      @@h3994 une partie de la population nantaise « par exemple » pour mieux définir ce que je dis ne se sent pas bretonne

    • @louisthomasic275
      @louisthomasic275 Před rokem +3

      Un peu d'histoire ne peut pas faire de mal.
      La Bretagne comme toutes les provinces du royaume de France ont été supprimées par la Révolution française, en 1790 les départements ont été créés (dont la Loire inférieure ancêtre de la Loire Atlantique).
      En 1941, Pétain (chef de l'état français et donc pas "le gouvernement français") a créé les régions contre la République qu'il détestait, la région Bretagne créée par Pétain avait dès l'origine 4 départements et donc le 44 n'en faisait pas partie.
      Il n'y a donc pas eu un seul jour dans '' histoire où le département 44 a fait partie de la Bretagne.
      Quand on fait référence à l'histoire il faut être rigoureux.
      Quand on fait référence à l'histoire il faut aussi préciser à quelle période on fait référence. À certains moments le mont Saint Michel et la ville d'Avranches ont fait partie de la Bretagne, faudra-t-il aussi lui inclure le département 50 ? Et pourquoi pas la ville de Naples dont Anne de Bretagne a été reine...

    • @eddybabas3889
      @eddybabas3889 Před rokem

      @@louisthomasic275 merci 🙏

  • @highestsprings
    @highestsprings Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thanks for sharing. I hope the Breton language can survive. It brings the heart of a culture that is different to France and has ties to old Britain. I think opening these languages up to people outside the culture helps to keep them going for those interested to learn.

  • @elsa7594
    @elsa7594 Před 2 měsíci +2

    i'm from the south of france and i think it's very important we fight to preserve our languages. I'm currently learning occitan , my regional language

  • @zagozago9893
    @zagozago9893 Před 11 měsíci +6

    The British tried killing Welsh off. Children were beaten for speaking it in school. Now, it's the official language here. I do hope my Breton cousins don't lose their lovely language.

  • @SilencedButNotForgotten
    @SilencedButNotForgotten Před rokem +13

    Thank you so much for this video. Of immense value and importance.
    European diversity is so important.

  • @TheHollandHS
    @TheHollandHS Před 8 měsíci +3

    I think britanny is the most successful region to show its identity compared to the Belgian Flemish, the alsatian German , occitanian, italian niceans, and the Mediterranean Arab corsians
    Bretagne is popular in France. Its rare known Celtic culture , it's certain mixed climate , and holiday in summer destination, youth culture trough rock and paganism
    France is a country known for centralism and hierarchy through Paris and it's central northern historical region each region outside surrounding the french zone since the medieval times ⚜️⚜️⚜️

  • @josebasterrica3358
    @josebasterrica3358 Před rokem +8

    Los bretones jamás perderán su lengualo llevan en la sangre son diferentes su país es maravilloso salvaje y hermoso como su mar

  • @maggifatai4497
    @maggifatai4497 Před 8 měsíci +2

    French government is lucky asterix and obelix are no longer around😊..

  • @niallocallanain3579
    @niallocallanain3579 Před 9 měsíci +2

    The Manx language which was declared dead by the UN is undergoing a revival especially in schools. Cornish is the last Celtic language that needs serious revival.

    • @enentr
      @enentr  Před 9 měsíci +1

      Hi Niall! We did a piece about Manx revival, too (we have a thing for Celtic languages...), it's on our channel if you want to check it out!

  • @72vince27
    @72vince27 Před 10 měsíci +4

    This was dope journalism, highly interesting

    • @enentr
      @enentr  Před 10 měsíci

      Thank you! Glad you enjoyed this! You may also like the other episodes of the series 😉

  • @calogerohuygens4430
    @calogerohuygens4430 Před rokem +3

    French state tried to erase corsu and italian in Corsica. France deserve a lesson in language protection.

  • @eukenef.l.816
    @eukenef.l.816 Před rokem +7

    Great one! Trugarez! 🌼

  • @davidwest2880
    @davidwest2880 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Bretton is not even recognised, that is sad.

  • @sianvendette5036
    @sianvendette5036 Před rokem +1

    " O bydded i'r hen iaith barhau"
    As a native Welsh speaker living in France, I would love to learn Breton but working on French first.

  • @bobapbob5812
    @bobapbob5812 Před 8 měsíci +1

    The French also accused the Bretons of treason during WW2. Welsh and Irish also had the punishment routine. l
    And I LOVE NOLWENN Leroy.

  • @vanakhoya
    @vanakhoya Před 7 měsíci +1

    I hope that Breton language will live

  • @lmnll2742
    @lmnll2742 Před 10 měsíci +1

    France had already sent a song in Breton in 1996, Dan Ar Braz.

  • @Melvorgazh
    @Melvorgazh Před 8 měsíci +4

    Ya, Breizh dizalc'h !
    Free Brittany !

  • @giorgiapala3864
    @giorgiapala3864 Před rokem +5

    Can you do a video about the Sardinian language next? It's another of the minoritarian languages in Europe that is gonna disappear in the next decades and the Italian goverment has done very little to preserve it.

    • @simonecodenotti6892
      @simonecodenotti6892 Před rokem

      Ma va che nessuno vi obbliga a rimanere in Italia. Vi sentite più Sardi che italiani, almeno la maggior parte di quelli che ho conosciuto

    • @matteopani9291
      @matteopani9291 Před rokem

      @@simonecodenotti6892 la secessione dall'Italia è incostituzionale, quindi per come stanno le cose ora si, siamo obbligati a restare. L'ultima volta che abbiamo provato a diventare indipendenti siamo stati impiccati e scuoiati

    • @matteopani9291
      @matteopani9291 Před rokem

      @Jana Kolašinac it's like asking why didn't Kosovo declare independence in the 50s, there were not the right political conditions. Who knows, maybe if there ever will be an Italian civil war we will.
      Plus, I don't think that America would bomb Italy as they did with Serbia

    • @gamermapper
      @gamermapper Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@matteopani9291lol America themselves helped to crush secession when it didn't benefit their interests. For example when Abkhazia tried to get independence from Georgia.

  • @SilencedButNotForgotten

    This video is so important.

  • @TheWarriorLP16
    @TheWarriorLP16 Před 2 měsíci

    Why did I find entr earlier? It's such a brilliant idea!

  • @peterjoyce6697
    @peterjoyce6697 Před rokem

    Have you written to Charles le twa?

  • @anaisulfs5469
    @anaisulfs5469 Před měsícem

    Breton has the status of a regional language in France. It can be taught in public schools as such, and can also be taken as an option for the French baccalauréat (the equivalent of taking it as an A-level for Brits, or the equivalent of choosing it as a subject for the end-of-high-school exam). There is a specific national exam, funded by the French state, in order to become a teacher of Breton. There is also a very well-funded, very wide network of private schools that teach the entire curriculum in Breton, and like most other private schools in France they are almost entirely funded by the French government, and staffed by teachers also recruited by the French government.
    It is therefore wrong to say that the French government doesn't recognize its existence. What it does not is give the status of co-official language along with French (only one official language is recognized in France), which would enable provincial local governments in Britany to make the language compulsory at school or for holding certain positions in Britany, like it is for example the case for the Basque language in the Spanish Basque country or Catalan in Catalonia.

  • @eliherrin3997
    @eliherrin3997 Před rokem +1

    y'know I find it funny that she used the french pronunciation in the beginning...

  • @hollowzest
    @hollowzest Před rokem +5

    Im breton

  • @spitalhelles3380
    @spitalhelles3380 Před rokem +3

    me listen to Alan Stivell evry day 🥺

  • @mikel9138
    @mikel9138 Před rokem +3

    I mean, France removed many languages to install one so...

  • @joalexsg9741
    @joalexsg9741 Před 2 měsíci

    Breizh da viken! Much love from this Brazilian who loves all Celtic languages but especially the Brythonic branch:-), which Breton obviously belongs to!

  • @angelaargentati3591
    @angelaargentati3591 Před 20 dny

    C'est formidable vorrei travail! Faite survivre votre langue! Pas de livres, pas de votation a' l'école.. il faut creer des dessin animées , chançons , tout ce que fait amuser les enfants.. bon courage de l'Italie❤

  • @wipemeoff8388
    @wipemeoff8388 Před rokem +1

    Very cool. Mont Saint Michel is still in Normandy though.

  • @paulthomas281
    @paulthomas281 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Excellent report.

  • @ozymandiascakehole3586
    @ozymandiascakehole3586 Před rokem +6

    Took French in high school because I had to but I failed. If you hadn't told me they are different languages I wouldn't have noticed. But I am a big fan of dialects, here in the Netherlands we have a lot of them for such a small place.

  • @lugo_9969
    @lugo_9969 Před rokem +5

    Greetings from Ireland. We have the same enormous problem.....to defend a little language against big bad neighbour.

    • @mitchyoung93
      @mitchyoung93 Před 11 měsíci

      You've been an independent state for 100 years and yet your people refuse to learn Irish. Stop blaming the English for that.

    • @Martini923
      @Martini923 Před 8 měsíci

      @@mitchyoung93Irish use at schools in Ireland, under British rule in Ireland Irish language was banned

    • @otherwize12
      @otherwize12 Před 7 měsíci

      @@mitchyoung93 Rather hard not to blame the English when they are responsible for this mess in the first place.

  • @miguelcuberosanchez6832
    @miguelcuberosanchez6832 Před rokem +6

    The typical policy of culturally homogenizing all of France (nothing new or surprising in Europe). France needs to be a federal republic or a republic where each zone or region of France has its own autonomy (like the autonomous communities of Spain, for example) because trying to be centralist in all political aspects in France will only bring nationalist and separatist sentiment. in some area like Bretonnia. France can outlaw languages ​​that are not French or that are not Romance languages, but believe me that there were nations that tried to make it their own nation and in the end they did not exterminate the cultures that were alien to them, but instead I end up in social unrest and, in very extreme cases, civil war for reasons of cultural identity (it's already reminding me of the ETA attacks, Euskadi Ta Askatasuna) Greetings from Spain.

    • @Perrirodan1
      @Perrirodan1 Před rokem +2

      Hello, you are seeing everything from a Spanish lense, the only independence movement in France is in Corsica, if we compare with Spain the reality actually shows that the French model creates less separatist movement and insurrection.
      We never had issues as big as you with Basque on our side for example.

    • @miguelcuberosanchez6832
      @miguelcuberosanchez6832 Před rokem +3

      @@Perrirodan1 I wouldn't be so sure. France has non-French nationalities (such as the Basques, Bretons and ect.) and I don't see that France's mode of territorial organization has no problem with non-French national territories being a centralist country. Our model of territorial organization is not perfect either (look at the situation in Catalonia, for an example)

  • @SilencedButNotForgotten
    @SilencedButNotForgotten Před rokem +3

    Save European diversity.

  • @gorillapizzascooty9830
    @gorillapizzascooty9830 Před 7 měsíci

    Tell me if I'm wrong, but in Namtes and Loire Atlantique Breton has been eradicated amd Brittany doesn't want them because it will contiminate them (with non Breton speakers claiming to be Bretton, perhaps because they like to be the owner of a crepes restaurant)

  • @misterthemad994
    @misterthemad994 Před rokem +5

    Actually it's not France who kills Breton, it's the French Republic, two completely different things.

  • @bgestin
    @bgestin Před 11 měsíci +1

    Sadly, the map seen at some point in the video is not correct, just as if Wales had been shown without Monmouthshire. The Loire Atlantique departement (Bro-Naoned in Breton) IS definitely part of Brittany with its capital city, Naoned/Nantes !

    • @lmnll2742
      @lmnll2742 Před 10 měsíci

      Nantes never spoke breton.

  • @paulthomas281
    @paulthomas281 Před 4 měsíci

    It is wonderful that Celtic languages like Breton in France and Welch in Britain and Gaelic in Ireland are, despite the epic struggle, being kept alive. These languages should adopt the A1/A2/B1/B2/C1/C2 system of teaching and training in order to move toward standardisation.

  • @admr622
    @admr622 Před 2 měsíci +1

    The European cultures and history is do beautiful

  • @misterthemad994
    @misterthemad994 Před rokem +3

    1:37 Rennes, well done, a part of Brittany where people stopped speaking Breton more than 500 years ago.

    • @enentr
      @enentr  Před rokem +4

      We mention it at 2:54 -- it's a common idea, but it isn't true. Although it was one of the parts of Brittany with the least Breton speakers, there were some because it hosted the Breton Parliament -- and there are still a few today!

    • @Perrirodan1
      @Perrirodan1 Před rokem +3

      The main local language was Gallo, and now the Celtic part of the country is trying to "culturally appropriate" Rennes like the American love to say.

    • @lmnll2742
      @lmnll2742 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@enentr the Breton Parliament has always spoken French. Like the Dukes of Brittany, because they were French princes.

    • @Morvaout
      @Morvaout Před 7 měsíci

      @@lmnll2742
      This is not true...
      Only the last family of our sovereigns had a french origin, but they were breton by nationality.
      For you information, at the 19th century, the king of Danemak was unable to speak danish and most of the administration was speaking and writing german.
      Do you mean that Danemark should be a German lander ?
      Charles III, in UK, has a german origin, as well...
      And the King of Sweden has a french origin...
      Same for the king of Spain !

    • @lmnll2742
      @lmnll2742 Před 7 měsíci

      @@Morvaout False.The Capetians and the Plantagenets are not breton dynasties.

  • @spaghettiisyummy.3623
    @spaghettiisyummy.3623 Před rokem +1

    I'm really intrested in Languages, so i actually, so i knew the Story of Breton.
    Well, Except for the fact that it made it into Eurovision!

  • @ginojaco
    @ginojaco Před 7 měsíci +1

    Odd there should be a problem with Breton in France. My children are taught everything but science through the medium of Welsh (and that's was my and my wife's pragmatic choice). I wish I'd had Welsh taught to me at school in England, I only got a little at home and it is the native British language; I think that Welsh and Gaelic should be offered in schools across the UK.

    • @gamermapper
      @gamermapper Před 5 měsíci +1

      You're right that it's the best way. But when your whole life people say that only French is the useful and important language, for you having another language as official, even the Indigenous and endangered one, will be seen as crazy and radical, because it'll radically change the status quo. Meanwhile when the status quo is already for the protection of these langauges, there's no issue. Let's look at another example : if you'll tell Americans they should study Native American langauges, they'll also say you're crazy.

    • @ginojaco
      @ginojaco Před 5 měsíci

      @@gamermapper Mostly fair comment; but with regard to the last sentence... I think the point would be lost because those wouldn't be the ancestral language(s) for most Americans now. Whereas we know that a Brythonic language (presumably pretty close to Old Welsh) was spoken across the island of Great Britain. Nonetheless, the option to help resurrect some of the languages is a pleasant thought.

  • @metasua
    @metasua Před 2 měsíci +1

    As a breton myself I kind of disagree with this, or at least with the "is in danger" idea, as if the breton was about to disappear.
    Yes, the breton culture (or "culture bretonne" in french) has been in danger for many years because of France, this is true. But a lot of efforts have been made to save and spread it, as well as it language.
    - Nowadays children and teenagers can learn several breton dialects in dedicated schools ("Diwan"), my 4 y.o niece actually started it a year ago and there are more and more places like this opening. This has become regular stuff and it's a good thing.
    - "France 3 Bretagne", the regional version of the one of the state TV channels (France 2, France 3, France 24, etc), displays news in breton everyday, with many people (young, old, men, women) more than happy to speak their own breton dialect.
    - Most of the places in Bretagne have their names, city names, street names, etc translated in french/breton (Nantes/Naoned, Rennes/Roazhon, etc), it's litteraly everywhere, you just have to look.
    - There is also many noticable bretons public figures as well (former defense minister "Jean-Yve Le Drian", the infamous crooked media boss "Vincent Bolloré", composer/poet "Denez Prigent" and many many others). Indeed this is not about language this time, but the fact that the bretons are pretty well represented in France, especially as senior officials (probably even more than people from others regions, starting with the DOM-TOM). It would be a mistake to forget this point.
    - I could also speak about Brittany by itself, how beaufitul and famous it is. Because it's no less than one of the most visited place in France, especially in summer, by tourist from litteraly everywhere (definitely worldwide). Others regions have good reasons to be jealous. Yes I know, this is still not about "breton language", but still worth mentioning.
    - Should I also mention Brittany is one of the richest region in France ? Ranked 5 in 2022. Yes we have problems (who doesn't ?), but we are also doing pretty good.
    - Should I also mention people can pay with check/cheque translated in breton ? Yes, it exists.
    I might forget others topics (such the famous Inter-Celtic Festival of Lorient, happening in Brittany, so bretons won't have to travel too far to enjoy it), but whatever, my point is that the Breton culture AND language is in pretty good shape by now, in comparison to 50 years ago, and it's rising, thanks to massive investments and love for our culture.
    Last thing, some people will probably despise me for it (and I couldn't care less), but some bretons have always been pretty vocal about historical persecution and sometimes it's a caricatural. The fact we still have people that want independence just kills me. We don't need more division, as a breton I'm glad France has Brittany and as a french I'm proud Brittany has France (probably because of Daft Punk and a good football team, who knows...).
    Fun fact: as a breton/french, I both hate how the "biniou" and "accordeon" sound. I might be a traitor after all.

    • @enentr
      @enentr  Před 2 měsíci +1

      Thank you for your comment! The point of this video is exactly this: the fact that the language is at risk of disappearing doesn't mean its speakers aren't fighting to preserve it. We wanted to show precisely this -- all of the incredible efforts Breton speakers are doing to save the language, and succeeding at that!

  • @erichimes3062
    @erichimes3062 Před rokem +5

    While in college, I had a part-time job working for a Francophile from Lebanon. Everything French was better, etc.. Anyways, I mentioned to her about Breton spoken in Brittany, and she made a stink face with corners of the mouth down-turned and said “no! French!”
    * who was I to disturb her vieu du Monde”

    • @enentr
      @enentr  Před rokem +3

      Hopefully people's mindset has shifted over the past few decades, but surely this French-centric view of the country hasn't completely faded!

  • @Dara-wk5ty
    @Dara-wk5ty Před 5 dny

    Too my knowledge France had many distinct dialects/languages but most ceased to exist because of centralization

  • @PaulBeauregard-wo2vb
    @PaulBeauregard-wo2vb Před 3 měsíci

    Since Breton is celtic,so is France .Alors nous avons besoin du Breton.la France, les bretons doivent
    Conserver le Breton ...

  • @pierren___
    @pierren___ Před rokem +1

    You forgot to mention that people liked that - because it eased social ascension.

  • @YorranKlees
    @YorranKlees Před 13 dny

    It is up to people in Bretagne to stand up and promote their culture.
    See, France is probably the only country in the world where the sun never sets. With that in mind, imagine how different French people can be, with their own ancestral culture and ways, but under the same flag. French has to be the lingua franca on French soil.
    That cannot prevent local cultures to thrive, not anymore. Greetings to my Bretons siblings, from a French soil a bloody lot farther to Paris than they are.

  • @timflatus
    @timflatus Před 2 dny +1

    Meur ras / Trugarez! It is shocking to hear that Breton language is almost illegal. How does one teach if not by immersion? I find this obscene. We have even fewer speakers of Kernowek, but at least there is some support for minority languages here.

  • @natedelaunay
    @natedelaunay Před rokem +1

    My family is from Pont l'evec, and I would love to learn how to speak breton. My dad says that it just sounds like french but backwards lol.

    • @hlp2583
      @hlp2583 Před rokem

      May be you mean Pont l'abbé? because Pont l'Evèque , for what i know is not in Brittany.

  • @fasted8468
    @fasted8468 Před 5 dny

    It'll be fine now

  • @bretagnejean2410
    @bretagnejean2410 Před 8 měsíci +1

    May be celtic peoole should try to rebuilt a common language as bryttonic language of origin.
    French call us breton but finally welsh cornish irish and good part of england scottish are all breton .

  • @HenrykTri
    @HenrykTri Před 6 měsíci

    Weird that in the entire video, there is no Bregton spoken, not even a taste of it outside of the concert song.

    • @enentr
      @enentr  Před 3 měsíci

      They're speaking Breton at school, that whole sequence is shot in the language!

  • @ericklamotte617
    @ericklamotte617 Před 7 měsíci +3

    Bretagne is a small country next to France and not part of France. Ma Bro, Breizh.

  • @zeuzeul
    @zeuzeul Před rokem +3

    Why you use a cuted map of Brittany?
    Why do people in the video answer in French if they speak Breton?
    Why you say "tried" like it's over?
    4:51 "DonemaT e Kemper" it's a basic mistake you do when you're a beginner... Not when you're a teacher!
    Nice video tho

    • @enentr
      @enentr  Před rokem +1

      Hi Anku!
      If by cut you mean the map doesn't include the "Loire atlantique" is because it's split into official French regions.
      Also, people in the video very kindly spoke French because our journalist doesn't speak Breton!

    • @zeuzeul
      @zeuzeul Před rokem +1

      @@enentr Hi thank you for your answer, I come from "Loire Atlantique" "Country of Naoned" so you understand that im a little bit ANGRY when i see a cuted map 😂 (and the map at 0:22 is good )

  • @Xravel72
    @Xravel72 Před rokem +1

    And in uk 🇬🇧 ?
    What about the irish ? 🇮🇪

  • @whitbyabbey4830
    @whitbyabbey4830 Před 11 měsíci

    Am I crazy, or do Celtic languages have a certain music in them that other languages don't?

    • @hooverbaglegs
      @hooverbaglegs Před 8 měsíci

      Ydyn, bendant maen nhw! Yes, they certainly do!

  • @Benjamin_idkidc
    @Benjamin_idkidc Před rokem +2

    Breton language is matter! 🇫🇷🛑🛑🛑

  • @phimassalia5411
    @phimassalia5411 Před rokem

  • @sellingenglandbythepound5255

    Don’t ever think it’s a coincidence. Same is happening in Scotland, Wales & Ireland and it’s all entirely engineered for reasons these comment sections aren’t designed for.

  • @masterofallthelakesintown2472

    There was once a kingdom and it was glorious!

    • @lmnll2742
      @lmnll2742 Před 10 měsíci

      For 50 years in the 9th century. Demolished by vikings.