10.
Respecting the period when this island became inhabited
subsequently to the flood, I have seen two distinct
relations. According to the annals of the Roman history, the
Britons deduce their origin both from the Greeks and Romans.
On the side of the mother, from Lavinia, the daughter of
Latinus, king of Italy, and of the race of Silvanus, the son
of Inachus, the son of Dardanus; who was the son of Saturn,
king of the Greeks, and who, having possessed himself of a
part of Asia, built the city of Troy. Dardanus was the
father of Troius, who was the father of Priam and Anchises;
Anchises was the father of Aeneas, who was the father of
Ascanius and Silvius; and this Silvius was the son of Aeneas
and Lavinia, the daughter of the king of Italy. From the
sons of Aeneas and Lavinia descended Romulus and Remus, who
were the sons of the holy queen Rhea, and the founders of
Rome. Brutus was consul when he conquered Spain, and reduced
that country to a Roman province. He afterwards subdued the
island of Britain, whose inhabitants were the descendants of
the Romans, from Silvius Posthumus. He was called Posthumus
because he was born after the death of Aeneas his father;
and his mother Lavinia concealed herself during her
pregnancy; he was called Silvius, because he was born in a
wood. Hence the Roman kings were called Silvan, and the
Britons from Brutus, and rose from the family of
Brutus.1 Aeneas,
after the Trojan war, arrived with his son in Italy; and
Having vanquished Turnus, married Lavinia, the daughter of
king Latinus, who was the son of Faunus, the son of Picus,
the son of Saturn. After the death of Latinus, Aeneas
obtained the kingdom Of the Romans, and Lavinia brought
forth a son, who was named Silvius. Ascanius founded Alba,
and afterwards married. And Lavinia bore to Aeneas a son,
named Silvius; but Ascanius2 married a wife, who
conceived and became pregnant. And Aeneas, having been
informed that his daughter-in-law was pregnant, ordered his
son to send his magician to examine his wife, whether the
child conceived were male or female. The magician came and
examined the wife and pronounced it to be a son, who should
become the most valiant among the Italians, and the most
beloved of all men.3 In consequence of this
prediction, the magician was put to death by Ascanius; but
it happened that the mother of the child dying at its birth,
he was named Brutus; ad after a certain interval, agreeably
to what the magician had foretold, whilst he was playing
with some others he shot his father with an arrow, not
intentionally but by accident.4 He was, for this
cause, expelled from Italy, and came to the islands of the
Tyrrhene sea, when he was exiled on account of the death of
Turnus, slain by Aeneas. He then went among the Gauls, and
built the city of the Turones, called Turnis.5 At
length he came to this island named from him Britannia,
dwelt there, and filled it with his own descendants, and it
has been inhabited from that time to the present
period. 11.
Aeneas reigned over the Latins three years; Ascanius thirty
three years; after whom Silvius reigned twelve years, and
Posthumus thirty-nine6 years: the latter, from
whom the kings of Alba are called Silvan, was brother to
Brutus, who governed Britain at the time Eli the high-priest
judged Israel, and when the ark of the covenant was taken by
a foreign people. But Posthumus his brother reigned among
the Latins. 1 The
whole of this, as far as the end of the paragraph,
is omitted in several MSS. 2 Other
MSS. Silvius. 3 V.R.
Who should slay his father and mother, and be hated
by all mankind. 4 V.R.
He displayed such superiority among his
play-fellows, that they seemed to consider him as
their chief. 5 Tours. 6 V.R.
Thirty-seven.
by Nennius
Notes
by Nennius
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