Referat Who Was King Arthur
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Was Arthur a king or just a battle commander?
Explorations in Arthurian History
The figure of Arthur begins as a war hero, the praises of whom are sung
in war poems by the Celts and the Welsh. Y Gododdin celebrates one
particularly brave warrior, then says he "was no Arthur." The Triads are
full of wonderful, courageous things Arthur did.
The most important early source for Arthur s deeds is Historia
Brittonum, written by the monk Nennius in the 9th century. Nennius calls
Arthur dux bellorum and tells us of 12 great battles Arthur fought.
Although Nennius tells us the location of each battle, those locations
are hard to come by these days. Scholars are still arguing over the
locations. Even the agreed-on locations suggest that Arthur got
around--literally--from Scotland to the lowlands of Wessex to Wales.
He fought everywhere. He won great victories. A strong tradition has him
a Roman heldover who uses his knowledge of cavalry to rout the Saxons
time and again, counting on their inexperience in fighting mounted men.
And even though the authors likely have exagerrated his deeds (killing
960 men single-handedly, for example), Arthur is likely to have been a
bona fide war hero, a man who led his countrymen to victory time and
again. It is certain that the Battle of Badon Hill, wherever and
whenever it was, set the Saxon occupation back for a good many years.
Whether Arthur fought at the battle is still not proved, but is
generally believed.
Arthur was conceived amidst a war and was mortally wounded in a
particularly bloody battle. His life was full of battle; it was the word
of the times.
But was he a king in the traditional sense? The legends name him High
King of Britain, a title held by his father, Uther Pendragon, and his
uncle, Ambrosius Aurelianus. Noted historian Geoffrey Ashe identifies
Arthur with Riothamus, who was called the King of the Britons even
though he operated mostly in Gaul (Breton territory). A recent book by
Graham Phillips and Martin Keatman identifies Arthur as the King of
Powys and Gwynedd, two powerful kingdoms in Wales. The northern
tradition has Arthur king of some or all of Scotland.
But these identifications would seem to point toward a man who held
regional sway but not national advantage.
Beginning with Geoffrey of Monmouth, we see authors embellishing the
tales to fit their own purposes. In Geoffrey, Arthur has a magical
sword, Caliburn, and a powerful fortune-teller on his side, Merlin.
Geoffrey tells us that Arthur conquers half the known world, including
defeating a Roman emperor along the way. Much of Geoffrey has been
proven to have been made up; is the rest fiction as well?
A conclusion can probably not be made on this subject because the
evidence is just too sketchy. Arthur s being a battle commander is
somewhat easier to prove, but again we suffer from too little reliable
information.
Explorations in Arthurian Legends
The legends tell us that Arthur was a wise and powerful king, who ruled
from a giant and glorious castle and who commanded the loyalty of
hundreds of men.
First and foremost of these followers were the Knights of the Round
Table. That the greatest knight in skill of arms, Lancelot, pledged his
loyalty to Arthur is testament to the fact that the king was worthy of
such admiration, both as a king and as a warrior.
For war was a way of life in Arthur s day. Just after he pulled the
Sword from the Stone, he hurried to Bedegraine and defeated a rogue band
of 11 powerful men who had rebelled against his leadership.
He faced constant pressure from the Saxons and the Picts and the Irish
and (according to Malory, who got it from Geoffrey) the Romans; in the
end, he faced a mortal threat from his own men.
He was also the backdrop against which many other advenures took place.
Beginning with Chretien de Troyes, writers wrote adventures of Arthur s
knights, telling us of their wonderful adventures and of courtly love.
The court, of course, was Arthur s. In a sense, Arthur was moved above
the day-to-day adventures his knights was having and put on a pedestal
as the symbol of what a knight could hope to achieve.
He was also the one whom everyone looked up to and whom everyone trusted
to pass judgment if they had a dispute. Important men bowed to his
authority and his wisdom He held court and was the arbiter of justice.
He made his own laws and enforced them himself, with the respect of his
subjects. He fought in battles and sent his knights out to do battle. As
such, he was both king and battle commander.
As the legend writers searched for deeper meanings, they found the
Holy Grail; with it, they found it sin. Arthur was said to have
conceived a son out of wedlock; Guinevere was said to have consummated
her affair with Lancelot. Both of these acts were sins. With the Holy
Grail the symbol of true knightly goodness, the picture of Arthur as all
that is good and right was weakened; so, too, with Arthur s failure to
eradicate the adultery in his midst. The idea, which had been building
for a while, that his rule was intertwined with the fate of the country
was shaken to its core.
As the legend writers tied a knight s goodness to piety, they tied
Arthur s fate inextricably to a bad end. The king who was the symbol of
the prosperity of the nation and the land was sick in his heart and his
soul and had sinned against his God; the nation and the land would
surely suffer as well.
And so Arthur died or was mortally wounded (take your pick) in a battle
as a battle commander who was king of all the land.
Round Table:
First mentioned in HYPERLINK
"http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/4186/Arthur/htmlpages/kingarthurau
thors.html" l "Wace" Wace s Roman de Brut. The idea was that the
table, being round, would have no head, or place of prominence. Arthur s
strategy was to reinforce the idea that none of the barons or dukes or
other nobles who sat there would be seen to occupy places of importance
greater than any other. HYPERLINK
"http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/4186/Arthur/htmlpages/kingarthurau
thors.html" l "Robert" Robert de Boron s poem "Joseph dArimathie"
talks of a table that Joseph was commanded to make in commemoration of
the Last Supper; further, Joseph was to leave a place vacant,
symbolizing the seat of Judas. This was the Siege Perilous, which could
not be occupied except by the Grail hero. Anyone else who sat there,
legend had it, would die. ( HYPERLINK
"http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/4186/Arthur/htmlpages/kingarthurle
gendpeople.html" l "Galahad" Galahad , being the Grail hero of later
legends, sat there and was unharmed.) Since the Vulgate cycle and
certainly in the HYPERLINK
"http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/4186/Arthur/htmlpages/kingarthurau
thors.html" l "Malory" Malory tradition, the Round Table has been said
to have been a dowry from HYPERLINK
"http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/4186/Arthur/htmlpages/kingarthurle
gendpeople.html" l "Leodegrance" King Leodegranc e for his daughter
HYPERLINK
"http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/4186/Arthur/htmlpages/kingarthurpe
ople.html" Guinevere s wedding to Arthur. The city of HYPERLINK
"http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/4186/Arthur/htmlpages/kingarthurpl
aces.html" Winchester still sports a Round Table, although it has been
dated to the 13th century. Click HYPERLINK
"http://www.mystical-www.co.uk/arthuriana2z/r.htm" l "RT" here and
HYPERLINK
"http://camelot.celtic-twilight.com/infopedia/winchester_round_table.htm
" here for more. Siege Perilous: seat at the Round Table where only the
Grail hero could sit without dying. HYPERLINK
"http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/4186/Arthur/htmlpages/kingarthurle
gendpeople.html" l "Merlin" Merlin named it. HYPERLINK
"http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/4186/Arthur/htmlpages/kingarthurpe
ople.html" Galahad sat in it and survived; Brumart, a nephew of King
Claudas, sat in it and died. HYPERLINK
"http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/4186/Arthur/htmlpages/kingarthurau
thors.html" l "Robert" Robert de Boron says HYPERLINK
"http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/4186/Arthur/htmlpages/kingarthurle
gendpeople.html" l "Perceval" Perceval sat in it.
Bibliografie: www.legends.co uk
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