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Saint Josse : ウィキペディア英語版
Judoc

Saint Judoc, Saint Josse, Saint Jost or Saint Joyce (traditionally 600–668)〔Alban Butler, (Michael Walsh, ed.) ''Butler's Lives of the Saints'' (1991) ''s.v.'' "December 13: St Judoc, or Josse (AD 688)".〕 was a seventh-century Breton noble and Catholic saint,〔The Breton genealogist Fr. Augustin du Paz, (du Paz, ''Histoire généalogique de plusieurs maisons illustres de Bretagne'', Paris, 1619) states that Conan I de Rennes, count of Brittany had a son Juthael; Alban Butler, following the twelfth-century ''Ecclesiastical History'' (iii) of Orderic Vitalis ("Beatus Iudocus Iuthail regis Britonum filius et frater Iudicail regis"), states "Judoc was a son of Juthaël, King of Armorica (Brittany), and brother of that Judicaël who had a cult in the Diocese of Quimper", whom Orderic would make king of the "Britons" after his father.〕 who sought the protection of Aymon, a predecessor of the counts of Ponthieu, to live as a hermit and renounce the crown of Brittany, in a place then called either ''Sidraga'' or ''Schaderias'' or ''Runiacum'',〔Butler 1991 gives "Runiacum".〕 located in the coastal forest near the mouth of the River Canche. He travelled to Rome along the via Francigena, returning safely shortly before his death.
==Etymology==

The name Judoc is the 14th century Breton version of Iudocus in Latin, Josse in French, Jost, Joost or Joos in Dutch and Joyce in English. Meaning "lord", the name became rare after the 14th century.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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