This HTML5 document contains 343 embedded RDF statements represented using HTML+Microdata notation.

The embedded RDF content will be recognized by any processor of HTML5 Microdata.

Namespace Prefixes

PrefixIRI
dbpedia-cyhttp://cy.dbpedia.org/resource/
dctermshttp://purl.org/dc/terms/
n22http://www.philological.bham.ac.uk/cambrit/
dbohttp://dbpedia.org/ontology/
n10http://dbpedia.org/resource/File:
foafhttp://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/
dbpedia-cahttp://ca.dbpedia.org/resource/
n28https://cornisharchaeology.org.uk/publications/
n23https://books.google.com/
n13https://web.archive.org/web/20080515141738/http:/www.menantolstudio.freeserve.co.uk/
n26https://global.dbpedia.org/id/
dbthttp://dbpedia.org/resource/Template:
rdfshttp://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#
freebasehttp://rdf.freebase.com/ns/
n14http://www.cornwall.gov.uk/
dbpedia-plhttp://pl.dbpedia.org/resource/
n18http://
n8http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/
n21http://avalon.law.yale.edu/medieval/
rdfhttp://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#
owlhttp://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#
dbpedia-ithttp://it.dbpedia.org/resource/
wikipedia-enhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
dbphttp://dbpedia.org/property/
dbchttp://dbpedia.org/resource/Category:
provhttp://www.w3.org/ns/prov#
xsdhhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#
wikidatahttp://www.wikidata.org/entity/
dbrhttp://dbpedia.org/resource/

Statements

Subject Item
dbr:History_of_Cornwall
rdf:type
owl:Thing
rdfs:label
History of Cornwall Storia della Cornovaglia Historia Kornwalii Història de Cornualla
rdfs:comment
La història de Cornualla es remunta al paleolític, però en aquest període Cornualla només va tenir visites esporàdiques per part d'alguns grups d'humans. L'ocupació contínua es va iniciar fa uns 10.000 anys després del final de l'última era glacial. Quan la història registrada va començar al segle I aC, la llengua parlada era , que es desenvoluparia fins al -oest i després la llengua còrnica. Cornualla formava part del territori de la tribu dels Dumnonii que incloïa el Devon actual i parts de Somerset. Després d'un període de domini romà, Cornualla va tornar a governar per independents i va continuar mantenint una estreta relació amb Bretanya i Gal·les, així com amb el sud d'Irlanda, veïns a l'altra banda del mar Cèltic. Després del col·lapse de Dumnonia, el territori restant de Cornuall The history of Cornwall goes back to the Paleolithic, but in this period Cornwall only had sporadic visits by groups of humans. Continuous occupation started around 10,000 years ago after the end of the last ice age. When recorded history started in the first century BCE, the spoken language was Common Brittonic, and that would develop into Southwestern Brittonic and then the Cornish language. Cornwall was part of the territory of the tribe of the Dumnonii that included modern-day Devon and parts of Somerset. After a period of Roman rule, Cornwall reverted to rule by independent Romano-British leaders and continued to have a close relationship with Brittany and Wales as well as southern Ireland, which neighboured across the Celtic Sea. After the collapse of Dumnonia, the remaining territor Historia Kornwalii zaczyna się od czasów przedrzymskich mieszkańców, w tym ludów posługujących się językiem celtyckim, który później ewoluował do języka bretońskiego i kornijskiego. Po okresie rządów rzymskich Kornwalia powróciła pod rządy niezależnych przywódców celtyckich. Od średniowiecza obszar jest częścią królestwa Anglii, później włączonego do Wielkiej Brytanii i Zjednoczonego Królestwa, jednak przeważnie z dużą samodzielnością i tendencjami decentralistycznymi. Zamieszkiwana przez celtycki naród Kornwalijczyków, sukcesywnie zaludniana także przez Anglików. Zwykle była na uboczu wydarzeń ogólnokrajowych, większe znaczenie odegrała przede wszystkim w angielskiej wojnie domowej. La storia della Cornovaglia risale al Paleolitico, periodo in cui vi erano solo sporadiche visite da parte di gruppi di umani. I primi stanziamenti continui iniziarono circa 10 000 anni fa, al termine dell'ultima era glaciale. Dai primi resoconti storici, riscontrabili dal primo secolo avanti Cristo, la lingua comunemente parlata in Cornovaglia era il che si sarebbe evoluto prima nel Brittonico del sud-ovest e infine nella Lingua cornica. Nel 1337 venne creato il titolo di dalla monarchia inglese per essere dato al figlio maggiore del re e suo erede al trono.
rdfs:seeAlso
dbr:Dumnonia dbr:Christianity dbr:Cornwall
foaf:homepage
n18:www.cornwall.gov.uk
foaf:depiction
n8:Boscawen1.jpg n8:England_Celtic_tribes_-_South.svg n8:Trevithick1803Locomotive.jpg n8:Grose-map-cornwall-q80-2340x1899.jpg n8:British_isles_802.jpg n8:EmpireNorth.jpg n8:English_civil_war_map_1642_to_1645.jpg n8:Tintagel_b.jpg n8:King-donierts-stone.jpg n8:Roman_stone_in_St_Materiana's_Church,_Tintagel_(5014).jpg n8:Truro_Cathedral_welcome_20070527.jpg n8:Ogham.Inscriptions.Cornwall.jpg n8:Cornwall_-_Men-an-Tol.jpg n8:Ruined_Cornish_tin_mine.jpg n8:The_Victoria_history_of_the_county_of_Cornwall_(1906)_(14591082390).jpg n8:Will_of_Alfred_the_Great_(New_Minster_Liber_Vitae)_-_BL_Stowe_MS_944,_f_30v.jpg n8:British_kingdoms_c_800.svg
dcterms:subject
dbc:History_of_England_by_county dbc:Military_history_of_Cornwall dbc:History_of_Cornwall
dbo:wikiPageID
1139372
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1123294395
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Canute_the_Great dbr:Annales_Cambriae dbr:Early_Middle_Ages dbr:Cornwall_Archaeological_Society dbr:Norman_French dbr:Trematon dbr:Geraint_of_Dumnonia dbr:Menhir dbr:Henry_VII_of_England dbr:Caithness dbr:Ceolnoth dbc:History_of_England_by_county dbr:Diocese_of_Exeter dbr:Devon dbr:Sweyn_Forkbeard dbr:Tin dbr:Hill_fort dbr:Coast_guard dbr:Robert,_Count_of_Mortain n10:Grose-map-cornwall-q80-2340x1899.jpg dbr:Exeter dbr:Bodmin_Moor dbr:Celtic_Christianity dbr:Methodism dbr:Bodmin dbr:Danes dbr:Philip_Payton dbr:Lostwithiel dbr:Anglo-Saxon_Chronicle dbr:Hut_circle dbr:Tumulus dbr:Arnold_Boscowitz dbr:Cornwall dbr:Sir_Richard_Grenville,_1st_Baronet dbr:Battle_of_Hingston_Down dbr:Vikings dbr:Tintagel dbr:Objective_1 dbr:Jamaica_Inn dbr:Tristan_and_Iseult dbr:Saint_Piran dbr:1755_Lisbon_earthquake dbr:Enclave_and_exclave dbr:Duchy_of_Cornwall dbr:William_Worcester dbr:John_Trevisa dbr:Béroul dbr:Gerrans dbc:Military_history_of_Cornwall dbr:Younger_Dryas dbr:Tintagel_Parish_Church dbr:Cornish_Rebellion_of_1497 dbr:List_of_Cornish_Saints dbr:Roundhead dbr:Jacobite_Rising_of_1715 dbr:Polychronicon n10:England_Celtic_tribes_-_South.svg dbr:Timeline_of_Cornish_history dbr:Mystery_play n10:Cornwall_-_Men-an-Tol.jpg dbr:Earl_of_Cornwall dbr:Cavalier dbr:Costean dbr:Illogan dbr:Padstow dbr:Book_of_Common_Prayer dbr:Celtic_art dbr:Isca_Dumnoniorum dbr:Historia_Regum_Britanniae dbr:Roman_Empire dbr:Portugal dbr:Cuthred_of_Wessex dbr:Dumnonia dbr:Dumnonii dbr:Mebyon_Kernow dbr:Mesolithic dbr:Constitutional_status_of_Cornwall dbr:Act_of_Uniformity_1549 dbr:Stratton,_Cornwall dbr:Bronze_Age dbr:Romano-British_culture n10:EmpireNorth.JPG dbr:Roman_roads dbr:Stannary_Courts_and_Parliaments dbr:Stratton_(hundred) dbr:Prayer_Book_Rebellion dbr:Roman_Catholic dbr:List_of_Cornish_soldiers,_commanders_and_sailors dbr:Paleolithic dbr:Continental_Europe dbr:St_Hilary's_Church,_St_Hilary_(Cornwall) dbr:Camborne_School_of_Mines dbr:Brian_of_Brittany dbr:Wessex_culture dbr:Normans dbr:Iron_Age dbr:Late_Antique dbr:Nonconformist_(Protestantism) dbr:Jacobite_uprising_in_Cornwall_of_1715 dbr:Burgh_Island dbr:Alfred_the_Great dbr:Scilly dbr:Barry_Cunliffe dbr:Duke_of_Cornwall dbr:Breage_Parish_Church dbr:Mount_Batten dbr:Powdershire dbr:English_Civil_War dbr:Palaeolithic dbr:Penzance dbr:Bishop_of_Crediton dbr:James_Paynter_(Jacobite) dbr:Byzantium dbr:Wiltshire dbr:John_Wycliffe dbr:Pydarshire dbr:Tudor_dynasty n10:Ogham.Inscriptions.Cornwall.jpg dbr:Duchy dbr:Thomas_Charles-Edwards dbr:Restormel_Castle dbr:Harold_Godwinson dbr:Bishop_of_Exeter dbr:William_of_Malmesbury dbr:Celtic_Revival dbr:Vug n10:Will_of_Alfred_the_Great_(New_Minster_Liber_Vitae)_-_BL_Stowe_MS_944,_f_30v.jpg n10:Roman_stone_in_St_Materiana's_Church,_Tintagel_(5014).jpg dbr:Edith_Ditmas dbr:List_of_legendary_rulers_of_Cornwall dbr:Camborne dbr:Somerset dbr:Wales dbr:Edward_the_Confessor dbr:Kingdom_of_Great_Britain dbr:Britons_(Celtic_people) dbr:Walter_de_Claville dbr:Scotland dbr:Battle_of_Hehil n10:Ruined_Cornish_tin_mine.jpg dbr:Chysauster_Ancient_Village dbr:Gunnies dbr:Tsunami dbr:John_Morris_(historian) dbr:List_of_monarchs_of_Wessex dbr:William_I_of_England dbr:Framework_Convention_for_the_Protection_of_National_Minorities dbr:Bishop_of_Cornwall dbr:Celts dbr:Breton_language dbr:St_Michael's_Mount dbr:Wessex dbr:River_Tamar dbr:Ine_of_Wessex dbr:Egbert_of_Wessex dbr:Lawhitton dbr:Donyarth dbr:Bronze dbr:List_of_museums_in_Cornwall dbr:Stannary_law dbr:Juhel_de_Totnes dbr:Neolithic dbr:Hundreds_of_Cornwall dbr:Cornish_people dbr:Smuggling dbr:West_Country dbr:Fowey dbr:Church_of_England dbr:Common_Era dbr:English_language dbr:Leonard_Elliott_Elliott-Binns dbr:Celtic_languages dbr:Cornish_revival dbr:Ringfort dbr:Brittany dbr:Edmund_I_of_England dbr:Carn_Euny dbr:Eudes,_Count_of_Penthièvre dbr:Licinius dbr:Triggshire dbr:Common_Brittonic dbr:Arthur dbr:Cornish_language dbr:Europe dbr:Carn_Brea,_Redruth dbr:Kerrier_(hundred) dbr:Mining_in_Cornwall_and_Devon dbr:Cornovii_(Cornwall) dbr:St_Meriasek dbr:Wivelshire dbr:Ethnicity dbr:Diodorus_Siculus dbr:Trethevy dbr:Southwestern_Brittonic_languages dbr:Excise n10:Tintagel_b.jpg n10:English_civil_war_map_1642_to_1645.JPG dbr:Léon_Fleuriot dbr:Industrial_Revolution dbr:Pytheas dbr:Glasney_College n10:King-donierts-stone.jpg dbr:Godwin,_Earl_of_Wessex dbr:Volusianus n10:Boscawen1.jpg dbr:Beaker_culture dbr:A._L._Rowse dbr:Megalith dbr:Kenstec dbr:Norman_Conquest dbr:Stannaries dbr:John_Wesley dbr:Charles_Wesley dbr:Shire dbr:Penwith_(hundred) dbc:History_of_Cornwall dbr:Henry_Jenner dbr:Roman_Britain dbr:Battle_of_Deptford_Bridge n10:British_isles_802.jpg dbr:Saint dbr:Trebonianus_Gallus dbr:Lifton,_Devon dbr:John_Thomas_Blight dbr:Edward,_the_Black_Prince n10:Trevithick1803Locomotive.jpg dbr:Gaul dbr:South_Crofty dbr:Æthelstan dbr:Brychan dbr:Norman_conquest_of_England dbr:Newlyn dbr:Armorica dbr:Sherborne dbr:John_of_Cornwall_(grammarian) dbr:Nanstallon n10:Truro_Cathedral_welcome_20070527.jpg dbr:Lesnewth_(hundred) dbr:Old_English dbr:Richard_Rufus_of_Cornwall dbr:Celtic_Sea dbr:Saint_Piran's_Flag dbr:Launceston_Castle dbr:Bishop_of_Sherborne dbr:History_of_the_British_Isles dbr:Districts_of_England dbr:Calstock n10:The_Victoria_history_of_the_county_of_Cornwall_(1906)_(14591082390).jpg dbr:British_Iron_Age dbr:Cornish_diaspora dbr:Isles_of_Scilly dbr:Cornish_self-government_movement dbr:Launceston,_Cornwall n10:British_kingdoms_c_800.svg dbr:St_German's_Priory dbr:Iberian_Peninsula dbr:Henry_VIII_of_England dbr:William_Camden dbr:Cape_St_Vincent dbr:Condor_of_Cornwall dbr:Diocese_of_Truro dbr:Archbishop_of_Canterbury dbr:Geoffrey_of_Monmouth dbr:Firth_of_Forth dbr:Cornish_literature dbr:Ravenna_Cosmography dbr:Cornish_nationalism dbr:Matter_of_Britain
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink
n13:blightcrosses.htm n14: n21:ang09.asp n22:coinseng.html%23welchcorn1%7Cchapter=Britans n23:books%3Fid=UfCvxdhNLHIC&pg=PA91&lpg=PA91&dq=%22james+whetter%22&source=web&ots=xZMzSC7uJq&sig=pxj-rLTFfE_QaR2MGItgicadb6E&hl=en%23PPP1,M1 n28:
owl:sameAs
dbpedia-pl:Historia_Kornwalii wikidata:Q3404745 dbpedia-it:Storia_della_Cornovaglia freebase:m.04czf33 dbpedia-ca:Història_de_Cornualla n26:38e3f dbpedia-cy:Hanes_Cernyw
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbt:Portal dbt:Short_description dbt:Cornwall dbt:Reflist dbt:Bots dbt:Further dbt:History_of_England dbt:ISBN dbt:Quotation dbt:Convert dbt:Cite_book dbt:EngvarB dbt:Cite_encyclopedia dbt:Main dbt:Cite_web dbt:Citation_needed dbt:Page_needed dbt:See_also dbt:Use_dmy_dates
dbo:thumbnail
n8:Boscawen1.jpg?width=300
dbo:abstract
The history of Cornwall goes back to the Paleolithic, but in this period Cornwall only had sporadic visits by groups of humans. Continuous occupation started around 10,000 years ago after the end of the last ice age. When recorded history started in the first century BCE, the spoken language was Common Brittonic, and that would develop into Southwestern Brittonic and then the Cornish language. Cornwall was part of the territory of the tribe of the Dumnonii that included modern-day Devon and parts of Somerset. After a period of Roman rule, Cornwall reverted to rule by independent Romano-British leaders and continued to have a close relationship with Brittany and Wales as well as southern Ireland, which neighboured across the Celtic Sea. After the collapse of Dumnonia, the remaining territory of Cornwall came into conflict with neighbouring Wessex. By the middle of the ninth century, Cornwall had fallen under the control of Wessex, but it kept its own culture. In 1337, the title Duke of Cornwall was created by the English monarchy, to be held by the king's eldest son and heir. Cornwall, along with the neighbouring county of Devon, maintained Stannary institutions that granted some local control over its most important product, tin, but by the time of Henry VIII most vestiges of Cornish autonomy had been removed as England became an increasingly centralised state under the Tudor dynasty. Conflicts with the centre took place with the Cornish Rebellion of 1497 and Prayer Book Rebellion of 1549. By the end of the 18th century, Cornwall was administered as an integral part of the Kingdom of Great Britain along with the rest of England and the Cornish language had gone into steep decline. The Industrial Revolution brought huge change to Cornwall, as well as the adoption of Methodism among the general populace, turning the area nonconformist. Decline of mining in Cornwall resulted in mass emigration overseas and the Cornish diaspora, as well as the start of the Celtic Revival and Cornish revival which resulted in the beginnings of Cornish nationalism in the late 20th century. Cornwall's Early Medieval history, in particular the early Welsh and Breton references to a Cornish King named Arthur, have featured in such legendary works as Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae, predating the Arthurian legends of the Matter of Britain (see the list of legendary rulers of Cornwall). La història de Cornualla es remunta al paleolític, però en aquest període Cornualla només va tenir visites esporàdiques per part d'alguns grups d'humans. L'ocupació contínua es va iniciar fa uns 10.000 anys després del final de l'última era glacial. Quan la història registrada va començar al segle I aC, la llengua parlada era , que es desenvoluparia fins al -oest i després la llengua còrnica. Cornualla formava part del territori de la tribu dels Dumnonii que incloïa el Devon actual i parts de Somerset. Després d'un període de domini romà, Cornualla va tornar a governar per independents i va continuar mantenint una estreta relació amb Bretanya i Gal·les, així com amb el sud d'Irlanda, veïns a l'altra banda del mar Cèltic. Després del col·lapse de Dumnonia, el territori restant de Cornualla va entrar en conflicte amb la veïna Wessex. A mitjan segle IX, Cornualla havia caigut sota el control de Wessex, però va mantenir la seva pròpia cultura. El 1337, el títol de duc de Cornualla va ser creat per la monarquia anglesa, que el tenia el fill gran i hereu del rei. Cornualla, juntament amb el comtat veí de Devon, mantenia que atorgaven un cert control local sobre el seu producte més important, l'estany, però durant el regnat d’Enric VIII la majoria dels vestigis d’autonomia de Cornualla havien estat eliminats, ja que Anglaterra es convertia en un estat cada cop més centralitzat sota la Dinastia Tudor. Els conflictes amb el centre van tenir lloc amb la i la rebel·lió del llibre de pregàries de 1549. A finals del segle XVIII, Cornualla era administrada com a part integral del Regne de Gran Bretanya juntament amb la resta d'Anglaterra i la llengua còrnica havia entrat en un fort declivi. La Revolució Industrial va comportar un enorme canvi a Cornualla, així com l'adopció del metodisme entre la població general, convertint la zona en . La disminució de la mineria a Cornualla va resultar en una emigració massiva a l'estranger i la , així com l’inici del renaixement celta i que van donar lloc als inicis del a finals del segle xx. La història medieval de Cornualla, en particular les primeres referències gal·leses i bretones a un rei de Cornualla anomenat Artur, han aparegut en obres llegendàries com la Historia Regum Britanniae de Geoffrey de Monmouth, anterior a les llegendes artúriques de la matèria de Gran Bretanya (vegeu la ). La storia della Cornovaglia risale al Paleolitico, periodo in cui vi erano solo sporadiche visite da parte di gruppi di umani. I primi stanziamenti continui iniziarono circa 10 000 anni fa, al termine dell'ultima era glaciale. Dai primi resoconti storici, riscontrabili dal primo secolo avanti Cristo, la lingua comunemente parlata in Cornovaglia era il che si sarebbe evoluto prima nel Brittonico del sud-ovest e infine nella Lingua cornica. La Cornovaglia faceva parte del territorio della tribù dei Dumnonii, che includeva il territorio dell'attuale Devon e parte del Somerset. Dopo un breve periodo di dominazione dell'impero romano, la Cornovaglia tornò ad essere comandata da leader Romano-Britanni indipendenti e continuò a intrattenere stretti rapporti con la Britannia e il Galles così come l'Irlanda del sud, dalla quale era separata solamente dal Mare Celtico. Dopo la caduta dei Dumnonii i rimanenti territori della Cornovaglia entrarono in conflitto con il vicino Wessex. Dalla metà del nono secolo la Cornovaglia caddè sotto il controllo del regno del Wessex, ma riuscì a mantenere una propria identità culturale. Nel 1337 venne creato il titolo di dalla monarchia inglese per essere dato al figlio maggiore del re e suo erede al trono. La storia dell'alto medioevo della Cornovaglia, in particolare riferimenti di fonti Gallesi e Britanniche a un re della Cornovaglia chiamato Artù, ha caratterizzato l'Historia Regum Britanniae di che diede vita al mito di re Artú. Historia Kornwalii zaczyna się od czasów przedrzymskich mieszkańców, w tym ludów posługujących się językiem celtyckim, który później ewoluował do języka bretońskiego i kornijskiego. Po okresie rządów rzymskich Kornwalia powróciła pod rządy niezależnych przywódców celtyckich. Od średniowiecza obszar jest częścią królestwa Anglii, później włączonego do Wielkiej Brytanii i Zjednoczonego Królestwa, jednak przeważnie z dużą samodzielnością i tendencjami decentralistycznymi. Zamieszkiwana przez celtycki naród Kornwalijczyków, sukcesywnie zaludniana także przez Anglików. Zwykle była na uboczu wydarzeń ogólnokrajowych, większe znaczenie odegrała przede wszystkim w angielskiej wojnie domowej.
prov:wasDerivedFrom
wikipedia-en:History_of_Cornwall?oldid=1123294395&ns=0
dbo:wikiPageLength
51163
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
wikipedia-en:History_of_Cornwall