- Camelot - Wikipedia
Camelot is a legendary castle and court associated with King Arthur Absent in the early Arthurian material, Camelot first appeared in 12th-century French romances and, since the Lancelot-Grail cycle, eventually came to be described as the fantastic capital of Arthur's realm and a symbol of the Arthurian world
- Camelot (TV Series 2011) - IMDb
Arthur acquires the sword in the stone and is crowned King Morgan enters Camelot with her prisoners, claiming that they are traitors and that only she can save the realm from the marauding bands Confronting Ygrain in private she kills her
- Camelot | Arthurian legend | Britannica
Camelot, in Arthurian legend, the seat of King Arthur’s court It is variously identified with Caerleon, Monmouthshire, in Wales, and, in England, with the following: Queen Camel, Somerset; the little town of Camelford, Cornwall; Winchester, Hampshire; and Cadbury Castle, South Cadbury, Somerset
- Camelot - Legendary Castle of King Arthur (Round Table)
Camelot, the legendary castle and seat of King Arthur's power in Britain, epitomized the Golden Age of Chivalry with the establishment of the Knights of the Round Table
- King Arthurs Camelot: Location Whether it Was Real
Camelot was King Arthur’s capital, where he reigned over the Britons before the Saxon invasion, according to legend It does not appear on any authentic early map from that time period The words “cam” and “camel” do, however, appear as elements in pre-Saxon British location names
- Camelot - World History Edu
Camelot is a storied and legendary castle, long associated with King Arthur and his court Absent in early Arthurian material, it emerged in 12th-century French romances Over time, Camelot became known as the mythical capital of Arthur’s realm, symbolizing the grandeur of the Arthurian world
- Camelot: The Legendary Seat of King Arthur - MythBank
Camelot is widely known as a mythical castle located in Great Britain, where King Arthur held court It was the center of the Kingdom of Logres and, in Arthurian romances, was the location of the Round Table and accommodated approximately 150 knights
- Camelot | Robbins Library Digital Projects
Although Camelot is, for most modern readers, the legendary center of King Arthur's realm, in many medieval texts Arthur holds court at Carleon or some other city Camelot is first mentioned in line 34 of Chrétien de Troyes's Lancelot; and the name does not appear in all manuscripts of that poem
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