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Brut| In medieval British legend, chronicle, and romance, the founder of Britain, to which he gave his name, and the great-grandson of the Trojan hero Aeneas (legendary ancestral father of the Romans). |
| Brut was said to have been banished from Italy and, after many adventures, reached Britain where he founded the New Troy (Trinovantum) on the site of London, and established a British dynasty. |
Literature Brut's story is the British version of a widespread pre-medieval legend which traced the founders of modern European nations to the fleeing heroes of Troy; the ancient Romans were among the first to seek such an association. The British form originally appeared in Welsh historian Nennius' 9th-century Historia Britonum/History of the Britons, but was developed more completely by Welsh writer and chronicler Geoffrey of Monmouth in his Historia Regum Britanniae/History of the Kings of Britain in 1136. |
| The rhymed chronicle Estorie des Bretons (now lost) by Anglo-Norman poet Geoffrey Gaimar and Roman de Brut written by Anglo-Norman poet Robert Wace in 1155 were both based on Geoffrey of Monmouth's version of British history, although Wace also mentioned the Round Table of the legendary English king Arthur. |
| In the early 13th century, the English poet Layamon created a colourful embellishment of Wace's history, or romance of chivalry, in his chronicle Brut. |
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