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King Arthur and the Languages of Britain
Examining the Linguistic Evidence
King Arthur and the Languages of Britain
Examining the Linguistic Evidence
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Description
Medievalists have denied the historical existence of King Arthur for over 50 years. Arthur and the Languages of Britain demonstrates how linguistic evidence can be employed to see if the earliest historical records that mention Arthur are reliable.
The book begins with an analysis of the evidence for the Anglo-Saxon invasions and the response of the Britons, and introduces the main methodological approaches employed in the linguistic analysis of historical records. It then provides evidence for Arthur as a Cumbric-speaker active in the region about Hadrian's Wall, before assessing the linguistic evidence which supports the validity of the references to Arthur in the Welsh Annals and the Historia Brittonum.
Bernard Mees reflects on how Arthur is recorded as having taken part in the Battle of Mount Badon, a site that has never been located, and dying at Camlann, now Castlesteads on Hadrian's Wall. He uses linguistic analysis of the evidence recorded for the existence of Arthur to support the historical reliability of these records. Mees concludes with a summary of how Geoffrey of Monmouth created pseudo-historical stories from the references to Arthur in these early sources, turning Ambrosius Aurelianus into Merlin and Mordred into King Arthur's nephew and the lover of his queen Guinevere.
Table of Contents
2. Picts and Scots, Romans and Britons
3. Roman Britain and the Germanic invasions
4. Gildas and Vortigern
5. The Northern Arthur
6. The Welsh Annals and the Northern Chronicle
7. Arthur's Twelve Battles
8. Geoffrey of Monmouth
9. Conclusion
Appendices
Index
Product details

Published | 23 Jan 2025 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 216 |
ISBN | 9781350443112 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
Illustrations | 10 bw illus |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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The question people always ask about King Arthur is if he really existed. Historians say that complicated surviving evidence in manuscripts written centuries later is worthless, but Mees shows that some of it was accurately copied from Arthur's time. Anyone who wants to know about Arthur from now on will have to read this book.
Professor P. J. C. Field , Emeritus Professor, Bangor University, Honorary President of the International Arthurian Society, Wales
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An enjoyable read both for those within academic circles [and] also for the general reader interested in the Arthurian legend.
Physics Book Reviews

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