Early References to a Real Arthur
A discussion by David Nash Ford
There is only
one contemporary Arthurian source that can be
examined today. "Concerning the Ruin of
Britain", or "De Excidio
Britanniae" was written by the Northern British
monk, St. Gildas, in the mid-6th century.
Unfortunately, Gildas was not a historian. He was
only interested in lamenting the loss of the
Roman way of life and reproaching the British
leaders (Constantine, Aurelius Caninus, Vortepor, Cuneglasus & Maglocunus) who had usurped Imperial power and
degraded Christian values.
There is no reference
to Arthur, but Gildas does make reference
to a character called "The Bear", the
meaning of the Celtic word, Art-. He
praises Ambrosius Aurelianus and also mentions
the Siege of Mount Badon, though not the name of
the victor. Gildas' writings are dated
immediately prior to 549 (the death of Maglocunus, one of his usurpers). The
passage telling of Badon places the siege
forty-four years before this. This places Arthur
firmly around the turn of the 6th century. (See Alcock 1971).
The Welsh
Easter Annals or Annales Cambriae, supposedly written over the years that
they cover, AD 447 to 957 (though very early
entries were probably written some time after the
events), are amongst the earliest sources to
mention Arthur. Used to calculate Easter dates,
this document also records historical events
alongside many of its yearly entries. Two of
these tell of Arthur. AD 516 refers to "The
Battle of Badon, in which Arthur carried the
Cross of Our Lord Jesus Christ for three days and
three nights on his shoulders and the Britons
were the victors".
The entry for AD 537 records "The
Strife of Camlann in which Arthur and Medraut
perished". All characters included
elsewhere in these, otherwise reliable, annals
appear to have been real historical people. There
is no reason to suppose, therefore, that Arthur
and Mordred were not likewise. It has been
suggested that stylistically speaking, Arthur's
appearance in the Badon entry may have been an
interpolation. Criticisms of the length of the
battle are unfounded though, for Gildas (see above), more correctly, calls the
battle a siege. The statement that Arthur
carried "the cross of Our Lord on his
shoulders" may refer to an amulet
containing a chip of the true cross. Or more
likely it is a transcriptual error of Welsh
"shoulder" for "shield",
indicating the cross was merely an armorial
bearing. (See Alcock 1971).
Arthur does warrant a passing
comment in the early 7th century poem Y Gododdin by Aneirin, the famous bard from the Royal House
of the North Pennines. This work praises the
efforts of the Northern British armies, headed by
those of Din-Eityn and Gododdin, at the battle of Catraeth around AD
600 and one warrior is described as having "glutted
black ravens on the ramparts of the fort,
although he was no Arthur".
It has been
argued that this shows the early spread of
Arthur's fame. Unfortunately, considering the
northern overtones, this may refer to the
Arthur's Northern contemporary, King Arthwys of the Pennines.
The last
major Arthurian reference occurs in the 8th
century "Historia
Brittonum" or "History of the
Britons",
apparently written by a Welsh historian called
Nennius, possibly a monk from Bangor Fawr
(Gwynedd). Nennius used numerous chronicles to
put together this compilation history of the
British peoples, followed by genealogies and a
list of the 28 Towns of
Britain. The work is particularly noted for its
chapter concerning the Campaigns of Arthur,
telling of his twelve battles.
These latter may be a Latin summary of
an ancient Welsh battle list, possibly pre-dating
the unmentioned Battle of Camlann. Was this sung
at Arthur's Court? Each battle is named in turn,
but the enemy is not specific and the places are
difficult to identify. Nennius states that at all
the battles, Arthur fought them, implying
the previously mentioned Kentish Saxons, though
this seems unlikely. (See Alcock 1971).
See Also:
Arthur, King of the Britons
Arthur, General of the Britons
12 Battles of King Arthur
Arthur, the Myth
King Arthur in Popular Literature
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