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Celtic Myths
Arthurian
Legend is the mixture of countless individuals over some 1500
years. Arthurian myths may have a basis in
fact; it is certainly possible that an
historical King Arthur did
indeed exist in the sixth century A.D.. The 'real'
King Arthur may have been a war leader defending post-Roman
Britain from the invading Saxons. It is also possible such a figure did
not exist.

Any existing
historicity of King Arthur has been
embroidered through accretion of other
mythic material and by authors using
the popular and powerful story for their own purposes.
Arthurian Legends
are an amalgamation of many different creative impulses. One of the
richest and most significant sources of influence,
constituting much of the original source material for the modern
Arthurian legend, comes from the half-remembered tales of an enigmatic
people called the Celts.
These Celtic Legends, themselves fragmentary and half-forgotten, tell us of the
people who created them. These are stories filled with the exploits of
great warriors and mighty kings.
The Celts had an aristocratic
warrior-culture, and valued courage and skill at arms. They are rife
with magic and the supernatural, being among the most fantastic of any
society's mythology.
The Celts believed in an
Otherworld, and felt that it
was very close to our own mortal world, and sometimes beings from one
world could even enter the other. Above all, these tales burgeon with
energy and verve.
But because these were all oral traditions, much
has been lost through the ages. What little remains has been garbled in
telling and retelling through the centuries, put to various uses and
incorporated into new stories. And thus, as Roman culture spread through
the Celtic lands and Christianity replaced the old beliefs, much of the
venerated lore of the tribes was deposited within one central
storehouse, a vehicle that has preserved these tales for over a thousand
years: the Arthurian legend.
The Grail Quest
The early Christian Church, seeing potential good in all stories,
often took over the established
folklore of a society and assimilating it into a new Christian religion.
If one looks for
it, however, the origins of Medieval Christian
Romance stories can by located
fairly easily. The 13th-century French writer
Chretien de Troyes first
introduced the Grail Quest in the form in which we know it today.
The
story of how virtuous Christian knights such as Percival and
Galahad set
forth to find the Holy Grail, the
Chalice used by Jesus Christ at the
Last Supper.
It was further hallowed by catching a few
drops of the Son of Man's blood during his Crucifixion, and later
brought to England by Saint Joseph of Arimathea. In the
medieval romances,
only Galahad, the purest and best of the knights, possessed the grace to
actually achieve the Grail. However, this sublime Christian myth also has
much older roots amid the ancient Celtic tradition.
An early Welsh poem entitled Preiddeu
Annwfn, or The Spoils of Annwn, recounts how
King Arthur set sail to Annwn, the
Celtic Otherworld, or the Land of the Dead.
In typical Celtic
mythic fashion, his object is to raid this supernatural realm and steal
"The
cauldron of the Head of Annwn," a powerful magical device and potent
symbol in Celtic religion. The mission was a disaster from which only
seven of Arthur's warriors returned. It is easy to see the
transformation of this mythic journey into the
romance of the
Grail
Quest, both being so alike in quality: the idea of a long and perilous
journey in search of a cup/bowl/cauldron symbol which fairly seethes
with magical potency. Another major corollary can be found in the
Welsh
tale of Peredur, obviously an older form of the Percival story
popularized by Chretien and the
romances.
The story obeys the known
Grail Quest formula except that the lame
Fisher King is the first lord Peredur
meets, who teaches the youth proper manners and how to fight, while the
custodian of the bleeding lance was Peredur's
uncle. The bleeding lance, instead of being the spear that gashed the
side of Christ, was the weapon used to slay a cousin of Peredur's, and
the silver bowl/plate carried the head of that unknown cousin. When this
was revealed to Peredur, he set out and with the help of Arthur avenged
his slain relatives.
Druids and Merlin
Celtic society was an elaborate and clearly defined system, with several
different branches and roles within it. The traditional roles of freeman
farmer and warrior aristocracy existed, and a chieftain or king ruled
the group.
However, everywhere within the
Celtic world, the intellectual
roles not only existed but were developed to a high degree, and were
separated into three general professional branches: the Bards, singers
of praises and feared satirists; the Vates, diviners and seers (or
sometimes Filidh, poets and possibly prophets); and the Druids, the
priests and wizards, judges and advisors, prophets and teachers of the
Celtic world.
Selected mostly from aristocratic stock, and given
extensive training (reports are usually around 20 years) which was
shrouded in secrecy, the Druids wielded enormous power within the
community, being the leaders of its mind and soul. There are even tales
that the kings themselves could not speak until the Druids had done so.
As one of the most central and important aspects of Celtic society, it
is hardly surprising that survived in the myths and legends of the Irish
and other Celtic groups. And again, this aspect of Celtic mythology
became inextricably linked with the
Arthurian mythos.
The obvious link is, of course, the most fascinating and enigmatic
figure in the cycle of Arthurian legend:
Merlin, the wise and mighty
wizard and prophet. First developed as a character by the monk
Nennius,
Merlin was inserted into the developing
Arthurian legend by
Geoffrey of
Monmouth, and the two became inseparable.
Displaying all the powers
appropriate for a great Druid, Merlin fits the Celtic archetype of
king's advisor snugly. All this should be expected, of course, for
Merlin originates deep in the Celts' mythic past. Originally Lailoken,
the character was already, even in the earliest Welsh poetry, a
traditional archetype. Driven mad in battle, Lailoken flees to the
forest and lives with the wild beasts, at the same time gaining the
potent gift of the second sight or prophecy.
The tradition continues with
the Welsh character of Myrddin; he is mentioned in several poems, the
earliest of which dates to just after A.D. 600, in the role of an
archetypal prophet-poet, whose name lends authority to the predictions
made by the author. With his name translated to Merlin by
Geoffrey of Monmouth, the
wizard takes his place as the most prominent Celtic element in the
entire Arthurian mythos.
Celtic Influences
Anywhere magic and the supernatural intrude into the romances of shining
knights and chivalric deeds, more than likely the story's true origins
are showing themselves. One of the adventures of the Irish hero Cuchulainn, involving a journey to the Otherworld and decapitation, seems
to presage the story of Gawain and the Green Knight.
Gawain himself
seems to be the latter-day avatar of a pagan vegetation or solar deity.
The tales of King Fionn and his roving warrior band, the fiana,
immediately call to mind analogous stories of
King Arthur and the
Knights of the
Round Table.
Arthur's magical sword,
Excalibur, symbol of
his kingship, also seems to rise from these misty legends. The nature of
the sword itself and its attainment from the
Lady of the Lake argue
persuasively for mystic origins, but the disposal of the sword is even
more noteworthy.
Sacrifice was common among the Celts, and often took
the form of votive offerings presented to the gods in shrines, or surrendered to the forces of nature. There are many examples of weapons
and other metal goods cast into pools, rivers, and lakes as offerings;
these are especially connected with funerary rites.
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