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Arthurian and Literature
Arthurian Literature in the Middle Ages.
* Vinaver, Eugène, " Sir Thomas Malory " in Arthurian Literature in the Middle Ages, Loomis, Roger S.
The Oxford Guide to Arthurian Literature and Legend.
), Medieval Arthurian Literature: A Guide to Recent Research, pp. 239 – 322.
" Oxford Guide to Arthurian Literature and Legend.
* Loomis, Roger S. " Layamon's Brut " in Arthurian Literature in the Middle Ages, Roger S. Loomis ( ed .).
* Charles Foulon, " Wace " in Arthurian Literature in the Middle Ages, Roger S. Loomis ( ed .).
" Wolfram's Parzival " in Arthurian Literature in the Middle Ages, Roger S. Loomis ( ed .).
* Jean Frappier, " Chrétien de Troyes " in Arthurian Literature in the Middle Ages, Roger S. Loomis ( ed .).
* Idris Llewelyn Foster, " Gereint, Owein and Peredur " in Arthurian Literature in the Middle Ages, Roger S. Loomis ( ed .).
* Albert W. Thompson, " The Additions to Chrétien's Perceval " in Arthurian Literature in the Middle Ages, Roger S. Loomis ( ed .).
The Holy Grail: The Galahad Quest in the Arthurian Literature.
" A Companion to Arthurian Literature.
" In Medieval Arthurian Literature: A Guide to Recent Research, ed.
Geoffrey of Monmouth in Arthurian Literature in the Middle Ages, Roger S. Loomis ( ed .).
Verse epics or narratives in the German Arthurian Literature tradition were undertaken with various success from the mid-18th century forward.
" German Arthurian Literature ( Modern ).
* Kennedy, Edward Donald, ‘ John Hardyng and the Holy Grail ’, Arthurian Literature, 8 ( 1989 ), 185-206.
* Riddy, Felicity, ‘ John Hardyng ’ s Chronicle and the Wars of the Roses ’, Arthurian Literature, 12 ( 1996 ), 91-108.
* Pierre Le Gentil, " The Work of Robert de Boron and the Didot Perceval ", chapter 19, in Arthurian Literature in the Middle Ages, A Collaborative History, ( ed.
" Wolfram's Parzival " in Arthurian Literature in the Middle Ages, Roger S. Loomis ( ed .).
A biography " In Quest of Jessie Weston " by Janet Grayson appears in " Arthurian Literature ," Vol 11 ( 1992 ).
There are three main categories of Middle English Literature: Religious, Courtly love, and Arthurian, though much of Geoffrey Chaucer's work stands outside these.
" The Arthur of History " Arthurian Literature in the Middle Ages, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
" Arthur in Early Welsh Verse " Arthurian Literature in the Middle Ages, Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Arthurian and Middle
Modern versions typically retain Camelot's lack of precise location and its status as a symbol of the Arthurian world, though they typically transform the castle itself into romantically lavish visions of a High Middle Ages palace.
Arthurian literature thrived during the Middle Ages but waned in the centuries that followed until it experienced a major resurgence in the 19th century.
Round Tables were popular in various European countries through the rest of the Middle Ages and were at times very elaborate ; René of Anjou even erected an Arthurian castle for his 1446 Round Table.
Category: Arthurian literature in Middle English
For example, the fully developed Code of Chivalry, which has a major role in the Arthurian tales, reflects the social conditions of the late Middle Ages when these tales were composed, rather than the conditions of 5th Century Britain when the historical King Arthur lived.
Very little historical information about Dark Age Welsh court tradition survives, but the Middle Welsh material came to be the nucleus of the Matter of Britain and Arthurian legend as they developed from the 13th century.
It is also possible that the tradition of an " apple " island among the British was influenced by Irish legends concerning the otherworld island home of Manannán mac Lir and Lugh, Emain Ablach ( also the Old Irish poetic name for the Isle of Man ), where Ablach means " Having Apple Trees " – derived from Old Irish aball (" apple ")— and is similar to the Middle Welsh name Afallach, which was used to replace the name Avalon in medieval Welsh translations of French and Latin Arthurian tales ).
Sir Galahad (; Middle Welsh: Gwalchavad, sometimes referred to as Galeas () or Galath (), in Arthurian legend, is a knight of King Arthur's Round Table and one of the three achievers of the Holy Grail.
During the High Middle Ages tales originated from Brythonic traditions, notably the Arthurian myth.
Category: Arthurian literature in Middle English
" Malory did not invent the stories in this collection ; he translated and compiled them ... Malory in fact translated Arthurian stories that already existed in thirteenth-century French prose ( the so-called Old French Vulgate romances ) and compiled them together with at least one tale from Middle English sources ( the Alliterative Morte Arthure and the Stanzaic Morte Arthur ) to create this text.
Category: Arthurian literature in Middle English
Category: Arthurian literature in Middle English
The Peredur who is most familiar to a modern audience is the character of this name who made his entrance as a knight in the Arthurian world of Middle Welsh prose literature.
He is, however, the protagonist of a later Middle Welsh text, Peredur son of Efrawg, which is one of the three Arthurian Welsh Romances associated with the Mabinogion, along with Owain, or the Lady of the Fountain and Geraint and Enid.
Cantor describes Southern in Arthurian terms, with a group of devotees who surrounded their master following the publication of The Making of the Middle Ages.

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