King Arthur left an ancient trail across Britain. Experts say it offers clues about the truth behind the myth

Vocabulary: 869, Words: 2574

1Editor’s note: Sign up for Unlocking the World, CNN Travel’s weekly newsletter. 2Get news about destinations, plus the latest in aviation, food and drink, and where to stay.

3He’s the mythical Celtic warlord who held out against the Anglo Saxon invasion of what would come to be called England. 4His right-hand man was a wizard, he was handed his famous sword by a deity, and he was a romanticand chivalroushero.

5Oh, and he isn’t dead. 6He’s merely asleep, and will rise again when the time is right to expel the invaders and turn Britain back into a Celtic land.

7He is, of course, King Arthur, a figure so imbued with beauty and potential that even across the pond, JFK’s presidency was referred to as CamelotArthur’s mythical court. 8But was there a real man behind the myth? 9Or is he just our platonic ideal of a heroa respectful king, in today’s parlance?

10Today, Arthur’s supposed exploits have left behind a tourist trail across the UK and beyond, with scores of sites claiming connections to his myth.

11It’s nothing new. 12For centuries, the legend of Arthur has fascinated much of Europe.

13He was supposedly the leader of a tribe of Celtsindigenous Britonswhen the Saxons invaded Britain in the fifth century.

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Gianni Dagli Orti/Shutterstock (5850818ol)<br />Christ flanked by Saints John and Peter, from The Last Supper, 1618 (detail) (Frans II Pourbus)<br />Art (Paintings) - various<br />Artist: POURBUS, Frans II (1569-1622, Flemish)<br />Location: Musée du Louvre Paris

14Related article They all say they’ve got the Holy Grail. 15So who’s right?

19The Saxonspeople from modern-day Scandinavia, Germany and Franceeventually colonized Britain, but there were fierce pockets of resistance from the Celts, especially in the far west of the country. 20Wales and CornwallEngland’s southwesternmost countywere the last to fall. 21The Celtic languages that all Britons originally spoke held out here, while elsewhere people began to speak what would become English.

22Arthur was, according to tradition, a leader resisting to the end against the Saxon colonizers. 23Fittingly, both Cornwall and Wales (among other places) claim him. 24Today, he is best associated with Tintagel Castle, where remains of a settlement dating back to the fifth century perch strikingly on an islet off the wild coast of Cornwall. 25Supposedly, Arthur was conceived here.

26But the myth of Arthur is also bound intrinsically with Glastonbury Tor (a hill in Somerset where Merlin, his magician, is said to be asleep, waiting to return), Caerleon Castle in Wales (this was said to where Arthur had his court, Camelot), and South Cadbury in Somerset, where archaeologists in the 1970s thought they’d located Camelot.

27In Wales alone, Arthur is meant to have killed a giant on Yr Wyddfa (Mount Snowdon) and a fearsome beast in Llyn Barfog lake, while Merlin is said to be buried both on Bardsey Island, off the north coast, and in a cliff at Nevern. 28Mind you, Arthur is also rumored to be sleeping in that cliffsideas well as buried at Glastonbury Abbey, Baschurch in Shropshire, and Mynydd y Gaer, a mountain in Wales. 29Even for a mythical figure, he got around.

30There’s also Arthur’s Seat in Edinburghthe names of Arthur and Merlin areright at the top of the listof historical figures who’ve loaned their names to places, according to Mark Stoyle, professor of early modern history at the UK’s University of Southampton. 31Even the French claim a link with him, with some arguing that he was from Brittanyanother Celtic part of Europe. 32The study of his story is, apparently, on the national school curriculum in France.

33So why is everyone so fascinated with this manand did he even exist?

Arthur was said to have been handed his sword, Excalibur, by the mysterious deity, the Lady of the Lake.

34For Stoyle, it’s likely that the myth of Arthur has at least its roots in fact.

35Nobody knows for sure,” he says. 36Historians are so divided on it.”

37He says that an increasing number of archaeologists and historians believe that Arthur is an amalgamation of various historical characters, rather than an actual figure himselfalthough plenty still believe that Arthur himself existed.

38Stoyle himself is in the former camp.

39When the Roman empire fell, the Anglo Saxons took over in the east of England and then moved to the west. 40There was fierce resistance to them which lasted a long time, and it’s easy to believe that there was one or more local chieftains who opposed them, and that those stories are perhaps the germ for the story of Arthur,” he says.

41My gut feeling is that there has to be someone extraordinary behind this [these stories] but we have so little hard evidence, and some things [which he is said to have done] he definitely couldn’t do.”

42That would be things like pulling a sword out of a rock in which it was lodged (this marked him out as the rightful king), or getting his most famous sword, Excalibur, handed to him bythe lady of the lake,” a kind of water deity (Cornish people swear this happened at Dozmary Pool on Bodmin Moor). 43Excalibur has, of course, become so rooted in our global consciousness that it was not only the subject of the 1963 Disney filmThe Sword in the Stonebut also is the name of a medieval-themed resort in Las Vegas.

The new footbridge at Tintagel Castle, Cornwall. Photograph by David Levene 6/8/19

44Related article A Cornish castle has recreated the legendary crossing of King Arthur’s father

47Whoever inspired these stories is almost a moot point for Stoyle. 48In a way, everybody has their own Arthurperceptions about who we want him to have been,” he says.

49Perhaps he’s the chivalrous knight who spent more time instilling good behavior at Camelot than killing his enemies. 50This is the Arthur that went viral in the medieval period, when chivalry was all the rage.

51Perhaps he’s the romantic hero, the king who fought for love when his wife Guinevere ran off with his most trusted confidant, Lancelot. 52That’s the erotic Arthur beloved by the pre-Raphaelite artists and poets who obsessed over him in the 1800s. 53This Arthur was played by Clive Owen in the 2004 film, “King Arthur,” alongside Keira Knightley as Guinevere.

54Perhaps he’s the mysticthe proto-New Age king who was led to victory by his trusted magician Merlin. 55Modern-day mystics swarm to Glastonbury to soak up his magic there.

56Or maybe he’s supernaturala man who never really died, but lies sleeping, ready to return when his country needs him. 57This Arthur will kick the Saxon colonizers out and return Britain to its native Celtic culture. 58That’s the guy who, says Stoyle, the Welsh and Cornishabsolutely believedin for centuries.

59As for Merlin, Stoyle says that most leaders of that age would have been accompanied by a sage. 60Merlin is the model in popular culture for the likes of Gandalf and Dumbledore, he says.

UK, England, Glastonbury Abby ruins<strong>Giant slayer: </strong>Arthur is indelibly linked with Wales, where he is said to have killed a giant on Yr Wyddfa (Mount Snowdon).<strong>Second coming: </strong>The myth of Arthur as a chivalrous politician spread to the US, where JFK's 'court' was nicknamed Camelot.<strong>Wise men: </strong>Arthur's sage Merlin was the inspiration for wizards in popular culture, from Gandalf to Dumbledore.<strong>Proof? </strong>The sixth-century “Artognou stone," discovered in 1998, has linked Tintagel with King Arthur for some scholars, though others dismiss it.<strong>New Age Arthur: </strong>At Glastonbury, people see Arthur as a New Age figure.<strong>Sitting around: </strong>Winchester Castle even has a 'round table' inspired by Arthur.<strong>Still making his mark: </strong>This set of Arthur-inspired stamps was issued in the UK in 2021.<strong>Modern man: </strong>Clive Owen (right) played Arthur in the 2004 film of the same name. Keira Knghtley played his wife, Guinevere.<strong>Pop culture: </strong>The myth has even inspired a Disney film, 1963's 'The Sword in the Stone.'<strong>Sin City style: </strong>The final proof of Arthur entering global consciousness has to be the medieval-themed Excalibur resort in Las Vegas.

61In the medieval period, Arthur’s storyor, more accurately, his mythwent viral after a writer called Geoffrey of Monmouth described King Arthur in his book, “Historia Regum Britanniae,” orA history of Britain’s kings,” around 1136 CE.

62Geoffreythought to have been a monkwrote that Arthur was conceived at Tintagel, and held court at CamelotAKA Caerleon in southeast Wales, around 150 miles northeast of Tintagel.

63According to Geoffrey, Arthur died fighting the forces of his wayward son Mordred at the battle of Camlann at Cornwall’s “River Camblan” — often interpreted as the River Camel, which coincidentally runs through a place called Slaughterbridge. 64He was buried on the island of Avalonnot located by Geoffrey, though the medieval monks of Glastonbury Abbey were quick to equate themselves with Avalon, not least because Arthur pilgrims were cash-rich visitors.

65Of course, medieval history writers were fast and loose with the facts. 66But it seems that archaeology can provide some pointers.

67Tintagel Castle is one of the most romantic sites connected with Arthur: an atmospheric ruined castle clinging to the cliffside of a small island, dangling just off the coast of the north Cornish coast.

68So spectacular is its location that it’s the second most visited site for English Heritage, the charity that manages it, after Stonehenge. 69In 2023, 334,195 visitors made their way down from the cliffs at Tintagel village, into a valley, and up along another cliff to a suspension bridge.

70The bridgebuilt in 2019 — leads visitors across an abyss, the Atlantic Ocean thrashing below, and onto the islet, where they walk straight into a ruined medieval dining hall on the side of the precipitous cliff.

Tintagel -- where Arthur is said to have been conceived -- is the second most popular site in England for English Heritage, second only to Stonehenge.

71Arthur, so the legend goes, was conceived herethough of course not in that dining hall. 72In fact, the atmospheric medieval ruins we see today were built expressly to tap into the Arthurian myth, says Win Scutt, senior properties curator at English Heritage.

73The castle was built by Earl Richard, the 13th-century duke of Cornwalla role today held by Prince William.

74Earl Richard wanted to associate himself with the Arthurian storythat’s why he bought the land and built the castle,” says Scutt. 75This was a feasting place to basically say he was the new Arthur.”

76Further up on the clifftop, however, are remains that date back to the (supposed) Arthurian period.

77Across the top of the headland spread the remains of a settlement from the fifth to the seventh centurythe height of theDark Ages,” the post-Roman period in Europe when trading and transport routes broke down, and for which there is little written evidence.

78Yet the archaeological evidence at Tintagel is compelling.

79It shows that the site was home to an important settlement during the period, with evidence of long-distance trading: wine from Greece, serving bowls from Turkey, and Tunisian ceramics. 80There is more pottery from the eastern Mediterranean at Tintagel than from all other sites from the same era in Britainput together.

81We don’t have a settlement in southern Britain as large as Tintagelnot even London,” says Scutt. 82There are traces of around 100 buildings scattered over the headland.

83There’s also evidence of connections with early Christian culture in the eastern Mediterranean.

84Seven hundred years before the [medieval] castle there was a place of power there,” says Scutt, adding that there are few signs of military defenses, implying that it was ahigh status sitemore of a statement.”

85It’s not necessarily royal, but probably is,” he adds. 86Cornwall was an independent kingdom in the early medieval period.”

TOPSHOT - A picture shows a section of Hadrian's Wall near the wall's milecastle 39 near Hexham, northern England, on January 19, 2022. This year marks the 1900 anniversary of the start of the construction of Hadrian's Wall, which took 6 years to complete and was built to guard the northern frontier of the Roman Empire in 122 AD. The wall ran for 73 miles from the Solway Firth to Wallsend on the River Tyne and is now designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The wall featured over 80 milecastles or forts, two observation towers and 17 larger forts. After the Romans left Britain in the early 5th century, some 300 years after the wall was constructed, large sections of the wall fell into decay and were recycled into local buildings and houses. (Photo by OLI SCARFF / AFP) (Photo by OLI SCARFF/AFP via Getty Images)

87Related article How Hadrian’s Wall is revealing a hidden side of Roman history

90Then there’s theArtognou stone,” discovered onsite in 1998. 91A sixth-century carved stone, it mentions the name Artognou, which some people have connected to Arthurthough other scholars have dismissed this idea.

92Scutt says that he and his colleagues have shied away in the past from linking Tintagel with Arthur too explicitly. 93Yet he is curious why Geoffrey of Monmouth chose it as Arthur’s place of conception.

94Where did he pick up this story? 95Oral history? 96Writing? 97Or did the people of Tintagel claim to have origins with Arthur? 98You can’t extricate the myth from the history,” he says. 99Maybe he was aware there had been an important place.

100That [Geoffrey] connects the birth of Arthur with Tintagel can’t be a coincidencethere’s something going on there.” 101But, Scutt hastens to add, “That doesn’t mean [Arthur] existed. 102As an archaeologist, I never trust historical records. 103We always question the documentary recordespecially if it’s from 500 years later.”

Arthur and his entourage were known as the 'knights of the round table' -- supposedly because sat round one big table together.

104One person who isn’t convinced by Geoffrey’s account is Nicholas J. Higham, professor emeritus at the University of Manchester, who calls the texta complete spoofa faux history which lionizes the Britons and downgrades the English as pagan incomers who aren’t very nice.”

105Higham likens Geoffrey’s text to the epicLord of the Ringssaga by J.R.R. Tolkienwho, incidentally, was an Arthurian scholar.

106You see him plucking stuff off [other source materials] and writing it into his own narrative,” he says. 107Those sources included a ninth-century document calledThe History of the Britonswhichrewrotethe history of the Roman occupation of Britain to laud the indigenous Britons, and a 540 CE Latin document in the manner of anOld Testament prophetwhich suggests that the Britons were subdued becausethey have gone against god, and they need to repent and return to the lord.”

108This documentby a writer called Gildas — “builds up the figures of resistance [to the Romans],” says Higham, One of these figures in the text is Arthur. 109He is depicted as an almost Christ-like figure, the battle leader of the Britons, winning 12 battlesa number significant to Christians.

110Old Welsh poetry of the eight to 11th century also mention Arthur, though Higham says that the texts we have today are medieval copies that wereradically modernizedand therefore untrustworthy.

111There’s also a roundabout reference to Arthur in a sixth century poem, damning another figure as, “He was not an Arthur.”

112You can make of that what you will,” says Higham, who calls himself anArthur skeptic.” 113You can’t accept the word of an early ninth-century writer who you know is attempting to rewrite the past for present propagandist purposes.”

Henry VIII is seen as the quintessential English king. In fact, he played up his Welsh roots, and his father claimed to be a descendant of the Celt, Arthur.

114Whatever the truth, the influence of Arthur has echoed down through the centuries.

115In 1485, England’s King Henry VII seized power from Richard III by landing in Wales from his exile in Brittany (he had first tried to land in Cornwall), billing himself asArthur’s heir,” says Stoyle. 116The prophecies that Arthur would come again encouraged the Welsh to join him, and his army snowballed.”

117Once he’d grabbed the throne, he emphasized his Welshness, even calling his first sonthe Prince of WalesArthur. 118Henry’s reign was, says Stoyle, aglorious Welsh renaissance,” and Arthurwho was sent to the English town of Ludlow to govern as a young manwould have been crowned king of England had he not died early.

119Instead, his younger brother took powerone Henry VIII. 120And although we think of Henry as the quintessential Englishman, Stoyle says heemphasized his connection with Wales,” celebrating St. David’s Day in court and having a retinue of Welsh staff. 121He and his daughter, Elizabeth I, spoke both Welsh and Cornish. 122The Tudors were really keen to say we are kings of England but also Wales and Cornwall,” says Stoyle. 123The later Stuart dynasty also played up links with Arthur, he says.

124It really shows Arthur mattered.”

125Whatever the truth, those who love Arthurthe man, the myth, or the many men whose stories might have created the mythhave plenty of places to visit.

126And the wonderful thing about the many Arthurs is that he can also tell us about ourselves.

127In a way, everybody has their own Arthur,” says Stoyle. 128There are all kinds of Arthurs. 129At Glastonbury it’s very New Age-y. At Tintagel it’s more grim and forbidding, he’s more like a warrior. 130Most people think of him in a more romantic way. 131Different people gravitate to different places in search oftheirArthur.”

132Scutt says that the legends are important as the truthwhatever that is.

133The legend is importantthat’s our identity,” he says. 134Some stories that we tell about our own families might not be very truthful 135but we remember them as part of us.

136As a child I used to write songs to do with the Arthur story and even called my bicycle Arthur.

137Do I want him to exist? 138I kind of do. 139But in a way, it doesn’t really matter. “

from CNN