He killed him
sir gwain fought the green knight
Andrew galilee
King Arthur's knights are challenged by the Green Knight in Arthurian legends. The Green Knight challenged the round table knights in a game of beheading.
The scheme to test King Arthur's knights, particularly in the context of the story of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, is orchestrated by the mysterious Green Knight himself. He arrives at Camelot to challenge the knights, proposing a game that tests their bravery and honor. The challenge is meant to assess their chivalric values and courage, with Sir Gawain stepping forward to accept the challenge on behalf of King Arthur's court. This encounter serves as a pivotal moment in exploring themes of honor, integrity, and the nature of true knighthood.
King Arthur's best knight was Lancelot
The Green Knight may be a bully; he may be hostile to King Arthur and his court; he may be testing King Arthur and his knights for an unknown, private reason
In Sir Gawain and the Green Knights, Sir Gawain accepts the offer to participate in the Green Knight's game. The Green Knight proposes a game where if someone will take his ax and hit him, he must be allowed to do the same to them in one year and one day.
King Arthur is the first to step forward and accept the Green Knight's offer to strike his head off with an axe. Sir Gawain stops Arthur and convinces him to step aside and allow Gawain to strike the Green Knight instead.
Sir Gawain is from the legends of King Arthur. He fought and cut off the head of the Green Knight in 'Sir Gawain and the Green Knight'.
The Christmas Game that the Green Knight proposed to Arthur's court was a challenge to any of Arthur's knights to strike him with an ax and then passively receive a blow in return a year and one day later.
Sir Kay is King Arthur's foster father's son and King Arthur's knight.
No one. There's nothing about King Arthur dreaming, or even falling asleep in the story.