Territory The region of Brittany was created in 1941 from four of the five
departments constituting the territory of
traditional Brittany. The other is
Loire-Atlantique, which is included in the region of
Pays de la Loire, whose capital,
Nantes, was a historical capital of the
Duchy of Brittany. The capital of the administrative region is
Rennes, although
Nantes is considered the capital of historic Brittany and is located in
Loire-Atlantique. The
reunification of Brittany is supported by a majority of Loire-Atlantique and is considered a prerequisite to further autonomy of Brittany as a whole. Part of the reason Brittany was split between two present-day regions was to avoid the rivalry between Rennes and Nantes. Although Nantes was the principal capital of the Duchy of Brittany until the sixteenth century, Rennes had been the seat of the Duchy's supreme court of justice between 1560 and 1789. Rennes had also been the administrative capital of the
Intendant of Brittany between 1689 and 1789, and Intendances were the most important administrative units of the
kingdom of France in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. As for the provincial States of Brittany, a legislative body which had originally met every two years in a different city of Brittany, that had met in Rennes only between 1728 and 1789, although not in the years 1730, 1758, and 1760. Despite that, the
Chambre des comptes had remained in Nantes until 1789. However, from 1381 until the end of the 15th century
Vannes (
Gwened in Breton) had served as the administrative capital of the Duchy, remaining the seat of its
Chambre des comptes until the 1490s, and also the seat of its
Parlement until 1553 and then again between 1675 and 1689. Although there were previous plans to create regions out of the departments, like the Clémentel plan (1919) or the Vichy regionalisation programme (1941), these plans had no effect or else were abolished in 1945. The current
French regions date from 1956 and were created by gathering departments together. In Brittany, this led to the creation of the new region of Brittany, which included only four out of the five historical Breton departments. The term
région was officially created by the Law of Decentralisation (2 March 1982), which also gave regions their legal status. The first direct elections for regional representatives took place on 16 March 1986. File:LeDiben Harbor.jpg|Le Diben harbour –
Plougasnou File:Marche des Lices mise en place 03.JPG|Rennes File:Brest - Le Château - PA00089847 - 011.JPG|Brest File:Bretagne Finistere Quimper 20055.jpg|Quimper
Departments Brittany comprises four departments:
Côtes-d'Armor,
Finistère,
Ille-et-Vilaine, and
Morbihan.
Major communities The following table is the list of communes in Brittany with a population over 15,000 inhabitants.
Rennes is situated in the east of Brittany, being the capital of the region, the capital of the
Ille-et-Vilaine department, as well as the most populous
metropolitan area in Brittany with 700,000 inhabitants (2013).
Climate The
Atlantic Ocean and the
English Channel provide Brittany with an
oceanic climate. Prevailing northwest winds reduce variations of temperature in the region. The climate is drier in southern sections. The extreme northwest has up to 10 days with temperatures above 25 °C, while southeastern Brittany can have up to 50. == Language and culture ==