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King Arthur
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(European mythology)

Hic jacet Arthurus, rex quondam, rexque futurus. ‘Here lies Arthur, king that was, king that shall be’. This inscription on his tomb at Glastonbury catches the flavour of his legendary life and un-death. In Wales, Cornwall, and Brittany, during the medieval period, there was a firm popular belief that Arthur was not dead but would return to deliver his people from their enemies. He was the focus and inspiration of late Celtic mythology.

In one of the earliest references to Arthur, namely the Historia Brittonum of Nennius, a ninth-century Welsh monk, he was described as dux bellorum, ‘leader of troops’. Like the Irishman Finn MacCool, he was a warrior who defended his country against foreign invaders. But his legendary character by far outshone whatever historical fame he may have had. In romance, King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table were the paragons of chivalry.

Son of Uther Pendragon, King of Britain, and Igraine, wife of Duke Gorlois of Cornwall, Arthur was conceived out of wedlock and brought up by the wizard Merlin. By pulling the magic sword Excalibur from a stone from which no one else could extract it, he revealed himself, though then a child, as the predestined king. Crowned at the age of fifteen, in Wales, he soon showed his skill as a military commander, even reaching the city of Rome in one campaign. Against Merlin's advice Arthur married Guinevere, who loved Sir Lancelot and was unfaithful to the king. Disaster struck his kingdom in the shape of a rebellion raised by Mordred, his nephew. A great battle was fought, nearly all of the Knights of the Round Table slain, and Arthur himself sorely wounded. Excalibur was thrown into a lake, and in a boat three fairies took Arthur away to Avalon, or Avallach which has been identified with Glastonbury.

 
 
Who2 Biography: King Arthur, Legendary Character / Royalty

  • Born: c. 6th century A.D.
  • Birthplace: England
  • Died: Possibly 537 A.D.
  • Best Known As: Ruler of Camelot

King Arthur is one of the great mythic figures of English literature. Dozens of legends and romantic images have grown up around him: the knights of the Round Table, Merlin the wizard, and the Holy Grail, to name a few. Historians can't decide whether anyone like Arthur ever existed, though most now accept that the legend is very loosely based on a real historical figure; he may have been a 5th or 6th century ruler name Arturus or Riothamus.

 
Dictionary: Ar·thur  (är'thər) pronunciation
n.

A legendary British hero, said to have been king of the Britons in the sixth century A.D. and to have held court at Camelot.


 

King Arthur and his circle are creations of medieval writers drawing on history, folklore, mythology, and imagination. Arthurian material has been continually reshaped and developed, reflecting aspects of contemporary life, morality, and aspirations. The ‘real’ Arthur is a hero referred to in the British poem the Gododdin (c.600), in the 9th-cent. Nennius' Historia Brittonum, and in two entries in the 10th-cent. Annales Cambriae. The original warlord, who defies identification, was developed by the 9th- and 10th-cent. Welsh into a great Welsh victor. Welsh tradition in turn contributed to oral traditions in Cornwall, and in Brittany, where it came to be believed that he still lived. It was probably Breton bards who were responsible for the Round Table motif. But Arthur and his world were definitively formed in the 1130s by Geoffrey of Monmouth in his fictional History of the Kings of Britain. In this, Arthur is the ideal king, conqueror of much of Europe, attacking even Rome. Finally defeated and mortally wounded, he is borne to Avalon.

Arthur's court proved a magnet for heroes and their deeds, and in much Arthurian material Arthur's own profile is low. The legend of Tristan and Isolde, one of the most popular, was tacked on to Arthur's. Other tales, however, developed out of it. The Grail element, combining Celtic traditions of magical testing-vessels and blessed food-producing horns with Christian sentiment, first crystallized in French. Chrétien of Troyes in the 1170s and 1180s also introduced courtly love, made the Round Table a centre of chivalry, and identified Arthur's capital as Camelot. The first treatment in (Middle) English was Layamon's Brut (late 12th cent.), which introduced the element of faerie. The greatest English production was the late 14th-cent. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.

The cult of chivalry was a European phenomenon. Arthurian romances portrayed its ideals, and its organization and trappings. Arthurian characters and deeds were emulated in tournaments, sometimes in Arthurian dress, and in ceremonial, as in Edward III's foundation of the Order of the Garter. Arthurian matters could be politically useful. Honour paid by Edward I to what were apparently bones of Arthur and Guinevere, at Glastonbury in 1278, was flattering to the Welsh, while emphasizing that hope for a Messianic delivery from him was pointless.

In the early modern period the popularity of Arthurian material declined. It survived in the English-speaking world because of Sir Thomas Malory, whose work, completed about 1469, retailed the story as a tragedy. It was printed in 1485 by Caxton as the Morte Darthur. Henry VII exploited Welsh interest, for example naming his elder son Arthur, and making him prince of Wales in 1489, but Arthur's significance under the Tudors was chiefly in pageantry and literature. There was some drama and poetry, and Arthur was taken up by Edmund Spenser in his Faerie Queene. Shakespeare, however, gave him no attention.

Arthurian romance was next popular in the 19th cent., though Dryden wrote a play which was set to music by Purcell. Sir Walter Scott and William Wordsworth wrote some Arthurian material, but the boom began with Tennyson's poems, from 1832, based on Malory. Tennyson's characters often symbolize particular qualities, and his works are moralizing. Other Arthurian writers include Algernon Swinburne, William Morris, Matthew Arnold, and (satirically) the American Mark Twain. In the 20th cent. Arthurian settings and circles were an enduring theme for novelists and poets of very different kinds. British musical treatments include works by Boughton, Bax, Parry, and Elgar. There have been a number of films.

Many attempts have been made to identify Arthurian sites. Through the ages Camelot has been located at Cadbury (where an Iron Age hill-fort was a centre of British power in the late 5th cent.), Caerleon, Colchester, Winchester, Tintagel, and, recently and controversially, near Stirling. The origin of Arthur's association with Cornwall is not clear. Castle Dore and Tintagel (with their late 5th- and early 6th-cent. secular aristocratic dwellings) are ‘identified’ as settings for Tristan and Isolde. Glastonbury was associated in the mid-12th cent. with an abduction of Guinevere, and became identified with Avalon. In 1190 or 1191 the monks ‘discovered’ the burial of Arthur and Guinevere, and in the mid-13th cent. they added Joseph of Arimathea, with whom the Holy Grail was associated, to their history.

 

Arthurian literature is beyond the scope of the present work, as is the problem of Arthur's historical setting. One theme, however, the belief that Arthur is not dead and will return, remained rooted in the popular mind throughout the centuries. The earliest references come from Celtic areas—a Welsh poem which remarks cryptically, ‘A mystery until Doomsday is the grave of Arthur’; a mention of a fight which broke out at Bodmin (Cornwall) in 1113 because some Frenchmen laughed at a local man who assured them Arthur was alive; allusions to an obstinate belief among Bretons that he would return.

By the time Malory wrote, in the 1460s, the tomb at Glastonbury containing a coffin alleged to be Arthur's was famous, but he does not mention it. Instead, he first says that a ship full of fair ladies bore Arthur away to ‘the vale of Avilion’ to be healed, but then that they returned that night with a corpse, and asked a hermit to bury it; finally, he says there were many tales, both written and oral, and he cannot decide between them:

No more of the very certainty of his death I never read, but thus was he led away in a ship wherein were three queens….[These] ladies brought him to his burials…but yet the hermit knew not in certain that it was verily the body of King Arthur…. Yet some men say in many parts of England that Arthur is not dead, but had by the will of Our Lord Jesu into another place, and men say that he shall come again, and he shall win the Holy Cross. I will not say it shall be so, but rather I will say, here in this world he changed his life. But many men say that there is written upon his tomb this verse: Hic jacet Arthurus, Rex quondam Rexque futurus [‘Here lies Arthur, former King and future King’]. (Morte d'Arthur, book 21, chapter 7).


Part of this derives from Geoffrey of Monmouth, who says Arthur was taken by boat to Avalon, an island paradise where nine queens would heal him. Folk tradition, however, claims he is sleeping in some secret cavern with his knights round him until his country needs him—a tale told of great kings and heroes throughout Europe. It is localized at several places in Britain, the main English ones being Cadbury Castle (Somerset), Richmond Castle (Yorkshire), and Sewingshields Castle (Northumberland). It tells how a farmer, or a potter, happens upon a secret entrance in the hillside, leading to an underground chamber where Arthur and his knights lie sleeping, surrounded by weapons and treasures, including a sword and a horn. At this point, the man blunders; either he draws the sword but fails to blow the horn, or he runs away without doing either. He can never find the entrance again.

Arthur's name is attached to a number of other sites, sometimes in such a way as to imply that he was imagined as a giant. There is a huge crag called Arthur's Seat near Sewingshields, a megalith called Arthur's Quoit at Trethevy (Cornwall), and another called Arthur's Stone at Hereford, with dents said to be the marks of his knees. There are also places linked to events in the medieval romances, either in the old texts themselves, or by later speculation. For instance, it is said that Excalibur was thrown into either Looe Pool or Dozmary Pool (both in Cornwall).

Other beliefs, more rarely recorded, are that Arthur leads the Wild Hunt, and that he lives on as a raven.

See also ALDERLEY EDGE, ROUND TABLE.

Bibliography
The full bibliography list is available here.

  • Westwood, 1985: 5-8, 18-21, 29, 241-5, 313-15, 370-1
 

Unlike his supposed historical prototype, the 6th-c. warrior chieftain of the Britons, the King Arthur of literature is above all the paragon of chivalric courtesy. His figure looms large over the matière de Bretagne and French courtly romance. He and his court, the knights of the Round Table, are the touchstones of an ethos of refined chivalry, combining amorous and military service, set in a Golden Age. On to this, the medieval aristocracy projected its idealized self-image. The change in Arthur's role away from heroic combatant to justice-loving monarch presiding over a leisured society is embryonic in Geoffrey of Monmouth, further emphasized in Wace's Brut, and more or less complete by the time of Chrétien de Troyes, in whose romances he is an often somewhat passive, background figure representative of an older order. Although he continues to provide military leadership in later romances, his status is inevitably compromised by his wife Guenièvre's adulterous relationship with Lancelot, which in La Mort le roi Artu (c.1230) is one of the factors that contribute to the collapse of the Arthurian world.

[Ian Short]

 

[Na]

Legendary king and champion of the British against the Anglo-Saxon invaders, immortalized in the 15th century ad by Malory's chivalric tales about the Knights of the Round Table and the search for the Holy Grail. Most of the stories about Arthur belong to the 12th century and later, and even his existence is disputed.

 

The British hero ‘King Arthur’, of medieval international romance, legend, pseudo-history, and poetry. As Arthur was the most popular figure in European literature from the 12th to the 15th centuries, and because speculations about his origins and possible historicity have been endless, the study of his persona and associations fills libraries. The earliest written evidence for Arthur is in Welsh sources: Gildas, who wrote the Latin history De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae before AD 547; the 9th-century Historia Brittonum, formerly attributed to Nennius; and the Annales Cambriae, compiled c.950–1000. These fragments suggest to learned commentators that the beginnings of the Arthurian character lay in British (i.e. Brythonic, antecedent to the modern Welsh) resistance to Saxon encroachments after the withdrawal of Roman forces (c.449–600). Welsh commentators, eager to accept Arthur as one of their own, have presented etymologies for Arthur's name to compete with several from other languages. Among the most plausible are arth [bear] = (g)wr [hero]; this is further supported by Arthur's association with the constellation Ursa Major, ‘Great Bear’. A second nomination is arddhu, ‘very black’; this is further supported by Arthur's association with theblack raven or chough. A writer who was not keen on the Welsh contributed most to what we now know as the dramatic character; this was Geoffrey of Monmouth, whose widely read Historia Regum Britanniae (c.1136) freely adapted several Welsh sources, including Nennius and others now lost.

In the following century several writers, including Wace of Jersey, Layamon, and Chrétien de Troyes, added new dimensions both to the character of Arthur and to the whole of Arthurian literature; of these, Chrétien appears to have made the greatest use of Celtic sources. In this same century appeared the anonymous Welsh prose romance Culhwch ac Olwen, which despite its charm was apparently not known outside Wales until the 19th century. Other Welsh Arthurian narratives followed that have been conventionally bound with the Mabinogi since its first translation in 1848. These are known under their Welsh titles, Breuddwyd Rhonabwy [The Dream of Rhonabwy], Owain [The Lady of the Fountain], Peredur, and Geraint ac Enid. From the time of Geoffrey, according to T. G. Jones, Arthur tended to be folkloric in Welsh narrative and legendary in the Triads. In Welsh tradition Arthur's activities are centred in south-east Wales and Cornwall. Less well known is the Scottish claim for Arthur's identity, which in 1989 was supported by Burke's Peerage. Arthur's Seat (a place-name found elsewhere in Britain) is an 822-foot hill near the centre of Edinburgh. And from the beginning of the 13th century the literary character of Arthur had a life of its own in nations beyond the Celtic lands.

Although the claims for the Celtic origin of Arthuriana made by R. S. Loomis in Celtic Myth and Arthurian Romance (1927) are now widely disputed, a number of striking parallels do exist between Celtic and Arthurian narratives. Examples include Irish, Scottish Gaelic, and Breton instances, as well as Welsh. Those figures most often thought to resemble Arthur include: Fionn mac Cumhaill, Conchobar mac Nessa, Eochaid Airem, Gwydion, Angus Óg, and Ogma. If these figures are not originals from which Arthurian copies were made, they certainly evoke a comparable ambiance and resonance. Some commentators have argued that post-12th-century Celtic narratives may themselves have been influenced by international Arthurian examples. Regardless of the merits of either side of the debate on origins, it must be admitted that a character called Arthur or Arthur of Britain also appears in Irish folklore collected from oral sources. He has little of the personality of the Arthur of Arthurian romance, and seems instead only to be a rapacious invader, much as another invader called ‘King of the World’ may evoke a peasant conception of the Holy Roman Emperor.

From the vast bibliography of Arthuriana a few items will be especially useful for Celticists. See the essays of K. H. Jackson, A. O. H. Jarman, I. L. Foster, R. Bromwich, and E. Hoepffner in R. S. Loomis (ed.), Arthurian Literature in the Middle Ages (Oxford, 1959); G. D. West, An Index to Names in Arthurian Romances (Toronto, 1975); Jean Markale, Le Roi Arthur et la société celtique (Paris, 1976); and King Arthur: King of Kings (London, 1977); Joy Chant, The High Kings: Arthur's Celtic Ancestors (New York, 1981). Also to be consulted are V. M. Lagoria and M. L. Day (eds.), King Arthur Through the Ages (2 vols., New York, 1989); N. J. Lacy (comp.), The Arthurian Encyclopedia (New York, 1986); E. Reiss, L. H. Reiss, and B. Taylor (eds.), Arthurian Legend and Literature: An Annotated Bibliography (2 vols., New York, 1983); Rachel Bromwich and A. O. H. Jarman (eds.), The Arthur of the Welsh (Cardiff, 1991); and the Bulletin Bibliographique of the International Arthurian Society, published annually. See also MERLIN; AVALON; CAMELOT; TRISTAN; PREIDDIAU ANNWFN [The Spoils of Annwfn].

 

Legendary king of England, son of Uther Pendragon and Igraine. It seems likely that Arthur was a sixth-century leader whose life and deeds became interwoven with romance mythology. The character of King Arthur is strongly identified with occult legends. Not only do we find his court a veritable center of happenings more or less supernatural, but his mysterious origin and the subsequent events of his career contain matter of considerable interest from an occult standpoint.

He is connected with one of the greatest magical names of early times— Merlin the Enchanter. It is possible that Merlin was originally a British deity who in later times degenerated from his high position in the popular imagination. There are many accounts concerning him, one of which states that he was the direct offspring of Satan himself, but that a zealous priest succeeded in baptizing him before his infernal parent could carry him off.

From Merlin, Arthur received much good advice, both magical and rational. Merlin was present when the king was gifted with his magic sword, Excalibur, which endowed him with practical invulnerability, and all through his career Merlin was deep in the king's counsels. Merlin's tragic imprisonment by the Lady Viviana, who shut him up eternally in a rock through the agency of one of his own spells, removed him from his sphere of activity at the Arthurian Court, and from that time the shadows were seen to gather swiftly around Arthur's head.

Innumerable are the tales concerning the knights of his court who met with magical adventures, and as the stories grew older in the popular mind, additions to these naturally became the rule. Of note is the offshoot of the Arthurian epic, known as the Holy Grail, in which the knights who go in quest of it encounter every description of sorcery for the purpose of retarding their progress.

Arthur's end is as strange as his origin, for he is wafted away by fairy hands, or at least by invisible agency, to the Isle of Avil-lion, which probably is the same place as the Celtic otherworld across the ocean.

As a legend and a tradition, that of Arthur is undoubtedly the most powerful and persistent in the British imagination. It has employed the pens and enhanced the dreams of many of the giants of English literature from the time of Geoffrey of Monmouth to the present day. Some claim Arthur was buried at Glastonbury, and tourists who visit are shown a tomb site and may purchase the replica of a cross with an inscription concerning Arthur.

Sources:

De Troyes, Chrétien. Arthurian Romances (Erec and Enide; Cligés; Yvain; Lancelot). London, 1914.

Lacy, Norris J., ed. The Arthurian Encyclopedia. New York: Garland Publishing, 1986.

Reiss, Edmund, Louise Horner Reiss, and Beverly Taylor. Arthurian Legend and Literature: An Annotated Bibliography. New York: Garland Publishing, 1984.

Waite, Arthur Edward. The Holy Grail: The Galahad Quest in the Arthurian Literature. 1933. Reprint, New York: University Books, 1961.

White, Terence H. The Once and Future King. London: Collins, 1958.

Wilhelm, James J., and Laila Zamuelis Gross, eds. The Romance of Arthur. New York: Garland Publishing, 1984.

 
Wikipedia: King Arthur
A bronze Arthur plate armour with visor raised and with jousting shield wearing Kastenbrust armour (early 15th century) by Peter Vischer, typical of later anachronistic depictions of Arthur
A bronze Arthur plate armour with visor raised and with jousting shield wearing Kastenbrust armour (early 15th century) by Peter Vischer, typical of later anachronistic depictions of Arthur

King Arthur is a fabled Brython leader and a prominent figure in Britain's legendary history. A real individual may have been the inspiration of the legend, but later stories of Arthur are almost entirely fictional. In these he appears as the ideal of kingship both in war and peace; even in modern times he has been ranked as one of the 100 Greatest Britons of all time. Over time, the stories of King Arthur have captured such widespread interest that he is no longer identified as the legendary hero of a single nation. Countless new legends, stories, revisions, books, and films have been produced in Europe and the United States that unabashedly enlarge on and expand the fictional accounts of King Arthur.

The scarce historical background to Arthur is found in the works of Nennius and Gildas and in the Annales Cambriae. The legendary Arthur developed initially through the pseudo-history of Geoffrey of Monmouth and the Welsh collection of anonymous tales known as the Mabinogion. Chrétien de Troyes began the literary tradition of Arthurian romance, which subsequently became, as the Matter of Britain, one of the principal themes of medieval literature. Medieval Arthurian writing reached its conclusion in Thomas Mallory's comprehensive Morte D'Arthur, published in 1485. Modern interest in Arthur was revived by Alfred Tennyson in Idylls of the King, and in the paintings of the Pre-Raphaelites. Key modern reworkings of the Arthurian legends include Mark Twain's A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, T.H. White's The Once and Future King and Richard Wagner's opera Parsifal.

The central themes of the Arthurian cycle vary depending on which texts are examined. However, they include the establishment of Arthur as king through the sword in the stone episode, the advice of the wizard Merlin, the establishment of the fellowship of knights known as the Round Table and the associated code of chivalry, the defence of Britain against the Saxons, numerous magical adventures associated with particular knights, notably Kay, Gawain, Lancelot, Percival and Galahad, the enmity of Arthur's half-sister Morgan le Fay, the quest for the Holy Grail, the adultery of Lancelot and Arthur's Queen Guinevere, the final battle with Mordred, and the legend of Arthur's future return. The magical sword Excalibur, the castle Camelot and the Lady of the Lake also play pivotal roles.

Historicity

The historicity of the King Arthur legend has long been debated by scholars, but a consensus has been reached over the years that King Arthur was in fact real, not fictional. One school of thought, based on references in the Historia Brittonum and Annales Cambriae, would see Arthur as a shadowy historical figure, a Romano-British leader fighting against the invading Anglo-Saxons sometime in the late 5th to early 6th century. The Historia Brittonum ("History of the Britons"), a 9th century Latin historical compilation attributed to the Welsh cleric Nennius, gives a list of twelve battles fought by Arthur, culminating in the Battle of Mons Badonicus, where he is said to have single-handedly killed 960 men. The 10th century Annales Cambriae ("Welsh Annals"), dates this battle to 516, and also mentions the Battle of Camlann, in which Arthur and Medraut were both killed, dated to 537. Neither text refers to Arthur as a king, although this may not be significant as they often name kings without mentioning their title. The Historia Brittonum calls him dux bellorum or "dux (commander) of battles".[1] The late historian John Morris went so far as to make the putative reign of Arthur at the turn of the 5th century the organising principle of his history of sub-Roman Britain and Ireland, The Age of Arthur. Even so, he found little to say of an historic Arthur, save as an example of the idea of kingship, one among such contemporaries as Vortigern, Cunedda, Hengest and Coel. Morris argues that Arthur's power base would have been in the Celtic areas of Wales, Cornwall and the West Country, or the Brythonic "Old North" which covered modern Northern England and Southern Scotland.[2]

Another school of thought argues that Arthur had no historical existence. Nowell Myres was prompted by the publication of Morris's Age of Arthur to write "no figure on the borderline of history and mythology has wasted more of the historian's time".[3] Gildas' 6th century polemic De Excidio Britanniae ("On the Ruin of Britain"), written within living memory of the Battle of Mons Badonicus, mentions that battle but does not mention Arthur.[4] Some argue that he was originally a half-forgotten Celtic deity that devolved into a personage, citing parallels with the supposed change of the sea-god Lir into King Lear, the Kentish totemic horse-gods Hengest and Horsa, who were historicised by the time of Bede's account and given an important role in the 5th century Anglo-Saxon conquest of eastern Britain, the founder-figure of Caer-fyrddin, Merlin (Welsh Myrddin), or the Norse demigod Sigurd or Siegfried, who was historicised in the Nibelungenlied by associating him with a famous historical 5th century battle between Huns and the Burgundians.[5] Some cite a possible etymology of Arthur's name from Welsh arth, "bear", and propose the Gaulish bear god Artio as a precedent for the legend, although worship of Artio is not attested in Britain.[citation needed]

Historical documents for the period are scarce, so a definitive answer to this question is unlikely. Sites and places have been identified as "Arthurian" since the 12th century,[6] but archaeology can reveal names only through inscriptions. The so-called "Arthur stone" discovered in 1998 in securely dated 6th century contexts among the ruins at Tintagel Castle in Cornwall, a secular, high status settlement of Sub-Roman Britain, created a brief stir.[7] There is no other archaeological evidence for Arthur.

A number of identifiable historical figures have been suggested as the historical basis for Arthur, ranging from Lucius Artorius Castus, a Roman officer who served in Britain in the 2nd century; Roman usurper emperors like Magnus Maximus; and sub-Roman British rulers like Riothamus, Ambrosius Aurelianus,[5] Owain Ddantgwyn[6] and Athrwys ap Meurig.[6]

Arthur's name

The origin of the name Arthur is itself a matter of debate. Some suggest it is derived from the Latin family name Artorius, meaning "ploughman" (the variant "Arturius" is known from inscriptions).[citation needed] Others propose a derivation from Welsh arth (earlier art), meaning "bear", suggesting art-ur, "bear-man", is the original form. Arthur's name appears as Arturus in early Latin Arthurian texts, never as Artorius, although it is possible that Vulgar Latin forms of Artorius, pronounced in Celtic languages, could have yielded both Arthur and Arturus.[citation needed]

Toby D. Griffen of Southern Illinois University links the name Arthur to Arcturus, the brightest star in the constellation Boötes, near Ursa Major or the Great Bear. The Classical Latin Arcturus would have become Arturus in Vulgar Latin, and its brightness and position in the sky led people to regard it as the "guardian of the bear" and the "leader" of the other stars in Boötes. Griffin suggests that "Arthur" was not a personal name, but a nom de guerre or an epithet borne by the man who led the Britons against the Saxons, which both Latin and Brythonic-speakers would associate with leadership and bear-like ferocity.[8] A variant of the nom de guerre theory has the name combining the Welsh and Latin words for "bear", art and ursus.[9] The name Arthur and its variants were used as personal names by at least four leaders who lived after the traditional dates of Arthur’s battles, suggesting to Griffen and others that it only began to be used as a personal name after "the" Arthur made it famous.

Literary traditions

The historical sources for Arthur have been discussed above. The creator of the familiar literary persona of Arthur was Geoffrey of Monmouth, with his pseudohistorical Historia Regum Britanniae ("History of the Kings of Britain"), written in the 1130s. All the textual sources for Arthur are divided into those that preceded Geoffrey and those that followed him, and could not avoid his influence.

Pre-Galfridian traditions

The earliest literary references to Arthur are found in Welsh poetry. He is mentioned briefly in the late 6th century Welsh poem cycle The Gododdin, attributed to the poet Aneirin. In one verse, the bravery of one of the warriors is described, "though he was not Arthur".[10] The poems are known only from a manuscript of the 13th century, so it is impossible to determine whether this passage is original or a later interpolation. Several poems attributed to Taliesin, a poet said to have lived in the 6th century, refer to Arthur, including The Chair of the Sovereign, which refers to "Arthur the Blessed",[11] The Treasures of Annwn, which recounts an expedition of Arthur to the Otherworld,[12] and Journey to Deganwy, which contains the passage, "as at the battle of Badon, with Arthur, chief holder of feasts, his tall blades red from the battle all men remember".[citation needed]

Arthur appears in a number of well known vitae ("Lives") of 6th century saints, most of them written at the monastery of Llancarfan in the 12th century. In the Life of Saint Illtud, apparently written around 1140,[citation needed] Arthur is said to be a cousin of that churchman. According to the Life of Saint Gildas, written in the 11th century by Caradoc of Llancarfan, Arthur killed Gildas' brother Hueil, a pirate on the Isle of Man. In the Life of Saint Cadoc, written around 1100 by Lifris of Llancarfan, the saint gives protection to a man who killed three of Arthur's soldiers, and Arthur demands a herd of cattle as wergeld for his men. Cadoc delivers them as demanded, but when Arthur takes possession of the animals, they transform into bundles of ferns. Similar incidents are described in the late medieval biographies of Carannog, Padern, Goeznovius, and Efflam.

An early Welsh poem found in the Black Book of Carmarthen, Pa gur yv y porthaur? ("What man is the gatekeeper?"), takes the form of a dialogue between Arthur and the gatekeeper of a castle he wishes to enter, in which Arthur recounts the deeds of his men, notably Cai and Bedwyr. The 10th century Welsh prose tale Culhwch and Olwen, included in the modern Mabinogion collection, includes a list of more than 200 of Arthur's men, Cai and Bedwyr included, and tells of Arthur helping his kinsman Culhwch win the hand of Olwen, daughter of Ysbaddaden the giant, by completing a series of apparently impossible tasks, including the hunt for the great boar Twrch Trwyth. The Historia Brittonum mentions Arthur hunting a boar named Troynt. This may be related to a post-Galfridian tradition of Arthur as leader of the Wild Hunt, first mentioned in the 13th century by Gervase of Tilbury.[13]

The Welsh Triads contain a number of traditions of Arthur. Many are derived from Geoffrey of Monmouth and later European traditions (see below), but some are independent of these and may refer to pre-existing Welsh traditions. His court is placed at Celliwig in Cornwall, identified with Callington by the Cornish antiquarians, but Rachel Bromwich, latest editor and translator of the The Welsh Triads, identifies it with Kelly Rounds, a hill fort in the parish of Egloshayle.[14]

Bewnans Ke, a play in Middle Cornish held by the National Library of Wales, is a recent Arthurian discovery.

Geoffrey of Monmouth

The first narrative account of Arthur's reign is found in Geoffrey of Monmouth's 12th century Latin work Historia Regum Britanniae ("History of the Kings of Britain"), an imaginative and fanciful account of British kings from the legendary Trojan exile Brutus to the 7th century Welsh prince Cadwallader. Geoffrey places Arthur in the same post-Roman period as the Historia Brittonum and Annales Cambriae. He introduces Arthur's father, Uther Pendragon, and his magician advisor Merlin, and the story of Arthur's conception, in which Uther, disguised as his enemy Gorlois by Merlin's magic, fathers Arthur on Gorlois' wife Igerna at Tintagel. On Uther's death, the fifteen-year-old Arthur succeeds him as king and fights a series of battles, similar to those in the Historia Brittonum, culminating in the Battle of Bath, and then defeats the Picts and Scots, conquers Ireland, Iceland, Norway, Denmark and Gaul, and ushers in a period of peace and prosperity which lasts until the Roman emperor Lucius Tiberius demands tribute. Arthur refuses, and war follows. Arthur and his warriors, including Caius, Bedver and Walganus, defeat Lucius in Gaul, but as he prepares to march on Rome, Arthur hears news that his nephew Modredus, whom he had left in charge of Britain, has married his wife Guanhumara and seized the throne. Arthur returns to Britain and defeats and kills Modredus on the river Camblam in Cornwall, but is mortally wounded. He hands the crown to his kinsman Constantine, and is taken to the isle of Avalon to be healed of his wounds, never to be seen again.[15]

Geoffrey's Historia became very popular and influential, and was translated into Norman French verse by Wace, who introduced the Round Table, and Middle English verse by Layamon. It fed back into Welsh tradition, with three different Welsh prose translations appearing, and material in the Welsh triads deriving from it.

Arthurian romance

The popularity of Geoffrey's Historia and its derivative works led to new Arthurian works being written in continental Europe, particularly in France, in the late 12th and early 13th centuries. Arthur and his retinue appear in some of the Lais of Marie de France, but it was the work of another French poet, Chrétien de Troyes, that had the greatest influence. Chrétien wrote five Arthurian romances between 1170 and 1190. Erec and Enide and Cligès are tales of courtly love with Arthur's court as their backdop, and Yvain, the Knight of the Lion features Yvain and Gawain in a supernatural adventure, but the most significant for the development of the legend are Lancelot, the Knight of the Cart, which introduces Lancelot, one of the most familiar of Arthur's knights, and his adulterous relationship with Arthur's queen, Guinevere, and Perceval, the Story of the Grail, which introduces the Holy Grail and the Fisher King. Perceval, although unfinished, was particularly popular, and four separate continuations of the poem appeared over the next half a century.

In Chrétien's Perceval it is not clear exactly what the Grail is. A few decades later Robert de Boron's poem Joseph d'Arimathe explains that the Grail is the cup used by Joseph of Arimathea to catch Christ's blood during the crucifixion, later brought to Britain by Joseph's family. Robert's work had lasting effect on subsequent stories of the Grail. By contrast, in Wolfram von Eschenbach's Parzival, a Middle High German version of the story, the Grail is a magical stone.

A German poet, Ulrich von Zatzikhoven, further developed Lancelot's story in his Lanzelet, which introduces the Lady of the Lake. The Anglo-Norman poet Thomas of Britain and the Norman poet Béroul introduced the story of Tristan and Iseult in the late 12th century, later developed in Middle High German by Gottfried von Strassburg.

The Welsh Mabinogion collection contains three Arthurian romances, similar to those of Chrétien, but with some significant differences. Owain, or the Lady of the Fountain is related to Chrétien's Yvain, Geraint and Enid to Erec and Enide, and Peredur son of Efrawg to Perceval, although the place of the Holy Grail is taken by a severed head on a platter.

The Vulgate Cycle

A series of five Middle French prose works, the Estoire del Saint Grail, the Estoire de Merlin, the Lancelot propre, the Queste del Saint Graal and the Mort Artu, written in the 13th century, combine to form the first coherent version of the entire Arthurian legend, known as the Lancelot-Grail cycle, also known as the Prose Lancelot or the Vulgate Cycle. These texts introduce the character of Galahad, expand the role of Merlin, and establish the role of Camelot, first mentioned in passing in Chrétien's Lancelot, as Arthur's primary court. The Suite du Merlin or Vulgate Merlin Continuation adds more material on Merlin and on Arthur's youth, and a later series of texts, known as the Post-Vulgate Cycle, reduces the importance of Lancelot's affair with Guinevere, which was prominent in the Vulgate.

Thomas Malory

The development of the Arthurian cycle culminated in Le Morte d'Arthur, Thomas Malory's retelling of the entire legend in a single work in English in the late 15th century. Malory based his book on the various previous versions, in particular the Vulgate Cycle, and introduced some material of his own. Le Morte D'Arthur was one of the earliest printed books in England, published by William Caxton in 1485.

Arthur's swords

Main article: Excalibur

In Robert de Boron's Merlin, Arthur obtained the throne by pulling a sword from a stone. In this account, this act could not be performed except by "the true king," meaning the divinely appointed king or true heir of Uther Pendragon. This sword is thought by many to be the famous Excalibur and the identity is made explicit in the later so-called Vulgate Merlin Continuation, part of the Lancelot-Grail cycle. However, in what is sometimes called the Post-Vulgate Merlin, Excalibur was given to Arthur by the Lady of the Lake sometime after he began to reign. According to many sources, Arthur broke the sword pulled from the stone while fighting King Pellinore, and thus Merlin took him to retrieve Excalibur from the lake (as cited in many novels including Howard Pyle's King Arthur and His Knights, King Arthur and the Legend of Camelot, and indeed most modern Arthurian literature). In this Post-Vulgate version, the sword's blade could slice through anything, including steel, and its sheath made the wearer invincible in that the wearer could not die so long as they bore the scabbard.

Some stories say that Arthur did indeed pull the sword from the stone (Excalibur), giving him the right to be king, but accidentally killed a fellow knight with it and cast it away. Merlin told him to undertake a quest to find another blade, and it was then that Arthur received his sword from the hand in the water, and named it Excalibur, after his original sword. The first appearance of the sword named Caliburn is in Geoffrey of Monmouth, who asserted that in battle against Arthur "nought might armour avail, but that Caliburn would carve their souls from out them with their blood."[16]

The Alliterative Morte Arthure, a Middle English poem, gives mention of Clarent, a sword of peace meant for knighting and ceremonies as opposed to battle, which is stolen and then used to kill Arthur.

King Arthur today

The legend of King Arthur has remained popular into the 21st century. Though the popularity of Arthurian literature waned somewhat after the end of the Middle Ages, it experienced a revival during the 19th century, especially after the publication of Alfred Lord Tennyson's Idylls of the King. The subsequent period saw the creation of hundreds, perhaps thousands of books, poems, and films about King Arthur, both new works of fiction and analyses of the relevant historical and archaeological data.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Historia Brittonum 56; Annales Cambriae 516, 537
  2. ^ John Morris, The Age of Arthur: A History of the British Isles from 450–650, 1973
  3. ^ Myres, J.N.L., The English Settlements", OUP, 1989, ISBN 0-19-282235-7, p 16.
  4. ^ Gildas, De Excidio Britanniae
  5. ^ a b Green, Thomas (2006). The Historicity and Historicisation of Arthur. Arthurian Resources. Retrieved on 2007-06-22.
  6. ^ a b c Mike Ashley, The Mammoth Book of King Arthur, Robinson Books, London, 2005.
  7. ^ "Early Medieval Tintagel: An Interview with Archaeologists Rachel Harry and Kevin Brady", The heroic Age, 1999
  8. ^ Griffen, Toby D. (1994-04-08). Arthur's Name. Celtic Studies Association of North America. Retrieved on 2007-06-22.
  9. ^ Graham Phillips and Martin Keatman, King Arthur: The True Story, Arrow Books, 1993
  10. ^ The Gododdin, from Joseph P. Clancy (ed. & trans.), Earliest Welsh Poetry, Macmillan, London & New York, 1970
  11. ^ Taliesin, The Chair of the Sovereign, translated by W. F. Skene
  12. ^ Taliesin, The Raid on the Otherworld, translated by W. F. Skene]
  13. ^ The Wild Hunt
  14. ^ Rachel Bromwich, Trioedd Ynys Prydein: the Welsh Triads (Cardiff: University of Wales, 1978), p. 275
  15. ^ Geoffrey of Monmouth, Historia Regum Britanniae 8.19-24, 9, 10, 11.1-2
  16. ^ http://www.bartleby.com/211/1206.html

References

  • Leslie Alcock. Arthur's Britain: History and Archaeology AD 367 – 634. Allen Lane, The Penguin Press. London. 1971. ISBN 0-7139-0245-0
  • Mike Ashley, The Mammoth Book of King Arthur, Robinson Books, London, 2005.
  • Chris Barber & David Pykitt. Journey to Avalon. 1993.
  • Richard Barber, King Arthur in Legend and History, Boydell Press, Woodbridge 2004, ISBN 0-85115-254-6 [1]
  • Rachel Bromwich, "Concepts of Arthur", Studia Celtica, 9/10 (1976), pp.163–81.
  • Ronan Coghlan, Encyclopaedia of Arthurian Legends, Element, Shaftesbury, 1991.
  • David N. Dumville, "Sub-Roman Britain: History and Legend", History 62 (1977), pp. 173–92.
  • Adrian Gilbert, Baram Blackett & Alan Wilson. The Holy Kingdom. 1998.
  • Norma Lorre Goodrich: "King Arthur", 1986 New York/London: Franklin Watts ISBN 0-531-09701-3
  • Phyllis Ann Karr: "The Arthurian Companion", 2001 Oakland: Green Knight Publishing ISBN 1-928999-13-1
  • Longford, Elizabeth (Editor) "Arthur" chapter in The Oxford Book of Royal Anecdotes. 1989. Oxford University Press, Oxford & New York
  • Roger S. Loomis, "The Arthurian Legend before 1139", The Romanic Review, 32 (1941), 3–38.
  • Daniel Mersey. Arthur King of the Britons: From Celtic Hero To Cinema Icon. Summersdale. Chichester. 2004. ISBN 1-84024-403-8
  • John Morris. "The Age of Arthur." New York: Scribner, 1973. SBN 684 13313 X
  • Thomas Jones, "The Early Evolution of the Legend of Arthur", Nottingham Medieval Studies, 8 (1964), pp. 3–21.
  • Derek Pearsall, Arthurian Romance: a short introduction, Blackwell, Oxford 2005 ISBN 0-631-23319-9
  • Graham Phillips & Martin Keatman. King Arthur: The True Story. 1992.
  • Robert Rouse and Cory Rushton, The Medieval Quest for Arthur, Tempus, Stroud, 2005 ISBN 0-7524-3343-1
  • King Arthur, General of the Britons, Ford, David Nash. Britannia.com

Mancoff, DEbra N. The Arthurian Revival - Essays on Form, Tradition and Transformation Garland Publishing, New York and London 1992. ISBN 0-8153-0060-3

External links

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Preceded by
Uther Pendragon
Mythical British Kings Succeeded by
Constantine III