King Arthur is probably the most famous and certainly the most legendary medieval king. From the early ninth century through the middle ages, to the Arthurian romances of Victorian times, the tales of this legendary figure have blossomed and multiplied. And in more recent times, there has been a continuous stream of books claiming to unlock the secret or the truth behind the "once and future king."
The truth, as Guy Halsall reveals in this fascinating investigation, is both radically different--and also a good deal more intriguing. Broadly speaking, there are two Arthurs. On the one hand is the traditional "historical" Arthur, waging a doomed struggle to save Roman civilization against the relentless Anglo-Saxon tide during the darkest years of the Dark Ages. On the other is the Arthur of myth and legend, accompanied by a host of equally legendary people, places, and stories: Lancelot, Guinevere, Galahad and Gawain, Merlin, Excalibur, the Lady in the Lake, the Sword in the Stone, Camelot, and the Round Table.
The big problem with all this, notes Halsall, is that "King Arthur" might well never have existed. And if he did exist, it is next to impossible to say anything at all about him. As this challenging new look at the Arthur legend makes clear, all books claiming to reveal "the truth" behind King Arthur can safely be ignored. Not only the fanciful pseudo-historical accounts--Merlin the Magician, the Lady in the Lake--but even the "historical" Arthur is largely a figment of the imagination. The evidence that we have, whether written or archeological, is simply incapable of telling us anything detailed about the Britain in which he is supposed to have lived, fought, and died.
Author(s): Guy Halsall
Edition: 1st ed.
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2013
Language: English
Pages: 384
City: Oxford
Tags: Arthur, King -- Legends; Britons--Kings and rulers--Folklore; Great Britain--History--Anglo-Saxon period, 449-1066--Historiography; Great Britain -- History -- To 1066.
Abbreviations xvii
List of Figures xix
Part I: Old Worlds 1
1. The Story of ‘King Arthur’ 3
2. The Matter of Arthur: The Traditional Narrative 11
3. Swords in the Stones: The Archaeology of Post-Imperial Britain 26
Part II: Present Worlds 49
4. The Antimatter of Arthur: Reassessing the Written Sources 51
5. Continuity or Collapse? The End of Roman Britain 87
6. Beyond Brooches and Brochs: Rethinking Early Medieval British Archaeology 102
Part III: Mad Worlds 135
7. Red Herrings and Old Chestnuts 137
Part IV: New Worlds? 155
8. The Dark Matter of Arthur: Changing the Framework 157
9. Rethinking the Anglo-Saxon Migration and Settlement (1): When Did the Anglo-Saxons Come to Britain? 184
10. Rethinking the Anglo-Saxon Migration and Settlement (2): The Nature and Scale of the Migration 221
11. Fifth- and Sixth-Century Politics in Britannia 253
12. The End of the ‘World of Arthur’ 300
Further Reading 309
Bibliography 321
Photographic Acknowledgements 341
Index 343