Anne Berthelot
Autor(a) de King Arthur. Chivalry and Legend
About the Author
Séries
Obras por Anne Berthelot
Associated Works
Le Livre du Graal, tome 1 : Joseph d'Arimathie - Merlin - Les Premiers Faits du roi Arthur (2001) — Editor, algumas edições — 34 exemplares
Etiquetado
Conhecimento Comum
- Nome canónico
- Berthelot, Anne
- Nome legal
- Berthelot, Anne
- Data de nascimento
- 1957-11-01
- Sexo
- female
- Nacionalidade
- France
- País (no mapa)
- France
- Educação
- Université de Paris IV-Sorbonne (Doctorat d'état, Littérature, Thèse 'Figures et fonction de l'écrivain au XIIIème siècle', 19 87)
Université de Paris IV-Sorbonne (Doctorat de 3e cycle, Littérature, Thèse 'L'Enchanteur et le Livre, ou le savoir de Merlin', 19 82)
Agrégation de lettres classiques (1980)
Ecole Normale Supérieure - Ocupações
- Professeure (Littérature médiévale française)
- Relações
- Poirion, Daniel (Directeur de thèse d'état)
- Organizações
- Université du Connecticut, Storrs, USA (Professeur, French and Francophone Studies)
Membros
Críticas
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 10
- Also by
- 1
- Membros
- 217
- Popularidade
- #102,846
- Avaliação
- 3.7
- Críticas
- 3
- ISBN
- 12
- Línguas
- 2
It is when she deals with the historical context of the legend, however, that we get some curious interpretations. For example, did you know the inhabitants of Pictland during the Roman occupation were called Scots? Even though ‘Scot’ was a derogatory term for 4th-century Irish adventurers on the west coast? That there were Sarmatian legions in Britain and that this irrefutably accounts for similarities between Arthurian legend and Sarmatian myths, even if the evidence is questionable? That the Picts were apparently of Germanic origin? Were you aware of an ancient region called West Anglia? Of a Badon Hill (sic) north of Salisbury (this is actually Baydon, the ‘ay’ pronounced differently from the short ‘a’ in Badon)? Of Dorset’s Maiden Castle as an ancient castle in Logres (this Iron Age hillfort is unconnected with the Castle of Maidens of medieval literature)? Or of Old Sarum as “one of the oldest Christian sites in southern Britain” when it is very, very low down a very, very long — and growing — list?
Which edition of the Welsh Annals was Professor Berthelot looking at when she declares that Arthur’s victory at Mount Badon was due to a twenty-four hour penance “reproducing the stages of Christ’s Passion”? Certainly not an early one: the so-called Sawley Glosses attached to one version of the Historia Brittonum, which date not from the Dark Ages but from the late 12th or early 13th century, propose that it was actually for “three continuous days” and not just 24 hours that Arthur “fasted and kept vigil and prayed in the presence of the Lord’s cross”. And which edition of the Historia Brittonum concentrates in particular on the battle of Camlann? (Answer: none. Though the battle is mentioned in the 10th-century Welsh Annals.) Are these erroneous assertions to be laid at the door of the translator? No, because a comparison with the original Gallimard edition Arthur et la Table ronde confirms the English translation’s accuracy.
The first chapter, then, should carry a health warning for those Arthurians who are liable to suffer apoplectic fits. Nevertheless, these and a few other reservations aside (the short list for further reading is a curious concoction) this title is good value for the colour illustrations alone. When we come to the remaining four chapters Berthelot comes into her own and we are on much firmer ground with the medieval heyday of the legends up to and including Spencer’s The Fairie Queene and Purcell’s “dramatick opera” King Arthur. Nearly a third of this small format 160-page title is taken up with documentary evidence; there are translated quotes from medieval texts, Victorian poems and 20th-century novels, and two sections respectively on sites to visit and films to see (just four short representative topics each). As a pictorial introduction to the Arthurian legend this book then is as good as any; but just don’t rely on it for authoritative statements on the historical context of the origins of the legends.
http://wp.me/s2oNj1-curious… (mais)