Because continued resistance to Roman rule in Armorica was supported by Celtic aristocrats in Britain, Julius Caesar led two invasions of Britain in 55 and 54 BC in response.
Under the Roman Empire, Armorica was administered as part of the province of Lugdunensis, which had its capital in Lyons. When the Roman provinces were reorganized in the fourth century, Armorica was placed under the second and third Lugdunensium provinces. Armorica rebelled from the Roman Empire in the 430s and again in the 440s, throwing out the ruling officals.
As the Brittany peninsula came to be settled with Romano-British from Britain in the fifth through seventh centuries, and Vikings or Northmen settled in the Cotentin[?] peninsula and the lower Seine around Rouen in the ninth and tenth centuries, these regions came to be known as Brittany and Normandy respectively, and the name Armorica fell out of use.
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