ARTHURIAN LEGEND

the mass of legend, popular in medieval lore, concerning King Arthur of Britain and his knights.

Medieval Sources

The battle of Mt. Badon—in which, according to the Annales Cambriae (c.1150), Arthur carried the Cross of Jesus on his shoulders—but not Arthur's name, is mentioned (c.540) by Gildas. The earliest apparent mention of Arthur in any known literature is a brief reference to a mighty warrior in the Welsh poem Gododdin (c.600). Arthur next appears in Nennius (c.800) as a Celtic warrior who fought (c.600) 12 victorious battles against the Saxon invaders.

These and several subsequent references indicate that his legend had already developed into a considerable literature before Geoffrey of Monmouth wrote his Historia (c.1135), in which he elaborated on the feats of King Arthur whom he represented as the conqueror of Western Europe. After Geoffrey's Historia came Wace's Roman de Brut (c.1155), which infused the legend with the spirit of chivalric romance. The Brut (c.1200) of Layamon, modeled on Wace's work, gives one of the best pictures of Arthur as a national hero.

Chrétien de Troyes, a 12th-century French poet, wrote five romances dealing with the knights of Arthur's court. His Perceval contains the earliest extant literary version of the quest of the Holy Grail (see Grail, Holy). Two medieval German poets important in the development of Arthurian legend are Wolfram von Eschenbach and Gottfried von Strassburg. The latter's Tristan was the first great literary treatment of the Tristram and Isolde story.

After 1225 no significant medieval Arthurian literature was produced on the Continent. In England, however, the legend continued to flourish. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (c.1370), one of the best Middle English romances, embodies the ideal of chivalric knighthood. The last important medieval work dealing with the Arthurian legend is the Morte d'Arthur of Sir Thomas Malory, whose tales have become the source for most subsequent Arthurian material. Many writers have used Arthurian themes since Malory, notably Tennyson in his Idylls of the King. Swinburne, William Morris, and Edwin Arlington Robinson also wrote poetic works based on the legend. T. H. White's trilogy The Once and Future King (1958) is a charming and decidedly 20th-century retelling of the Arthurian story.

The Link to Celtic Mythology

Formerly, it was thought that the Arthurian legend was the work of several inventive poets and romancers of the Middle Ages. The generally accepted theory now is that Arthurian legend developed out of stories of Celtic mythology. The most archaic form in which these occur in British sources is the Welsh Mabinogion, but much of Irish mythology is palpably identical with Arthurian romance.

It is probable that traditional Irish hero stories fused in Britain with those of the Welsh, the Cornish, and the Celts of North Britain. The resultant legend with its hero, Arthur, was transmitted to their Breton cousins on the Continent probably by the year 1000. The Bretons, famous as wandering minstrels, followed Norman armies over Western Europe and used the legend's stories for their repertory. By 1100, therefore, Arthurian stories were well known even in Italy.

The Story

Although there are innumerable variations of the Arthurian legend, the basic story has remained the same. Arthur was the illegitimate son of Uther Pendragon, king of Britain, and Igraine, the wife of Gorlois of Cornwall. After the death of Uther, Arthur, who had been reared in secrecy, won acknowledgment as king of Britain by successfully withdrawing a sword from a stone. Merlin, the court magician, then revealed the new king's parentage. Arthur, reigning in his court at Camelot, proved to be a noble king and a mighty warrior. He was the possessor of the miraculous sword Excalibur, given to him by the mysterious Lady of the Lake.

Of Arthur's several enemies, the most treacherous were his sister Morgan le Fay and his nephew Mordred. Morgan le Fay was usually represented as an evil sorceress, scheming to win Arthur's throne for herself and her lover. Mordred (or Modred) was variously Arthur's nephew or his son by his sister Morgawse. He seized Arthur's throne during the king's absence. Later he was slain in battle by Arthur, but not before he had fatally wounded the king. Arthur was borne away to the isle of Avalon, where it was expected that he would be healed of his wounds and that he would someday return to his people.

Two of the most invincible knights in Arthur's realm were Sir Tristram and Sir Launcelot of the Lake. Both of them, however, were involved in illicit and tragic love unions—Tristram with Isolde, the queen of Tristram's uncle, King Mark; Launcelot with Guinevere, the queen of his sovereign, King Arthur. Other knights of importance include the naive Sir Pelleas, who fell helplessly in love with the heartless Ettarre (or Ettard) and Sir Gawain, Arthur's nephew, who appeared variously as the ideal of knightly courtesy and as the bitter enemy of Launcelot.

Also significant are Sir Balin and Sir Balan, two devoted brothers who unwittingly slew one another; Sir Galahad, Launcelot's son, who was the hero of the quest for the Holy Grail; Sir Kay, Arthur's villainous foster brother; Sir Percivale (or Parsifal); Sir Gareth; Sir Geraint; Sir Bedivere; and other knights of the Round Table. To modern readers, Arthurian legend has become the mirror of the ideal of medieval knighthood and chivalry.

Bibliography

See studies by R. H. Fletcher (2d ed. 1966), R. L. Loomis (1949; 1956; 1927, repr. 1969; 1963, repr. 1970), L. Alcock (1972), J. Morris (1973), and R. W. Barber (1973); J. L. Weston, tr., Arthurian Romances Unrepresented in Malory's Morte d'Arthur (8 vol., 1907; repr. 1971); N. J. Lacy et al., ed., The Arthurian Encyclopedia (1987).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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17 THE ARTHURIAN MATERIAL AND GERMAN SOCIETY IN THE MIDDLE AGES W H. Jackson The Arthurian legend did not, in Germany, have the national...it possessed in England, and German Arthurian romance often has a strongly fictional...
...into the various uses of the legend. We hope to open up new avenues...the ambiguous collocation "Arthurian film." Our method is not...much of the scholarship on "Arthurian film" has consisted heretofore...instance, to be cognizant of the legend and even the ethos of those...accentuate the significance of the legends mythopoeic nature - that is...
...reinventions of the Arthurian legends, Edward Russell commented...Morriss, is no exception. The Arthurian court is remote and Arthurs...of the nineteenth century Arthurian literature frequently linked...for dramatic productions of Arthurian legend coincided with a renewed interest...
...that Paradise Lost , not the legend of Arthur, was the true expression...Miltons rejection of the Arthurian legend is, therefore, seen...Stuarts, who had used the Arthurian legend to strengthen their...Lost . DRYDEN Once again the Arthurian subject was to come under...
ELEANOR PLANTAGENET AND THE ARTHURIAN LEGEND IN SPAIN A. 1 Henry Plantagenet, titular patron of Arthurian Legend. 2 Richard Coeur de Lion, friend of Alfonso II. of Aragon, patron of Bernard de Ventadorn and other troubadours, source of original...
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...The Arthur of the French: The Arthurian Legend in Medieval French and Occitan...The Arthur of the French: The Arthurian Legend in Medieval French and...S. Burgess and Karen Pratt, Arthurian Literature in the Middle Ages...
...860725-3 The Oxford Guide to Arthurian Literature and Legend. By Alan Lupack. Oxford: Oxford...American Branch of the International Arthurian Society, traces the development of the Arthurian legend in a series of extended essays...
...by Andrew Breeze Celtic Arthurian Material. Ed. by CERIDWEN LLOYD-MORGAN. (Arthurian Literature, 21) Cambridge...8438-4028-6. The Grail Legend in Modern Literature. By JOHN B. MARINO. (Arthurian Studies, 59) Cambridge...
...authoritative account of the Arthurian past. As Christopher...Vergil debunked the legend of Arthur in his early...the reliability of the Arthurian section in the Historia...who was steeped in Arthurian legends,(26) also set his...
...story that lies beyond our Arthurian horizon. I would like to end...International Conference of the Arthurian Society at Toulouse in August...really believed the rigmarole of legend and so-called history which...King Arthur in History and Legend (London, 1966), p. 23...
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A Place of Legends - Rumored to Be the...True Believers in the Arthurian Legend. by laura byrd The...ports. I recall the legend that some kingdoms...Atlantic Ocean. Although legends are just that--fanciful...remain eternal. And no legend remains as strong as...Merlin, the wizard of Arthurian legend, had prophesied...
...Life and Parts of the Arthurian Legends Are Examined. by Luigi...are familiar with the legend of the Sword in the...shrouded in mystery and legend. Evidence of his historical...fading away into these legends when, in 1189, the...coincidences between his legend and those of the Arthurian stories. In 2001 I...
Elfin honey: Peter Conrad on how Arthurian legend is lavishly recreated in Madrid. by Peter Conrad Music is...alliterations and limp-wristed metaphors, his version of the Arthurian myth has a quirky and subversive charm. With his mercantile...
...last decades work on Celtic legend and Celtic history. The research...and Carey suggests that oral legend can, indeed, carry historical...thousands of years. But as these legends need very specific archaeological...of Celtic Sources for the Arthurian Legend (Llanerch, 1995).
...of Arfderydd. The medieval Arthurian romances seized on the Myrddin...literal interpretation of the legend of Saint Patrick and the snakes...superman-like figure in the legends but probably another manifestation...have spirit guardians, and legend tells that a goose protects...
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Books: Brush Up on Your Arthurian Legends. Byline: by Lorne Jackson...many early versions of the Arthurian tales were 13th century romances...Merlin, a new take on the legend, starring Arthurs magical...browsing through the cream of Arthurian fiction on my shelves. Heres...
...Chris Upton Discovers That the Arthurian Legend May Have Been Put Together by...Byline: Chris Upton Yet another Arthurian epic is currently filling seats...turned the bits and pieces of the Arthurian legend into a coherent and commanding...
FAIR GAME; Revered in Arthurian Legend as a Sign of Good Fortune, a White Deer Is a Rare Sight...result, they are much prized by animal lovers, and in legend, too - Arthurian knights on a new quest from the Round Table considered them...
...COUPLES DELIGHT: Celtic Star Magnus Names Tot after Arthurian Legend. Byline: EXCLUSIVE By NATASHA WEALE CELTIC goalie...four-year-old son Lancelot, again turned to Arthurian legend for inspiration. Former model Magdalena, 28, said...
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encyclopedia articles on: Arthurian Legend  - 42 results

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...Britain. The resultant legend with its hero, Arthur...Western Europe and used the legends stories for their repertory...By 1100, therefore, Arthurian stories were well known...innumerable variations of the Arthurian legend, the basic story has...
LANCELOT, SIR , in Arthurian legend see Launcelot, Sir . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...the first great literary treatments of the Arthurian legend . His narrative romances, composed c...Ovid and Guillaume dAngleterre, a non-Arthurian narrative. Translations of the Arthurian romances are included in W. W. Comforts...
...and Rome, and the British legends of King Arthur and the Knights...marks the first appearance of Arthurian matter in English (see Arthurian legend ). Original English romances...French romances, notably the Arthurian romances of Chretien de Troyes...
...is an early example of an Arthurian tale. The Dream of Rhonabwy...story apparently based on the legend of Emperor Maximus is The...Mabinogion consists of three Arthurian romances, Geraint, The Lady...invaluable in the study of the Arthurian legend . Using just the Red...
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