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Dolly Pentreath

 

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Dolly Pentreath



 
 
Dolly Pentreath (Dorothy Pentreath) (died December 1777) is often considered to have been the last monoglot speaker of the Cornish language
Cornish language

The Cornish language is one of the Brythonic group of Celtic languages. The language continued to function as a community language in parts of Cornwall until the late 18th century, and there have been attempts to revive the language since the early 20th century....
 (that is, the last person who spoke only Cornish and not English) -- a legend which arose as a result of an account written by Daines Barrington
Daines Barrington

Daines Barrington, Fellow of the Royal Society was an England lawyer, antiquary and naturalist.Barrington was the fourth son of the first John Shute Barrington....
 of an interview he had conducted with Dolly. She has passed into legend for cursing at people in a long stream of fierce Cornish whenever she became angry.






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Dolly Pentreath (Dorothy Pentreath) (died December 1777) is often considered to have been the last monoglot speaker of the Cornish language
Cornish language

The Cornish language is one of the Brythonic group of Celtic languages. The language continued to function as a community language in parts of Cornwall until the late 18th century, and there have been attempts to revive the language since the early 20th century....
 (that is, the last person who spoke only Cornish and not English) -- a legend which arose as a result of an account written by Daines Barrington
Daines Barrington

Daines Barrington, Fellow of the Royal Society was an England lawyer, antiquary and naturalist.Barrington was the fourth son of the first John Shute Barrington....
 of an interview he had conducted with Dolly. She has passed into legend for cursing at people in a long stream of fierce Cornish whenever she became angry. Her death essentially marked the death of Cornish as a community language. According to legend, her last words were "Me ne vidn cewsel Sawznek!" ("I don't want to speak English!")

Pentreath lived in the parish of Paul
Paul, Cornwall

Paul is a village and civil parish in the Penwith district of Cornwall. The village itself falls within the current boundaries of the civic parish of Penzance, however there is a separate Paul parish council which is responsible for the surrounding area....
, next to Mousehole
Mousehole

Mousehole is a village and fishing port near Newlyn in Cornwall, United Kingdom, reputed to have one of the most beautiful harbours in the country....
, where she was also buried; a monument in her honour was established in the churchyard wall in 1860 by Louis Lucien Bonaparte
Louis Lucien Bonaparte

Louis Lucien Bonaparte , was a France anglophile linguistics, and the third son of Napoleon I of France second surviving brother, Lucien Bonaparte, and Lucien's second wife Alexandrine de Bleschamp....
, a nephew of Napoleon
Napoleon I of France

Napoleon Bonaparte later known as Emperor Napoleon I, was a military and political leader of France whose actions shaped European politics in the early 19th century....
, and the Vicar of Paul. There are many tales about her. She was said often to curse people, including calling them "kronnekyn hager du", an "ugly black toad", and was even said to have been a witch. Numerous other stories have been attached to her, their accuracy unknown. She was at one time thought to have been identical with a Dorothy Jeffrey whose burial is recorded in the Paul parish register but this is now doubted.

A year following the death of Dolly Pentreath, Barrington received a letter, written in Cornish and accompanied by an English translation, from a fisherman in Mousehole
Mousehole

Mousehole is a village and fishing port near Newlyn in Cornwall, United Kingdom, reputed to have one of the most beautiful harbours in the country....
 named William Bodinar (or Bodener) stating that he knew of five people who could speak Cornish in that village alone. Barrington also speaks of a John Nancarrow from Marazion
Marazion

Marazion is a civil parish and town in the Penwith district of Cornwall, England, UK. It lies on the shores of Mount's Bay, two miles east of Penzance, one mile east of the village of Long Rock, and is served by the Great Western Railway....
 who was a native speaker and survived into the 1790s.

As with many other "last native speakers", there is controversy over Dolly Pentreath’s status. William Bodinar (died 1794) learned Cornish as a child and, in 1776, could remember it well enough to write a letter in it. Some claim that John Davey, who died in 1890, should be considered the last "traditional" speaker; he was said to have kept the language alive by speaking to his cat. However there is some confusion as to the extent of his abilities, notably that some may be only attributed to him. Mebyon Kernow
Mebyon Kernow

Mebyon Kernow is a minor political party in the United Kingdom. The main objective of MK is to establish greater autonomy in Cornwall, through the establishment of a legislative Cornish Assembly....
 erected a plaque bearing his name as the last person to have significant knowledge of the Cornish language. Subsequently the Cornish language continued to have some usage, by a few isolated learners, and words of Cornish origin persisted in the local dialect of English. Currently some children and young adults speak various forms of revived Cornish as native speakers. For example the musician Gwenno Saunders
Gwenno Saunders

Gwenno Saunders is a Welsh people dance and solo musician. However she is best known for being a singing and keyboardist with The Pipettes. She is also known by the name Gwenno Pipette....
 of the Pipettes has been a native speaker of Cornish and Welsh since a child.

John Mann was one of a group of Zennor
Zennor

Zennor is a village and civil parish in the Penwith district of Cornwall in the UK. The parish includes the villages of Zennor, Boswednack and Porthmeor and the hamlet of Treen ....
 children who spoke Cornish
Cornish language

The Cornish language is one of the Brythonic group of Celtic languages. The language continued to function as a community language in parts of Cornwall until the late 18th century, and there have been attempts to revive the language since the early 20th century....
 among themselves in the 1840s. In 1914, this native Cornish speaker from Boswednack
Boswednack

Boswednack is a village in the parish of Zennor near the north coast of the Penwith peninula, Cornwall, in the United Kingdom....
 was living in Chapel Street, St Just in Penwith
St Just in Penwith

St Just is a town and civil parish in the district of Penwith, Cornwall in England, United Kingdom. The parish encompasses the town of St Just and the nearby settlements of, Pendeen and Kelynack and is bounded by the parishes of Morvah to the north-east, Sancreed and Madron to the east, St Buryan and Sennen to the south and by the sea in...
 at the age of 80, ten years after Henry Jenner
Henry Jenner

File:Henjenner.jpgHenry Jenner Society of Antiquaries of London was a Celtic languages scholar, Cornwall cultural activist, and the chief originator of the Cornish language revival....
's Handbook of the Cornish Language sparked the revival.

Pêr-Jakez Helias
Pêr-Jakez Helias

P?r-Jakez Helias was a France author, poet, stage actor and radio worker of Breton language expression. He was born in 1914 in Pouldreuzic, Finist?re, Brittany and died on August 13, 1995....
, the Breton
Breton people

The Bretons are a distinct Celts ethnic group located in the region of Brittany in France. They trace much of their heritage to groups of Brythons who settled the area from south western Great Britain in the 4th to 6th centuries....
 writer, has dedicated a poem to Dolly Pentreath.

See also

  • Chesten Marchant -- sometimes considered the last monoglot Cornish speaker
  • Ned Maddrell
    Ned Maddrell

    Edward "Ned" Maddrell was a fishing from the Isle of Man who was the last surviving first language of the Manx language.Following the death of Mrs....
     -- often considered the last native speaker of Manx
    Manx language

    Manx , also known as Manx Gaelic, is a Goidelic languages spoken on the Isle of Man. The last native speaker, Ned Maddrell, died in 1974, but in recent years it has been the subject of language revival efforts, and it is now the medium of education at the , a primary school for four- to eleven-year-olds in St....
    , which is also in the Celtic language group.


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