Difference between revisions of "King Arthur"

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::On the other hand, 'Arthur' may be a decayed deity from pre-Christian times, or a legendary memory.
 
::On the other hand, 'Arthur' may be a decayed deity from pre-Christian times, or a legendary memory.
  
King Arthur is the central and ruling character in the '''[[Matter of Britain]]''', along with his Knights of the Round Table. This was, in the myth, a table constructed for the King in order that no individual should have precedence over (higher status than) any other, in accordance with the chivalric code that developed in the myth of King Arthur. A table-top is still shown in Winchester as Arthur's: it was made in the thirteenth century, in the reign of [[King Edward#Edward I|Edward I]] or [[King Edward#Edward III|Edward III]], perhaps on the occasion of a tournament held to further contemporary ideas of chivalry. It was painted on the order of [[King Henry#Henry VIII|Henry VIII]] with the names of 24 knights of King Arthur and the king himself, whose 'portrait' thereon has a striking resemblance to Henry. (Early accounts say that it seated 150 knights.) It was preserved, it has been speculated, to attract tourists to Winchester, where many relics of Arthur were shown.  
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King Arthur is the central and ruling character in the '''[[Matter of Britain]]''', along with his Knights of the Round Table. This was, in the myth, a table constructed for the King in order that no individual should have precedence over (higher status than) any other, in accordance with the chivalric code that developed in the myth of King Arthur. A table-top is still shown in Winchester as Arthur's: it was made in the thirteenth century, in the reign of [[King Edward#Edward I|Edward I]] or [[King Edward#Edward III|Edward III]], perhaps on the occasion of a tournament held to further contemporary ideas of chivalry. It was painted on the order of [[King Henry#Henry VIII|Henry VIII]] with the names of 24 knights of King Arthur and the king himself, whose 'portrait' thereon has a striking resemblance to Henry. (Early accounts say that it seated 150 knights.) It was preserved, it has been speculated, to attract tourists to Winchester, where many relics of Arthur were shown, and he was said to be buried.  
  
The earliest literary mention of King Arthur is in Wace's ''Roman de Brut'' (written in [[Norman French]] and finished in 1155) and Laʒamon's ''rut'' (written in [[Old English]] after 1190). The Round Table appears in both. The Knights of the Round Table are Arthur's 'order of chivalry', and the characters in most of the parts of the [[Matter of Britain]]. Their legends were comprehensively collected by Sir Thomas [[Malory]] (c. 1416-1471) in his ''Morte Darthur'', finished in 1470 (as ''The Whole Book of King Arthur and his Noble Knights of the Round Table'') and printed by [[Caxton]][ in 1485. Later writers who have used material and ideas from yjhr lergrnds of Kingf Arthur and the [[Matter of Britain]] include [[Spenser]], in ''The Faerie Queene'', [[Tennyson]] in ''The Lady pf Shallott'' and ''The Idylls of the King]]
 
 
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Other 20th- and 21st-cent. children’s writers who have tackled the Arthurian material include Rosemary Sutcliff, Susan Cooper, Kevin Crossley-Holland, Catherine Fisher, and Philip Reeve.
  
  

Revision as of 19:54, 2 May 2017

King Arthur appears to be the trace of an historical person in the sixth century C.E. This person was not so much a King as a warrior, and leader (dux bellorum) of warriors, among the British (Celtic) people who were resisting the Anglo-Saxons. He has been identified by some with Ambrosius Aurelianus, an equally obscure Briton of the time who appears (as Arthur does not) in Gildas' De excidio Britanniae (?479 - 484).

Nennius, a 9th century writer, lists Arthur's battles in his Historia Brittonum, a not entirely reliable chronicle, "[Arthur] was twelve times chosen [as] commander [of the British], and was as often conqueror. The first ... was at the mouth of the river Gleni [perhaps in Northumberland]. The second, third, fourth, and fifth, were on another river, by the Britons called Duglas,[perhaps the Lothians; perhaps Lancashire] in the region Linuis. The sixth, on the river Bassas [perhaps the Bass Rock, in the Firth of Forth. The seventh in the wood Celidon, which the Britons call Cat Coit Celidon [the Caledonian Forest].) The eighth was near Gurnion castle [Cornwall, Norfolk and County Durham have been suggested]. where Arthur bore the image of the Holy Virgin, mother of God, upon his shoulders, and through the power of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the holy Mary, put the Saxons to flight, and pursued them the whole day with great slaughter.(7) The ninth was at the City of Legion,(8) which is called Cair Lion [Caerleon, Monmouthshire, or Exeter]. The tenth was on the banks of the river Trat Treuroit [Brue, Somerset, or Ribble, Lancashire]. The eleventh was on the mountain Breguoin, which we call Cat Bregion [Cadbury, Somerset, or Edinburgh]. The twelfth was a most severe contest, when Arthur penetrated to the hill of Badon [Badbury Rings in Dorset; Bathampton Down near Bath, Somerset; or Bowden Hill, Linlithgow]."
The Annales Cambriae give the date of Mons Badonicus as 516, and Arthur's death as occurring in 537 at the Battle of Camlann
On the other hand, 'Arthur' may be a decayed deity from pre-Christian times, or a legendary memory.

King Arthur is the central and ruling character in the Matter of Britain, along with his Knights of the Round Table. This was, in the myth, a table constructed for the King in order that no individual should have precedence over (higher status than) any other, in accordance with the chivalric code that developed in the myth of King Arthur. A table-top is still shown in Winchester as Arthur's: it was made in the thirteenth century, in the reign of Edward I or Edward III, perhaps on the occasion of a tournament held to further contemporary ideas of chivalry. It was painted on the order of Henry VIII with the names of 24 knights of King Arthur and the king himself, whose 'portrait' thereon has a striking resemblance to Henry. (Early accounts say that it seated 150 knights.) It was preserved, it has been speculated, to attract tourists to Winchester, where many relics of Arthur were shown, and he was said to be buried.



Other 20th- and 21st-cent. children’s writers who have tackled the Arthurian material include Rosemary Sutcliff, Susan Cooper, Kevin Crossley-Holland, Catherine Fisher, and Philip Reeve.


    • T.H.White
    • Camelot
    • Alcock, Leslie Arthur of the Britons