The Discovery of King Arthur

Front Cover
Macmillan, 1987 M01 15 - 224 pages
Myths, legends, and literary mysteries mix with maps, relics, and historical facts in The Discovery of King Arthur. Scholars, students, and general readers of all ages have wondered—for centuries—about whether Britain was ever really ruled by an Arthur who held court at a place called Camelot. In this book, the distinguished scholar Geoffrey Ashe offers convincing proof that King Arthur not only existed, but was more like the Arthur of legend than historians have previously suspected.

In this exciting study, drawing upon myriad sources both literary and historical, Ashe traces the legend of King Arthur to its roots in the twelfth-century chronicles of Geoffrey of Monmouth. He then illustrates that a great deal of Geoffrey's history, which set out ot depict events and persons of fifth-century Britain, was based on fact. After challenging previous assumptions about where Arthur's court and other remnants can be found, Ashe identifies the real King Arthur and provides powerful evidence to support his theory.

Riothamus, an actual fifth-century British monarch, is the figure whom Ashe painstakingly identifies. But his study also investigates the histories behind other Arthurian phenomena, such as the key concepts of knighthood and chivalry. Throughout the book, the swep and grandeur of a tumultuous era in British and European history is vividly recounted as Ashe describes the origins and development of the Arthurian legend—a legend that seems to grow ever more enchanting and spellbinding.
 

Contents

THE KINGMAKER
3
THE UNEXTINGUISHED LIGHT
19
ARTHURS CONTEXT
40
ARTHUR
61
THE OLD WELSH TRAIL
63
NEW DISCOVERIES
86
THE WELLSPRINGS OF ROMANCE
112
THE UNFOLDING MYTH
127
SAINTS BARDS HEROES
129
MAJESTY
164
THE MODERN QUEST
184
APPENDIX
195
NOTES
198
BIBLIOGRAPHY
207
INDEX
213
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information