A Thierry,
Il existe une extension de Parisii en (G)Bretagne (Yorkshire)
Voici l'étude étymologique proposée par Rivet & Smith :
derivation.
The name is identical with that of thé Gaulish Parisii, which survives as that of thé capital of France: for a discussion of thé connection, see I. M. Stead, The La Tène Cultures of Eastern Yorkshire (York, 1966), and H. G. Ramm, The Parisi (London, 1978). Holder il 932 explains their name by comparison with an assumed *Quâr-îsii in Q-Celtic, based on a verb-stem *qari-*qariu-, citing as a derivative Old Irish cuirim 'ich setze, stelle', a cognate being Old Welsh péri, infinitive of param, paraf ' wùrke ' ; with suffixes *-is-io-. To this O'Rahilly EIHM 147-48 adds thé parallel of thé Quariates people of thé Alps, whose name in P-Celtic would be *Pariatis, a précise forerunner of Wclsh peiriad 'one who causes'. Sensés suggested for thé ethnie name are 'efficaces, strenui ' (Zeuss) and ' gens dont les actes produisent des effets' (d'Arbois de Jubainville) ; but O'Rahilly thinks thé Quariates have the name of a deity which means ' the shaper, maker'. Any one of these might have applied to thé Parisi ; the suggestion about a base in a divine name is that most in accord with modem thinkmg about many ethnie names.
identification.
A people of eastern Yorkshire to whom Ptolemy, placing them next to the Brigantes and near Gab-rantovicum Sinus, ascribes only Petuaria
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JC Even
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