Background
Miliau was the son of Budic and grandson of Alain le Long, kings of Armorica in Brittany.
Miliau was the son of Budic and grandson of Alain le Long, kings of Armorica in Brittany.
He is said to be a good saint to invoke in cases of rheumatism. Street Miliau is a figure of some importance in Breton cult and legend. He is sometimes represented as a cephalophore, id est (that is) holding his own severed head
lieutenant is hard to be sure what historical core there might be to the legends.
Miliau was famous as a protector and benefactor of the poor, and is represented as dividing his cloak with a beggar, like Street Martin of Tours. When he succeeded to the throne, Rivod had him assassinated by decapitation, around 531.
A few years later, Rivod eliminated Melar in the same way. However, the historical Alan I, King of Brittany, flourished in the 9th century and died in 907.
He really did have a son called Budic, who did not succeed him as king.
The date 892 is sometimes given for the martyrdom of Street Miliau, making him a contemporary of the Carolingian emperors, rather than the early Merovingian kings. This seems a better fit with the alleged ancestry of Street Miliau, and it is reasonable to suppose that Budic might have had two sons who quarreled over their ranking within the kingdom. This dating separates Miliau from Street Melar by more than three centuries.
On the other hand, the paternity, and even the geographical origins, of Melar are disputed, and it possible that the connection between the two is based on a misunderstanding.
A further confusing factor is that Street Hervé, whose date of death (as an old man) is generally given as 556, is also regarded as a native of Guimiliau. Even the earlier dating for Miliau would make it improbable that Hervé was born in a village of that name, though it would not exclude the possibility that he was born in that locality some time before Miliau.