Lucan and Bedievere offer Mordred safe passage out of Britain and a portion of land to rule in exchange for not fighting King Arthur. They want to avoid unnecessary bloodshed and bring an end to the conflict peacefully.
Arthur Lucan's birth name is Towle, Arthur.
Arthur Lucan went by Old Mother Riley.
Lucan and Bedivere convince Mordred not to fight by offering him a promise of safe passage and the potential for reconciliation. They appeal to his sense of honor and the futility of further bloodshed, suggesting that peace is a more honorable outcome than conflict. Ultimately, they aim to avoid unnecessary loss and preserve what remains of Camelot's legacy.
Arthur Lucan was born on September 16, 1885, in Boston, Lincolnshire, England, UK.
Arthur Lucan died on May 17, 1954, in Hull, Yorkshire, England, UK.
Arthur Lucan
Mordred makes himself King of England and takes Guinevere as his wife. He then forces a battle with Sir Gawain, who is mortally wounded in the battle. Arthur meets Mordred again at the battle of Bareon Down, and the two men prepare for what will be their last battle. Arthur has a dream telling him that if he fights Mordred that day, he will die, but if he can stall the battle another month, Lancelot will be able to come and help him. When Arthur tries to draw a truce with Mordred and his army, a snake comes by and one of Mordred's men draws his sword to kill it. This action sets the two armies to war. By the end of the battle, Mordred is the only man standing from his army, and Arthur has himself, Sir Lucan, and Sir Bedivere. Against Lucan's advice, Arthur fights Mordred and kills him, but Arthur sustains his own death wound in the process. Arthur is dying and can't be moved safely, so he asks Sir Bedivere to throw Excalibur into the lake. At first, Bedivere merely hides the sword, because he believes it to be too precious to throw away, but he eventually obeys Arthur's orders and throws the sword into the water. Arthur asks Bedivere what he saw when he did so, and Bedivere reports that a hand caught the sword and brandished it three times. Arthur then commands Bedivere to take him to the water, where a barge is waiting. Arthur is borne on the barge to Avalon. Bedivere then takes to wandering the woods and eventually stumbles upon a hermit mourning at a grave. It is unclear to both Bedivere and the reader whether or not the grave is that of King Arthur, and whether or not Arthur still lives.
The only mention I can find in SGGK of Sir Lucan is in line 553: Lancelot, and Lionel, and Lucan the Good. There are other Arthurian sources (in particular Malory's Morte d'Arthur) which mention Sir Lucan as a Knight of the Round Table (and sometimes say that he was King Arthur's butler):- but in SGGK, Sir Lucan is just a name.
The Knights of the round table of king Arthur is a famous famed table on the stories about king Arthur. there are actually 25 knights. King Arthur himself, Sir Lancelot, Sir Kay, Sir Gareth, Sir Galahad, Sir Degore, Sir Mordred, Sir Alymere, Sir Lucan and Sir Palomedes are then 10 knights among the 25 Knights of the round table.
Robbers and plunderers had came to the field to slew them for armor and riches
The four men still alive at the end of the battle in King Arthur are King Arthur, Sir Bedivere, Sir Lucan, and Sir Bedivere's brother.
The address of the Lucan Historical Society is: Box 51, Lucan, MN 56255-0051