There were actually 150 knights that sat at his table. Some of them are Pellinore, Tristan, Percival, Bors, Gawain, Lancelot, Galahad, Ector, Lionel, Gaheris, Agravane, Gareth, Rheynold, Kay, Matthias and Lamorack. That is just a portion of the knights.
Different stories had different numbers of knights, ranging from only 12 to 150 or more. The Winchester Round Table, which dates from the 1270s lists 25 names of knights. See the related link for a list of names. The only medieval account which says there were 12 knights of the Round Table, plus the Siege Perilous, is the prose Perceval which claims to be by Robert de Boron. Though this work does not specifically name the Knights of the Round Table, perhaps by chance, exactly 13 prominent Arthurian knights are mentioned in this work:
# Kay the Seneschal
# Bedwyr
# Gawain son of King Lot
# Mordred son of King Lot
# Garries son of King Lot (Malory's Gareth)
# Guirres son of King Lot (Malory's Gaheris)
# Yvain son of King Urien
# Yvain White-hands
# Lancelot of the Lake
# Saigremor
# Dodinel
# Erec Perceval sits in the Siege Perilous in this story, as the thirteenth knight.
Depending on your source, there may have been more than just twelve. Here's 12 to start though:
Sir Gareth
Sir Lancelot
Sir Kay
Sir Agravain
Sir Gawain
Sir Gaheris
Sir Bedivere
Sir Tristran
Sir Dinadan
Sir Patrise
Sir Mador
Sir Galahad
Sir Galahad
Sir Launcelot Deulake
Sir Lancelot du Lac
Sir Gauen
Sir Gawain
Sir Percyvale Sir Percivale
Sir Lyonell Sir Lionell
Sir Trystram Delyens
Sir Tristram de Lyones
Sir Garethe
Sir Gareth
it was called the round table because it was around table and it was a plase for metings
galahad, lacealot and percyvill
Sir Gareth, Sir Dinadan, Sir Griflet
Uhhh . . . the Knights of the Round Table?
No King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table is not nonfiction.
The legend says that they were The Knights of the Round Table.
the knights of the round table
his knights of round table
Uhhh . . . the Knights of the Round Table?
the round table
They are the knights of the Round Table (including Merlin) they were kind of like King George's authorities but King Arthurs knights
King Arthur's legendary table was round(hence the name 'The Round Table'). This was meant to show his knights('The Knights of the Round Table') that no one knight was greater than another and that, while sitting at the table, everyone was equal.
round
No King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table is not nonfiction.
three knights of the round table
Knights
The Knights of the Round Table were said to have lived in Camelot, a legendary castle and court associated with King Arthur. Camelot is believed to have been located in either Wales or southwest England, but its exact location remains a mystery.
The legend says that they were The Knights of the Round Table.
the knights of the round table
they were knighted by king Arthur