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a place beside Telemachus at the Chief's table
Yes there was, it was called the triclinium. It had three couches that could seat three each. It also had a table in the center that held the food. there was also an opening at one end; so it was aranged in an open square like:[1] [3][1] [ ] [3][1] [3][2][2][2]Please for give the crudeness of the model, but ir was one person per block, with the food in the middle, and each number symbolizes a couch.
Dionysus (Greek god of wine) became a god when Hestia gave up her seat of power. The Olympians were arguing so she gave up her seat so there would be no fighting.
Crete was the seat of Rhea's earliest worship; so most likely there.
- Hestia sacrificed her seat on Olympus for Dionysus, the god of wine and entertainment - She is the goddess of the hearth. - She is not in many myths.
they slaged a monsster
The most important seat at the Round Table was typically reserved for King Arthur, as he was the leader of the Knights of the Round Table and the one who convened the meetings. His seat symbolized his authority and leadership over the knights.
Siege Perilous (which later belongs to "Sir Galahad The High Prince")
The Round Table was where Arthur sat with his Knights. It was given to him as a wedding present by Guinevere's father, and it showed equality through all the knights. The number seated around the table varies, but a minimum is about 12. There was a seat left empty where all who sat in it would die except one knight, the purest of knights- Sir Galahad, who sought the Holy Grail and is almost always listed as one of the Grail knights, if not the only Grail knight. A Round Table is viewable at Winchester Castle, and lists 25 knights, including Arthur himself.
Only one knight could sit in the Seat of Peril, the one destined for it. That was Lancelot's son, Galahad.
no, the higher the knight's rank, the farther to King Arthur's right he sat. To the king's immediate right was Lancelot. To his left were the least experienced knights.
Round a table, in a park, in a cinema.
36"
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9'0" Diameter
The round table was used rather than a more conventional rectangle so that there would be no 'seating plan'. According to Sir Thomas Malory in the Morte D'Arthur, King Arthur implemented the Round Table because his knights kept fighting over who got the most prestigious seats at a normal, rectangular table (presumably those near the head of the table). By using a round table instead, Arthur made each seat equally prestigious, as a circle has no head or foot.
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