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The Quest for Arthur (The Quest for) (The Quest for)
 
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The Quest for Arthur (The Quest for) (The Quest for) (Hardcover)
by Stuart McHardy (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  (1 customer review)
RRP: £16.99
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Product details
  • Hardcover: 211 pages
  • Publisher: Luath Press Ltd (1 Dec 2001)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1842820125
  • ISBN-13: 978-1842820124
  • Product Dimensions: 21.9 x 14.3 x 2.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  (1 customer review)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 924,211 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)
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Product Description
Synopsis
King Arthur of the Britons - the Celtic hero supreme. But was he a king? Where did he come from? Wales? England? In this book Stuart McHardy re-investigates the 19th century idea that Arthur originated in Scotland. Combining interpretation of the earliest written sources with a new approach to the content of orally transmitted traditional tales he has come up with a picture of Arthur unlike any before. Stripping away the later romanticised notions of a feudal king surrounded by fair maidens and jousting knights McHardy takes us back to a 6th century Britain where battle was endemic amongst the tribes and no warrior would follow a man he did not honour. Into this ancient society a new force came that changed things forever. The Romans had long been gone but behind them they left a ticking time bomb that exploded into tribal society changing it forever. That time-bomb was the new religion of Christianity and at the front of the battle against the ancient traditional pagan religion was the war band leader we know as Arthur.

Modelling himself on a hero in traditional belief he led the Christian Britons against the pagan alliance of Angles, Picts and Scots - Germanic and Celtic speakers united in arms - who together had regularly attacked the might of Rome for centuries. Much of the fighting took place around the Gap of Stirling, Scotland's battleground from prehistoric times through to the 18th century. Here where the different societies met and mingled Arthur led a crusade that not only led to a change in religion of the native peoples but laid the basis for the development of the later kingdoms of north Britain, and eventually Scotland itself. There was no invasion for Arthur to fight, the Angles and Saxons came slowly, over centuries, but he was leading a crusade - for the new religion against the old. As the language of the Britons drew back into Wales, most of the great tales of the hero went with them, leaving a few handfuls of scattered traditions and placenames around Scotland.

Now in the light of recent scholarship, and with new insights into the old pagan religion, McHardy has gathered these scraps together and combined them with the Welsh memories of the Men of the North to paint a picture of Arthur closer to reality than has been possible before now.


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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A quest with much of interest which peters out., 27 Dec 2001
By A Customer
This is an honest attempt to throw more light on claims for a historical Arthur, who existed not in Wales or the West Country and England, but in Southern Scotland. The argument is that most of the written sources alluding to Arthur in the 6th century come from Welsh literature and the Britons who inhabited central Scotland were later forced to migrate/retreat to Wales. Looking at the sources, McHardy argues that the 6th century society has been misunderstood by traditional historians and that the value of oral transmission of history has been undervalued, and he goes on to make the case for much of Arthur's activity as being in lowland Scotland.

Struggling against considerable odds, McHardy makes a useful contribution to the debate. As well as fighting academic opinion (which largely discounts the accuracy of sources such as Gildas, Nennius and Geoffrey of Monmouth), he struggles to make his case under 4 other burdens. A cumbersome narrative style, poor proof reading and excessive concentration on certain interests (nine maidens, guestimates of 6th century pagan norms etc) distract somewhat from the usefulness of his presentation. The reader can puzzle, as I have done, over the fourth burden. To the last paragraph, McHardy infers Arthur was "semi-mythical". So the Quest for Arthur concludes he might have been a myth and he might have been historical!

Nonetheless, there is much useful discussion of sources, place-names - and a few new ideas to consider.

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