Tuesday, March 19, 2019
In Search of King Arthur :: Internet Literature Essays
In count of queen mole rat ArthurEver since I was a little girl, I was hypnotized by stories of courageous knights and virtuous ladies, who populate the covers and knaves of books and screens of the movie theaters. Their splendid attire, enrapture of the courts and impeccable manners attracted and conquered the imagination of the little girl. Robin Hood was genius of my favorite characters, however there was one hero, who troubled my imagination or so of all. I have heard and read numerous stories of a magnificent, undecomposed and most generous king of all, King Arthur. Legends and myths surrounding the adventures of this character command my thoughts and pulled me into reading marathons. Today, several years later, I am continuing to deflower my interests. Luckily there is so much material available on the Internet on the subject of King Arthurs and his knights adventures that I dont have each trouble locating the material interesting to me. Moreover, I have gear up the following Internet sites most useful in studying the field of King Arthurs adventures Britannia.com (http//www.britannia.com/history/h12.html), The History and Historicisation of Arthur (http//www.users.globalnet.co.uk/tomgreen/arthur.htm) and Legends (http//legends.dm.net/kingarthur/index.html.). Britannia.com is a very well-structured website. The home page of this Internet site is organized in a manner that allows a viewer to locate necessary information speedily and with ease. However, besides existence well structured, the site ends all the essential information related to King Arthur and other main characters of the legend such as Merlin, Guinevere. Information on Geoffrey of Monmounth, the author of the History of the Kings of Britain, is also available. A viewer only require to click on Arthur, the King (http//www.britannia.com/history/arthur/kaking.html) in order to recoup numerous hypotheses of King Arthurs birth and origin as well as general theories of his existenc e Arthur, it seems, is claimed as the king of nearly every Gaelic Kingdom know (Arthur, the King, p.1). Here King Arthur is claimed to be a Breton king, a Dumnonian king, a Cumbrian king, an Elmet king, a Scottish king, a Powysian king, among others. Many historians such as Geoffrey Ashe, Graham Philips and Martin Keatman identify Arthur with various noble houses that occupied territories of Great Britain and Scotland. Furthermore, Britannia.com contains cerebrate to such material as Timeline of Arthurian History (http//www.britannia.com/history/timearth.html). These pages contain a detailed timeline, starting from 63 A.D., with Joseph of Arimatheas coming to Glastonbury, bringing with him the Blessed Grail, and ending in 1090 A.
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