The Description of Wales
by Geraldus Cambrensis
Book I
Chapter VII
Origin of the names Cambria and
Wales
Cambria was so called from Camber, son of Brutus, for
Brutus, descending from the Trojans, by his grandfather,
Ascanius, and father, Silvius, led the remnant of the
Trojans, who had long been detained in Greece, into this
western isle; and having reigned many years, and given his
name to the country and people, at his death divided the
kingdom of Wales between his three sons. To his eldest son,
Locrinus, he gave that part of the island which lies between
the rivers Humber and Severn, and which from him was called
Loegria. To his second son, Albanactus, he gave the lands
beyond the Humber, which took from him the name of Albania.
But to his youngest son, Camber, he bequeathed all that
region which lies beyond the Severn, and is called after him
Cambria; hence the country is properly and truly called
Cambria, and its inhabitants Cambrians, or Cambrenses. Some
assert that their name was derived from CAM and GRAECO, that
is, distorted Greek, on account of the affinity of their
languages, contracted by their long residence in Greece; but
this conjecture, though plausible, is not well founded on
truth.
The name of Wales was not derived from Wallo, a general,
or Wandolena, the queen, as the fabulous history of Geoffrey
Arthurius falsely maintains, because neither of these
personages are to be found amongst the Welsh; but it arose
from a barbarian appellation. The Saxons, when they seized
upon Britain, called this nation, as they did all
foreigners, Wallenses; and thus the barbarous name remains
to the people and their country.
Having discoursed upon the quality and quantity of the
land, the genealogies of the princes, the sources of the
rivers, and the derivation of the names of this country, we
shall now consider the nature and character of the
nation.
The Description of Wales
Book I
by Geraldus Cambrensis
Chapter VI
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