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Arthurian legend
(redirected from Matter of Britain)

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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 Gildas, Saint (gĭl`dəs), d. 570, British historian, possibly a Welsh monk.
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. 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 Nennius (nĕn`ēəs), fl. 796, Welsh writer, to whom is ascribed the Historia Britonum.
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 (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 Geoffrey of Monmouth (mŏn`məth), c.1100–1154, English author.
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 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 Wace (wās), c.1100–1174, Norman-French poet of Jersey. King Henry II made him canon of Bayeux.
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's Roman de Brut (c.1155), which infused the legend with the spirit of chivalric romance. The Brut (c.1200) of Layamon Layamon (lā`əmən, –mŏn, lī`–), fl. c.1200, first prominent Middle English poet.
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, modeled on Wace's work, gives one of the best pictures of Arthur as a national hero.

Chrétien de Troyes Chrétien de Troyes or Chrestien de Troyes (both: krātyăN` də trwä), fl.
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, 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 Grail, Holy, a feature of medieval legend and literature. It appears variously as a chalice, a cup, or a dish and sometimes as a stone or a caldron into which a bleeding lance drips.
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). Two medieval German poets important in the development of Arthurian legend are Wolfram von Eschenbach Wolfram von Eschenbach (vôl`främ fən ĕsh`ənbäkh), c.1170–c.1220, German poet.
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 and Gottfried von Strassburg Gottfried von Strassburg (gôt`frēt fən shträs`brkh), fl.
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. The latter's Tristan was the first great literary treatment of the Tristram and Isolde Tristram and Isolde (trĭs`trəm, ĭsōl`də, ĭzōl`–), medieval romance.
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 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 Malory, Sir Thomas (măl`ərē), d. 1471, English author of Morte d'Arthur.
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, 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 Mabinogion (măbĭnō`gēən), title given to a collection of medieval Welsh stories.
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, 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 Merlin, in Arthurian legend , magician, seer, and teacher at the court of King Vortigern and later at the court of King Arthur. He was a bard and culture hero in early Celtic folklore. In Arthurian legend he is famous as a magician and as the counselor of King Arthur.
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, 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 Excalibur (ĕkskăl`ĭbər), in Arthurian legend , sword given to King Arthur by the Lady of the Lake .
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, given to him by the mysterious Lady of the Lake Lady of the Lake, in Arthurian legend , a misty, supernatural figure endowed with magic powers, who gave the sword Excalibur to King Arthur. She inhabited a castle in an underwater kingdom.
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.

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 Avalon (ăv`əlŏn), in Celtic mythology, the blissful otherworld of the dead.
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, 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 Launcelot, Sir (lăn`səlŏt', lŏn`–, lôn`–)
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 with Guinevere Guinevere (gwĭn`əvĭr', gwĕn`–), in Arthurian legend , wife of King Arthur.
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, 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 Parsifal (pär`sĭfäl)
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); Sir Gareth; Sir Geraint; Sir Bedivere; and other knights of the Round Table Round Table, in Arthurian legend , the table at which King Arthur and his knights held court. It was allegedly fashioned at the behest of Arthur to prevent quarrels among the knights over precedence.
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. To modern readers, Arthurian legend has become the mirror of the ideal of medieval knighthood and chivalry chivalry (shĭv`əlrē)
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.

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).


Arthurian legend

Body of stories and medieval romances centring on the legendary English king Arthur. The stories chronicle Arthur's life, the adventures of his knights, and the adulterous love between his knight Sir Lancelot and his queen, Guinevere. The legend was popular in Wales before the 11th century, was brought into literature by Geoffrey of Monmouth, and was adapted by other medieval writers, including Chrétien de Troyes, Wace, Lawamon, and Sir Thomas Malory, becoming entwined with legends of the Holy Grail. From Victorian times, when interest in the legend revived, it has figured in major works by Alfred Tennyson (Idylls of the King) and T.H. White (The Once and Future King). It is uncertain whether Arthur was a historical figure. Medieval sources say he was a 6th-century warrior and champion of Christianity who united the British tribes against the Saxon invaders, died in battle at Camlann c. 539, and was buried at Glastonbury. See also Galahad; Merlin; Tristan and Isolde.


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On a more general level, the Potter saga derives its strength from the Matter of Britain also as concerns more controversial issues.
Despite the continued fascination of "The Matter of Britain," as the tales of Arthur and his Round Table are called, Arthur's very existence is a subject of vigorous debate, and nobody truly knows exactly where "Camelot" was, although many historic sites in England and Wales claim the honor.
White may come closest to Tolkien's medievalism in style and subject matter, but his dark pessimism about homo ferox and the centrality of sex to the whole Matter of Britain in the later parts of the story mark The Once and Future King as more influenced by the Second World War.
 
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