Stuff You Should Know - Was there a real King Arthur?
Episode Date: January 14, 2014The legend of King Arthur is very old and very established. By the time the king who saved Britain and united it was first written about, his story was already hundreds of years old. And while many of... the details of his life and adventures, from the Lady of the Lake to Merlin the Magician, seem fictional some archaeologists believe that Arthur -- and much of his life -- was real. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome to Stuff You Should Know from howstuffworks.com.
Hey, welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant.
Jerry Waved everybody. Quiet, Jerry. That's Stuff You Should Know. Yeah, that's us. That is us. The
legend. You know, it was impossible for me to research this without only thinking of two things,
two movies. Five on. Nope. Didn't see that one. That's good. Was that the one called King Arthur?
It was a good. I thought so. I'll check it out because I dig this character
and I've seen a lot of the movies that tackle Camelot, but Excalibur and Monty Python and The
Holy Grail, of course. Surely I've seen Excalibur because I had Showtime when I was a kid.
It was a big hot movie when you were 12 in the early 80s. Yeah. And then of course The Holy Grail.
I mean, how do you not see that? It's The Holy Grail of comedies, some say. Yeah, I could see that.
You should check out a cabler. It actually holds up pretty well. Does it? Yeah. And it's has somewhat
notable for having a couple of early appearances by actors that went on to be much bigger. Oh,
yeah. Love movies like that. Yeah. Gabriel Byrne is in it and just barely and Liam Neeson. Oh,
really? And I think both of them. It was their first roles. Wow. And they're like hardly in the
movie. Who was who played King Arthur? Was it anybody like I've heard of or like they were
they had to have been big at the time, right? Who was it? Richard Burton. You know, when I was
like 13, I saw Richard Harris do Camelot at the Fox Theater in Atlanta. So is that like pretty
neat? Is that based on the Arthurian legend? What, the musical Camelot? Yeah. Yeah, sure. Okay.
But I mean, you know, it's a musical. Yeah. And it's from the 60s. So you can never tell.
Like it could have just been named Camelot. That's what I was asking. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
No, it's about the Arthurian legend. But out of all of them, I would say hands down,
Monty Python and the Holy Grail is the best of the Arthurian legend movie adaptations. Yeah,
I haven't seen it in years, but it's like one of those that I saw so many times I can still
quote most of it, you know, I mean, it has it all. It has the killer rabbits, the killer bunnies.
Yeah. It has the coconut carrying swallows. Yeah. It has the nice to say knee. Yeah. It has the
black knight who merely has a flesh wound. Yeah. It has everything. It has singing, dancing. Yeah.
Yeah. I mean, yeah, the great Graham Chapman as Arthur. Yeah. And bring out your dead.
Yeah. So many things that are in the lexicon. All came from that movie. Yeah. Nigel Terry played
Arthur in the Excalibur movie. I don't know who he is. You'd probably recognize him. Helen Mirren
was Morgana though. Oh, wow. But yeah, small roles. Oh, Patrick Stewart was the other guy.
Gotcha. He played was he bald? Has he always like he always been bald? I'm sure he had hair at some
point. Oh, I'll bet he looked weird with hair. I can't imagine him with hair. What if he was born
with like a full head of hair? And that was it. He started losing it after that. Right for two days.
And then it all came out. All right. So anyway, I started to disrupt us early on. But those two
movies I just every time I saw with the pin dragon. This is a cool name. That's a great name. I
couldn't help but just kind of say those lines in my head. So I mean, you you make a good or you
raise a good point. There's so many Arthur movies out there. Sure. Arthur books, Sword in the Stone
was pretty good too. Yeah. That everybody has a kind of a basic idea of the King Arthur legend,
the Arthurian myth or romance that sometimes called to sure. But what I think probably a lot
of people don't know is that it is a syncretized meaning the Catholics got their myths on it
and threw a bunch of Christianity on top of something that was already extant. And in this
case, what was excellent was a group of myths that arose from the Celts, the Celtic people,
which is pretty substantial that we have this because the Celts never wrote anything down,
mainly on account of the fact that they didn't have a written language. Their tradition was
entirely oral, which is why we have very little of an understanding of the Celts. Most of our
understanding of the Celts comes from outside observers like Pliny the Elder. Thank God for
Pliny or else we might not even know the Celts ever existed. Yeah. But the Arthurian legend
is very clearly based on Celtic mythology. But even more enticing to me is the idea that it's
possibly or it's possible that that Celtic legend that Celtic mythology is rooted somewhat in fact,
like Arthur may have been a real person. Yeah, that's sort of the age old question.
Yeah. But I mean, I find that in astoundingly fascinating, like there's places that are part
of the Arthurian legend that do exist in real life. But whether or not they actually were a part
of Arthur's life, if there was a real Arthur, I mean, each spot generates awesome debate. Yeah.
You know, so for the anthropologist, the history major in me, I just am fascinated by the whole
thing. Agreed, sir. So let's go over the basic legend of Arthur. Killer King, legendary hero.
Yeah. Saved Britain when Britain needed saving. Yeah, because the Roman Empire had crumbled.
Yeah. And the Saxons were all over Britain, the Germanic tribes. Yeah. And he defeated them.
Yes. And brought great peace to the land and built a castle called a Camelot gathered up
nights together around around a round table, which we'll get into.
And there's a lot of round to help bring peace to to the land and and he did and he did so very
successfully. In fact, in 2002, the BBC voted King Arthur as number 51 and the poll of 100 Greatest
Britons. Yeah. Even though he might not even be a real dude. And the Britons are smart folks,
and they still voted him that they're pretty sharp. Yeah. So those are the broad strokes.
But depending on which version you're reading, it's going to be different. Did he pull a sword
from a stone? Was it Excalibur? Did he get it from the lady in the water? Was his undoing
Mordred or was it Guinevere and Lancelot? Yeah. Depends on which version you're reading.
And we'll go over those versions. Right. And we can you can kind of trace these back to,
you know, you can see layer after layer being added. So when you look at the Arthurian legend,
as we understand it now, yeah, you can kind of peel back layer by layer and get to the original
stuff. Yeah. Which is pretty old indeed. Like they think that we'll get to that. Let's talk
about the Arthur story. Okay. So you've got Arthur. He comes along at a time when Britain
is in its greatest need. There were some great kings, possibly relatives of Arthur like Uther
Pendragon, his father supposedly would have been one of the rulers. Yeah. Right. But you're smiling
because you like that name. All I can think of is I am Arthur, son of Uther Pendragon. Okay. So
you just say that anytime you want, man. So but he arrives at a time when Britain is being
overrun by the Saxons. It's being ruled by the Saxons like there's no British king on the throne.
Yeah. And there's a legend that comes up that there's a sword in a stone and only the rightful
king, meaning only the line of Uther Pendragon. Yep. I'm not gonna say it again. We'll be able
to remove the sword from the stone. And when that person comes, he will be dubbed the King of Kings
and will restore the rightful lineage to the British throne. Yeah. And in some stories,
like I said, a young man, a young Arthur pulls the sword stored. It's a sword from the swan.
And in other legends, it does come from the lady in the lake. He rides out on a barge and
the hand stretches up with the sword in it. All you see is the arm. Right. Coming from the water.
And he gets the sword that way. Well, and then I think a third way he pulls the sword from the stone
and proclaiming himself Arthur. Yeah. And everyone goes nuts. The ruler Britain. Everyone's like,
he's the dude. Right. Like we got one of our own back in power now. And then that sword breaks and
that's when he gets Excalibur from the lady of the lake. That's right. The most powerful magic
sword in all the land. It's a, it's what you call a bitching sword. This is a bitching sword.
Merlin in some stories comes around right about this time. And he appears on Arthur's
uh, a teen, generally, um, associated with the lady of the lake. They're an Avalon. They're both
from the same neck of the woods, apparently. Avalon is a magical mystery place. Even outside
of the Arthurian legend. As far as the Celts go, it was a, it means Apple land. Really? Yeah.
And I guess apples were super magical to the Celts. But Avalon itself is almost in other
worldly afterlife kind of area, even though it's a physical place you can go to in Britain.
Right. Still interesting. Uh, it's interesting that the apple has always been a strange fruit.
Yeah. Like I know it was probably wasn't an apple in Eden, but it's all in
I wonder Southern Baptist called it an apple. Yeah. And I wonder when what it was originally
in like Aramaic and then when it was converted to Apple, because what, where's the apple indigenous?
I don't know. Or the, or the apple and the, the, uh, what was the children's? Was it not snow white?
Was it snow white? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. With the poison apple. Poison apple again. Yeah. I saw a
video today that we've been eating apples wrong. Did you know that? I've seen that. I can't bring
myself to eat an apple like that. There's a, there's a middle spindle, AKA the core that is not to
be consumed. That is not true. I won't do it. It's just too weird. But you can eat the core. There
is no core. There is a core. I make it every, I create the core every time I, I, I, I show it
just like a sculptor reveals the sculpture within a slab of stone. So too do I reveal the core
in an apple? Let me ask you this. If you cut the apple up into the eight pieces and get the seeds
out, you can just eat. That's the whole apple. No, no, you have to shave off like the inner part,
the core. For those of you who don't know, there's a video of a dude eating an apple from the,
the bottom end forward and he just eats the whole thing. Cause he's a psychopath.
Okay. Sorry to get sidetracked by the history of the apple.
Well, no, I think you do raise a really, really interesting point, Chuck. I wonder,
you know, when the apple started getting a bad rep, when the apple stood in for other fruit. Yeah.
I think that's an excellent thing to look up. Okay. So let me know what you find.
All right. So Arthur, like I said, he builds Camelot. That's his castle. Once he restores
peace. Yeah. Well, no. I know. No, I think that was, he went out and got all the nights to help
him restore peace. Oh, okay. So he built Camelot in anticipation of restoring peace. Exactly.
And recruited nights for the round table and we might as well go ahead and leak that the round
table was supposedly round because we're all equals and there's no head of a round table.
Makes sense. Yeah. And it was either fashioned by Merlin. Yeah. Or it was a gift from Guinevere,
who we haven't gotten to yet, avoiding present from Guinevere's father. Yeah. Even though he
got it from Arthur's father, Uther Pendragon. Yeah. And her father was King Leo de Grants,
who I think that was Patrick Stewart. Gotcha. Enix caliber. So the nights go out. They defeat
all the outsiders there. Peace reigns and that's why Camelot to this day has the connotation of,
and especially with the Kennedys like this, you know, peaceful, idyllic situation.
Right. That's Camelot. And although it was a place, you know what I'm saying?
I do. It sort of represents more than a place. Right. It represents the piece that he brought.
Yes. With these nights. Okay. Then he meets Guinevere. Yeah. Falls in love with this little
hottie. And then depending on what story you read, there might have been an affair with Lancelot
or Mordred, who was either his nephew or depending on what you read or his son,
which technically he could be both because supposedly he had Mordred with his half sister,
Morgana, who is translated into Morgan Lafay, who's like this kind of enchanting, temptress,
evil woman who helps Mordred try to take over Camelot, tries to take over the throne.
And Arthur says, nay, to you, we will do battle at a place called Camelon. That's right.
That's where Mordred dies. That's where Mordred is killed and Arthur is wounded. And depending
on the version of the story, Arthur's either mortally wounded or just kind of wounded. But
either way, he gives his sword, Excalibur, to Betavir and says, you need to return this to
the lady in the lake. After kind of waffling, because Betavir is like, I could use Excalibur.
He finally gives, he throws Excalibur to the lake and this arm comes up and goes ching,
and like catches it and then goes back down. And he's like, there was a lady of the lake.
Yeah, that's the Excalibur movie version. Okay. They follow that version. Okay.
Because I remember distinctly him chunking the sword out there in the arm coming up.
That's cool. I have some vague mental memory of that as well. And then Arthur's taken to
Avalon to either die and be buried, which is, or he recuperates and hangs out there to come back
to reign over Britain. And it's next time of greatest need, which is why Arthur is
frequently referred to. And there is a book titled, The Once and Future King, because he
will return again when Britain needs him, which makes him like kind of the British Superman.
Yeah. Before we go any further, my friend, I think it's a good time for a message break.
Attention Bachelor Nation. He's back. The man who hosted some of America's most dramatic
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So that's the, uh, that's the basic legend. I mean, like we just basically condensed thousands of
pages of different books and thousands, well, not thousands, but hundreds of years of folklore
into a few minutes. But to get the gist of it, sure, you know the story. And if this, if this
ignited your fancy and you're like, I want to know more, man, you've got a, you could dedicate
the rest of your life to researching and reading Arthurian legend. Some have, because there's
tons of it. Yeah. And, and it's all like we said, um, it's a literary tradition, but it's rooted
in an oral tradition among the Celts, the pagan Celts. Um, but this literary tradition itself
is really, really old. The, the first mention of Arthur is, um, from, I think the fifth century,
right? The fifth century Welsh poem, uh, six, six century Welsh poem, but when you're off
by a hundred years back then, yeah, I didn't have a big deal, um, especially with a man who may or
may not have existed. Yeah, true. But Arthur pops up in one line in this Welsh poem, poem called
the Gododen Gododen Gododen. Yeah. It's a great word. And this, uh, poem eulogizes the Welsh warrior
years. Maybe Britain's oldest poem. Yeah. Because the Celts would have started to become
Christianized around this time. Yeah. Hence things would have started to have been written down.
So this poem would have popped up really right around that cusp between the end of purely Celtic
culture, because the British Isles were the last stronghold of the Celts, which swept all the way
to Asia. Like they covered Europe, parts of North Africa. The Celts were everywhere, but, um, it was
the, um, the British Isles that were the last holdouts until about like the fifth, sixth, seventh,
eighth centuries, um, when they became Christianized. All right. So they're Christianized at this point?
Yeah. By the time this poem came out, the very fact that there's a written poem,
yeah, it shows you that the Christians have made their way in this area. And the Celts are all
just telling stories, looking their wounds and telling stories still. Right. Not writing stuff
down. They're like, do you, have you, are you familiar with mistletoe? Yeah. Do you know about
knocking on wood? Look at you utilizing all your information. Uh, so, uh, some other references,
uh, in literature, um, the Historia Britonum, History of Britain, uh, AD 800 and the Annalis
Cambrier, the Annals of Wales, a few hundred years after that, they were, they were basically
history books, the main history books of Britain and Wales. Right. And, um, but they themselves
were just compilations of, of other books and can't be like factually verified. Yeah. But nevertheless,
they were used and Arthur was mentioned in both. Um, the Arthur we know and love today, uh, you
can trace back to, uh, Jeffrey of Monmouth and he was a priest who wrote Historia Regum Britannia,
the History of British Kings and the 1100s. But he based his stuff on the Historia Britonum,
but it just became really popular. Right. So like he kind of based it on the other thing. Well,
I mean, some people even say you plagiarize, but it became so popular. He was kind of, uh, golden.
Right. And I think, I think also he, um, I mean, most histories are based on previous histories.
Sure. Um, so that's that in and of itself isn't a bad thing. But yeah, I don't know what this
article is implying that like he was, that he stole work or he fabricated it. Well,
he was accused of fabricating some of it. So. So well, either way, he gave the world the Arthurian
legend. That's right. Like Arthur existed before this, like as we've seen, but he was the one that
said like, there's a great story here and I'm going to bulk this up. Yeah. So he started naming
places. Yeah. He started contemporizing things like he, he, he took, um, this legend and put it
into a context that the people who lived in his time would understand and be fascinated by.
Yeah. And he introduced Christianity for the first time to the story. Um,
the French got ahold of it and then they're all about a good romance novel. So they sort of
introduced the love elements or not introduced, but, uh, emphasize the love elements a little bit
more. Yeah. About 50 years after Geoffrey of Monmouth, um, made his, uh, history, um, Cretan
Detroit, uh, came up with some stories that added that romantic part. Yeah. And a lot,
like the, I think the Grail stuff too. Oh yeah. Yeah. He was the one who, who, uh, came up with
the romance between Lancelot and Guinevere and the Grail, the search for the Grail, which
wasn't a part of the story up until the 12th century. And most of the stuff had been like
history books and poems, um, starting with the Vulgate cycle, uh, or prose Lancelot is when
you started getting these great prose stories and Christianity is woven in even more. And this is
between 1210 and 1230. Right. Just to give you an idea of where we are. And they don't know if these
stories were like maybe part of a popular literary trend at the time. Right. Where a bunch of people
were writing. Yeah. Like Chilvery was a big thing to write about. Right. Yeah. Or if it was one
author writing a series of stuff and they were not, they're not attributed to any single author,
but they're, they're collected together as a body of work, the Vulgate cycle. Yeah. And those ones
focus a little more on like Lancelot and the chivalrous nights and all that. Yeah. And the Grail
too. Um, yeah. With Gala head. Yeah. They said that, um, Joseph of Arimathea, who was in the
Bible, he was the one who gave Jesus his tomb after Jesus was crucified and brought back.
And, uh, he said, no, I'm, well, he didn't say that, but they, they said Joseph of Arimathea
brought the Grail to Britain. Um, but then Gala had Sir Lancelot's illegitimate son was said in
the Vulgate cycle that he discovered the Grail because he was pure, of course. Yes. Until
he went to the castle anthrax. Remember that scene? And the, the pure and chaste, uh,
goes to the castle and there's all the, there's all the ladies that are like tempting them.
Yeah. It's, uh, Michael Palin. It's just like wide eyed. That's such a great movie, man. Uh, and
then the big one, um, that most of our modern stories are based on is Thomas Mallory's, uh,
LeMorte d'Arthur, the death of Arthur. And I read this in college. Oh yeah. Oh yeah. And it was
tough. It was, uh, sort of like a, a bit of a modernized middle, middle English. Yeah. It wasn't
quite Chaucer. It wasn't that tough. Um, but it was still a tough read. And I remember thinking at
the time, can I just watch Excalibur? And it turns out I could cause that was, that movie was
specifically based on the death of Arthur. Right. Yeah. And so as you're, you're kind of seeing
like each, um, each new century, each new, um, authors adding their own thing to it.
Yeah. He didn't actually write it. I should say that he compiled the stories together.
Oh, okay. Surely he cleaned them up and well, yeah, but he didn't, he didn't create a new work.
He's known as, it's known as a compilation. Well, he did add some new stories about some
other knights, Sir Gareth and Sir Tristan. Um, and he, he, he also kind of took the,
the focus off of the Celtic pagan mythology and really focused it onto the Christian mythology.
Yeah. Um, and, and at this point, the, the idea that this whole thing is based on Celtic ideals
and, and, um, myths is lost largely to history. Yeah. I mean, at the very least it doesn't become
nearly as apparent. Um, was he the one that added the lady in the lake though? Oh no,
that was the Vulgate cycle. Yeah. Um, which was surprising to me because I would think that would
be ancient Celtic mythology, but that wasn't added until the 13th century. Oh yeah. Yeah. The lady
in the lake and the idea of Mordred is Arthur's son by a sister. You'd think those two would be
real old. Yeah. No, no, no. It was a part of the preoccupation of the weirdos in the 13th century.
Well, I think Mallory did add the, um, after Guinevere and Lancelot are busted,
they go their separate ways to become a nun and a monk. Oh yeah. Respectively. Right. Um,
so after Mallory, you have, uh, Alfred Lord Tennyson, um, who wrote the Idols of the King.
Yeah. That creepy looking dude. And, uh, great poet though. Yeah, but scary looking. And I love
his name too. Yeah. Um, and then T.H. White wrote the Once and Future King and that was the basis
of The Sword in the Stone. Yeah. Yeah. Little Disney action. That was a good movie if I remember
correctly. Yeah, it was good. Merlin was kind of like a kooky. I mean, he was weird, right?
Right. In that story? Yeah. In, uh, The Sword in the Stone. I don't remember that one that much.
Was that the animated? Uh-huh. Okay. Yeah. Where he's like a young King Arthur pulls
the sword from the stone and... I didn't see that. I must have seen it, but I was all about the
Jungle Book. This one came out about the same time. I know, but I was probably so obsessed
with the Jungle Book. Same exact animators and everything. Yeah. You're like, I can't pay attention
to this. All right, so, um... To lend my fascination to. Uh, all right. So we, we should
talk a little bit about the real, um, ties to real history and whether these people were real
or these places are real. Uh-huh. Uh, so let's get to that after this message break.
Attention Bachelor Nation. He's back. The man who hosted some of America's most dramatic TV
moments returns with a brand new Tell All podcast. The most dramatic podcast ever with Chris Harrison.
It's going to be difficult at times. It'll be funny. We'll push the envelope,
but I promise you this. We have a lot to talk about. For two decades, Chris Harrison saw it all,
and now he's sharing the things he can't unsee. I'm looking forward to getting this off my
shoulders and repairing this, moving forward, and letting everybody hear from me. What does
Chris Harrison have to say now? You're going to want to find out. I have not spoken publicly
for two years about this, and I have a lot of thoughts. I think about this every day.
Truly every day of my life, I think about this and what I want to say.
Listen to the most dramatic podcast ever with Chris Harrison on the I heart radio app Apple
podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey, I'm Lance Bass host of the new I heart podcast
frosted tips with Lance Bass. The hardest thing could be knowing who to turn to when
questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road. Okay, I see what you're
doing. Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give
me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help this. I
promise you. Oh God. Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there
for you. Oh man. And so my husband, Michael, um, Hey, that's me. Yep. We know that Michael and a
different hot sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide you through life step by step.
Oh, not another one. Kids relationships life in general can get messy. You may be thinking
this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody everybody about my new podcast
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Okay, buddy. So what's the deal? Was there a Camelot? Was there an Arthur?
Were these nights real dudes? Probably. All right. So send it. So, uh, well, so take Merlin,
for example. Okay, he seems probably the least likely to have existed because he is a magician
source for magical wizard. Yeah. Yeah. A wizard. That's that's a great word. Actually, is he a
wizard or is he just a magician? So, well, I mean, come on, the two are fairly interchangeable.
Oh, you just wait, my friend. There'll be some larkers emailing. Oh, right. Yeah. It is not
nearly the same, sir. Let me explain you the difference between a cleric and a mage. So,
he was apparently based on one or two people that really did exist and both of them were holy men.
They would have been Druids. At least one of them would have been Druids. Yeah.
He was one was named Murden Wilt. Yeah. And another one was named Emerus Willedig. Yeah.
That's a tough one. W L E D I G. There's two vowels and both of those names combined. Right.
You know, it's just yeah, it's almost like Russian. It's tough to read. And both of them lived in
the late sixth century. And one was the first one, Murden. Yeah. He was this wild man who
went into war and saw too much and like went crazy and fled into the jungle. I've seen too much.
Yeah. Wow. Apparently suffered from some sort of PTSD and went and fled into the jungle.
Well, not the jungle because this is a British Isles. Yeah. But the woods will call them. Yeah.
And lived as a wild man for many years. And he was apparently a famous local like magic wild man.
The other one, Emerus was like a full on straight up druid. He was a prophet and advisor and he
definitely lived. So they think that possibly one of them was Merlin or folklore combined the two
together and made a Merlin. I think that's what most of this stuff is. Yeah. Possibly based on
real people add a dash of this and a dash of that and mix it up. And you come up with a literary
figure. That's just my take. Camelot. Supposedly if you read the Historia Regum Britannier,
he wrote that it was Cornwall at Tintin Gall Castle. And they've actually found a stone there
in the 80s, 1980s with an inscription that said, descendant of Arthur, father of a descendant of
Cole. And Monmouth, actually the writer of that history book, names King Cole, as in
Mary Old Soul was he that same King Cole as one of Arthur's ancestors. But there's a little bit
of a rub because that castle was built in the early 1100s. So many hundreds of years later
after Arthur was supposedly living. Right. And the author of this article accuses
Joffrey of basically using Tintin Gall Castle as a way to please his patron who had a cousin
that lived there at the time. Yeah. But the some archaeological excavations have found
that this Tintin Gall area was settled from at least 300 AD and was definitely in full swing,
was a trading post basically and a fortified castle around the time when Arthur would have
been conceived. So it actually is archaeologically possible that this was a place where he was
born at the very least if there was a real Arthur and he was born in the time frame that
we're talking about. Tintin Gall Castle was settled and in full operation in that area.
Oh really? Yeah. So it wasn't built hundreds of years later? The castle as it stands now was.
Oh, okay. It could have been a different castle. Settlement was built upon settlement upon settlement
and as they've excavated down where they found that at that time, yes, there's plenty of.
So that stone could in fact be real? Wow. All right. Busted. Yeah. Thomas Mallory said Camelot
was Winchester Castle and for many hundreds of years there was a wooden round table that hung
on the wall with all the little names of the Knights of the Round Table there. But Winchester
Castle was built in the 11th century and they carbon dated the table to 1340 and said it was
probably painted during the 1500s under King Henry VIII because everyone was way into chivalry and
medieval history at that point. Right. Are you going to bust that one or is that one? No,
that one makes sense. But that is busted. Unbust, I mean. The Cadbury Castle, the fort that's in
Somerset that's mentioned in here too. That one, if anything, was Camelot. It would have been that
place. Oh yeah. Is that the leading? Yeah, but it wouldn't have been Arthur's. It would have been a
one of the rulers that basically handed over Britain to the Saxons that Arthur had to come in
and whose mess he had to unmake. It would have been that rulers and there's a 16 foot thick
fort, fortress made of timber and stone that is apparently unique to this castle that's from the
5th century that was written about from that time frame, from that period of time was supposedly
built around that period of time. So you have documentary evidence in the literature and then
you also have the actual physical evidence of this castle that's built in a way that's just
unique to it that supposedly belonged to this guy that Arthur may or may not have come in and
taken over. If he were ruling in this area at the time, that would have been the castle that he
would have taken over. Because it's the most heavily fortified. And it was just like a prime castle
in the area that he would have been in. So if there was a Camelot, a castle that he ruled from,
that probably would have been it. Alright, so you're going, Josh Boats,
for Cadbury Castle in Somerset. Yes. Okay. Avalon is supposedly Glastonbury,
where they have the music festival now. Oh yeah. I think they have a big music festival there.
My TV tells me. And here's the deal there. That was the Glastonbury tour, which is sort of a,
I guess, for England, for that area that's a mountain. It's like a hill. It's a little hill.
Yeah. It's like the Englishman who went up the hill and came down a mountain. Right.
The Glastonbury tour had the ruins of St. Michael's, which was an abbey built in the 12th century,
which replaced an earlier abbey that was burned down. And while they were building the newer
abbey, these monks said, you know what, we found graves containing bones. Look at the bones.
Yeah. Man and a woman. And this is King Arthur, because there's a cross there.
Yeah. It's described in Latin and it says it's King Arthur and Guinevere. So there's your proof,
even though the cross doesn't exist anymore. The bones don't exist anymore. They did read
the inscription that was supposedly copied verbatim from the monks. And they said,
some smart dudes said, no, that's 12th century Latin, my friend, not sixth century Latin.
Yeah. You silly people. Yeah. So I guess there's a difference and they knew. So that was quashed?
Or are you about to debust that and debusting that sweet? So Glastonbury tour, this conical hill
used to be an island. And at the top of it is Glastonbury abbey, which was built in the 12th
century, but was built on the ruins of an early one. So that thing actually did happen. It did
burn down. Apparently in the 1980s, they excavated and found a pair of sixth century graves,
stone lying graves. The bones are gone. There's no markers or anything like that.
But they would have been the kind of graves and they were dated to Arthur's era.
Okay. So that furthermore, yes, furthermore, there was evidence that these graves were disturbed
in the 13th century in the 1200s. Or is it the 12th century? Sorry, that they were disturbed
in the 12th century. So there's evidence that these graves are from the sixth century and that
these 12th century monks did find them and open them up. So whether or not they were
Arthur and Guinevere or if this cross ever existed and what it said, it still remains to be proven.
Sure. But I mean, it's very possible that these monks were just trying to drum up patronage
to rebuild their abbey. They're like, Hey, we found Arthur. So they may have forged the cross,
but it's still entirely possible that that was Arthur and Guinevere. Just because they
beefed up the story with the story of a cross doesn't mean that it wasn't truly their final
resting place. Yeah. At the very least, there were a pair of sixth century graves there.
With bones. No bones. Oh, well, where'd the bones go? I don't know if they moved them in
the 12th century or if they just dissolved. Okay. We were talking a while. Yeah, sure.
All right. So is that your vote? Yeah. All right. Josh votes for the Glastonbury tour.
Right. All right, which I want to go to this. All this makes me want to go to the English
countryside and just like find all this stuff. Yeah, it's pretty neat. Yeah. I like old things
and it's hard to get anything super old in this country, you know. Yeah. 1600s. Yeah. Maybe 1500s
if you go down to St. Augustine. Let's go to Rome. We'll see some old stuff go to Rome. I have. Yeah,
I have to eat. It is neat. It's kind of neat to stand there in the Coliseum and think holy cow.
Yeah. This is the oldest thing I've ever seen. That was the one that got me and you me was the
Coliseum. Yeah, me too. I mean, we everywhere else were like, yeah, this is pretty cool for
something about the Coliseum. It was, it was, that was, yeah, I was, I was pretty blown away too.
Yeah. Yeah. And boy, the people, man, good looking. The, the Romans. Yeah. Just all over Italy.
The dudes, the chicks, they were all like models. Yeah. Very stylish. Very stylish and cats everywhere.
We're there. Yeah. Street cats in Rome. They're known for it. I don't remember seeing too many
cats. Oh, you saw some cats. Oh, don't they live in like all of the ruins and everything?
They're, they're everywhere. Yeah. Yeah. I like the Trevi fountain there. That was something else.
That one kind of took my breath away. Yeah. We should start a travel show. We should. I think we
just did. And finally, maybe some of these nights were real dudes. Sir Bedivere, he was one of the
earliest nights to appear in the Arthurian legends and one of his right hand dudes. He has appeared
in other writings, historical writings that have nothing to do with the Arthurian legend.
Exactly. And he was known as Bedward Bedridant, a member of the Royal House of Findu,
which rose to power in Wales in the 6th century. And then Sir Kay was also possibly a real dude.
Yeah. Both of them appear in a Welsh collection of warrior poems called the Mabinogen.
Mabinogen. Take your pick. Yeah. I'm not Welsh. You're not Welsh. So either one.
We get crap for not pronouncing things right, but this, this stuff is tough.
Oh, yeah. You've got like 13 letters in one vowel. It's like, what do you do with that?
You know. And I mean, I'm looking at the alphabet that I recognize. My brain just won't put it
together. Uh-huh. Agreed. And finally, Arthur himself. Yeah. My vote is on a compilation of
real people. Like I said earlier, some folks say he might have been a Roman leader named Lucius
Artorius Castus, or maybe a Roman named Aurelius Ambrosius. See, I saw that Aurelius Ambrosius
was his uncle, was a really their pendragon's brother. And Uther and Aurelius had to seize
power to start to restore their lineage. And Arthur followed after that. Okay. See,
well, I guess it depends on who you're reading. You know, yeah, some folks say he was a British
historian named Allen Wins Wilson says he was a Welsh King, Arthas in the seventh century. Yeah.
I think everyone wants to claim a piece of it. I think that's what's going on here.
You know, I think they're saying, no, he was this Welsh King or no, he was this Roman king
when I think he might have been all of them. Well, the idea that he was sent by the Pope
to basically restore order or take the British Isles back from the Saxons definitely is like
credence by the idea that he kind of comes out of nowhere and like pulls the sword from the stone
is like I'm arrived I'm the King of Kings now. Yeah. So the idea that he came from somewhere else is,
I mean, that would suggest that he could have possibly been some Roman commander. Yeah. And
there were Roman commanders who did come to Britain and fight the Saxons successfully.
Was one name Arthur? Yeah, one was named Artorius. Well, there you have it. Yeah.
And then some people say that Arthur wasn't a name but a title, Arth, and which in Latin means
Bear. And if that's the case, it could just be like, you know, could be anybody. Yeah.
Yeah. Could be short for Arthur. Yeah. Could be Bear. So why does the story persist? Because
it's got romance. It's got chivalry. It's got all the classic elements of drama
in literature and fiction. So there you have it. Plus Monty Python's take on it doesn't hurt
in perpetuating everything. What kind of a man can summon fire without flint or tender?
Man, you know that movie inside now, don't you? I watched it a lot at one point in my life. I think
that's my favorite part of the movie. The nun shall pass when they have to pass the
the guy that spits. It tells them about the rabbit.
I remember the nun shall pass. I don't remember the spitting. Yeah. When he's when he's talking,
he's got a list of spitting all over everybody. You got anything else? I got nothing else. All
right. If you want to learn more about King Arthur, you can type in King Arthur in the search bar.
We also recommend you go just look up stuff about King Arthur. There's plenty of stuff out
there. It's fascinating. You let's see. I said search bar, right? You did, sir. Okay. Well,
then that means it's time for Listener Mail. I'm going to call this tribute to my father
for Megan. Josh Chuck and Jerry wanted to write to tell you thank you immensely for the show.
My dad Howard passed away nearly a year ago. And while I don't think he listened before he passed,
I think he would have really enjoyed it. He was a tinkerer and loved learning new things. In fact,
when I was younger and visited him during the summers, I'd be alone most days at his apartment
while he worked. And he would encourage me to search random things on the internet and read
about them to learn something new. He would even leave me lists like the planet Jupiter,
the state of Wyoming, or the year 1845. I thought at the time it was pretty silly and only did it
a few times. But now as an adult, I've since found your podcast a few months ago. And I find it
really fascinating. And it reminds me of my dad and has been really helpful to me when I get down
about him being gone. It makes me happy to know that he would probably think it's awesome
that I spend my days learning about things now. So Megan from Plano, Texas, thank you for that.
And in memory of your father Howard, I think he would like the show too.
That's pretty cool. I'm sorry he's not around to hear it.
No, but I mean, we're carrying on his legacy. Exactly. Nice.
So I guess we need to do a show on the year 1845 for the state of Wyoming.
Never. Not Wyoming. If you, thanks a lot for that, Megan. That was nice of you to share that.
If you want to get in touch with me and Chuck to tell us anything you like,
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