No. It is Avalon.
"Camelot" Camelot was the name of the Castle from which Arthur ruled. This kingdom, traditionally, spanned all of Britain. The "historic" Arthur may have had influence as far away as Norway and Denmark.
King Arthur's castle is commonly known as Camelot. Camelot is a mythical and legendary castle associated with the tales of King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table.
King Arthur's paradise of knights and their ladies fair, and of the knights of the round table, was "Camelot." There was even a song written about Camelot, which featured the line, "It never rains but at night in Camelot." A true kingdom of valiant knights, out fighting to rid the world of evil, and of their ladies fair. The most famous knight was Lancelot, and his lady was Guenevere, with whom he maintained a intimate relationship despite her marriage to Arthur. Lancelot also was instrumental in the ongoing search for the Holy Grail of Christ..
The legendary King Arthur and his knights, known as the Knights of the Round Table, guarded over the court of Camelot.
type there name in leadersboard and then click view the cords are there
That kind of depends upon what you consider 'real'.There was no king in any of the kingdoms of the time with that name, there was no kingdom of Camelot, nor were there any other 'knights' that are in the tales.But the stories were created for a purpose, they are as real as the parables or Aesop's fables.
The name of the island is "Astro Knights Island". (see the related question)
No. In Sonic and the Black Knight an alternate timeline exists within a storybook about Camelot and King Arthur's knights. Blaze is one of those knights and is not Blaze at all instead she goes under the name "Sir Percival".
It is usually called Camelot.
The dogs name from the jetsons was either rover or astro i dont remember but it was one of those two.
Mordred had often been going to the same location in the castle library (castle, first floor right).
The term "Camelot" was applied to the presidency of John F. Kennedy (1917-1963) by his wife, Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy. Camelot refers to the seat of the court of the legendary King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table; it has come to mean a place or time of idyllic happiness.