PDA

View Full Version : Avalon - A Land of Myth and a Time of Magic



Cristian
30th March 2013, 16:18
thread inspired by the excalibur auto-report user :P




Isle of the Blessed - Arthur's final resting place


http://alandofmythandatimeofmagic.weebly.com/uploads/1/0/3/1/10312660/7766491.jpg?500
The BBC interpretation of the Isle of the Blessed, which is usually associated with Avalon

Avalon or Ynys Afallon in Welsh (probably from the Welsh word afal, meaning apple) is a legendary island featured in the Arthurian legend. It first appears in Geoffrey of Monmouth's 1136 pseudohistorical account Historia Regum Britanniae ("The History of the Kings of Britain") as the place where King Arthur's sword Excalibur (Caliburnus) was forged and later where Arthur was taken to recover from his wounds after the Battle of Camlann. Avalon was associated from an early date with mystical practices and people such as Morgan le Fay.

The Celts believed in the Otherworld and for them Avalon represented the land of the mythical and mystical. It existed outside of the normal world but was accessible from it. Time moved at a different pace and islands were specifically associated with being gateways into the Otherworld. Most of the islands of the coasts of Britain were known as Isles of the Dead to the early Celts. Lundy, the Isle of Man, the Scilly Isles, have all been associated with being the real life location for Avalon.


The Idylls of the King - Glastonbury as Avalon

http://alandofmythandatimeofmagic.weebly.com/uploads/1/0/3/1/10312660/1360080497.jpg
Glastobury Tor, showing the church on the summit and the processional way

In the 12th century the island Tor at Glastonbury would have appeared rising out of the boggy marshes, with the only access a road which bisected Ponter's Ball Dyke, an ancient earthwork whose ends now disappear into farmland. To all intents and purposes, it would have been an island though it was nowhere near the sea. In Welsh Glastonbury's earliest name translates as Ineswitrin or Ynes Witrin, (Isle of Glass), which tends to back up the idea that it was seen as an island in the middle of the "Dark Ages".

Glastonbury Abbey was established as a Benedictine monastery, under Beorhtwald its first Saxon abbot, during the years 670 to 678 AD. Before then it had been known as a Celitc religious centre, the Tor was believed to hide an entrance to the Otherworld Kingdom of the Lord of the Wild Hunt, Gwynn ap Nud, a powerful other-worldly figure who was once banished by the Celtic St. Collen.
Pilgrims were said to have made their way to the Tor and followed the circuitous route to the summit as part of a sacred processional way for the priests and priestesses of the old Celtic and Pagan religions. At the time of the abbey's construction a church made of wattle and daub stood on the same spot, which local legends claimed had been dedicated by Jesus in honour of his mother Mary.

Glastonbury was already heavily associated with early Christianity. Joseph of Arimathea was said to have brought not only the Holy Grail, in which he had caught drops of Christ's blood as he lay on the cross, but to also have been responsible for a sacred tree. Legend has it that as he set foot on Wearyall Hill just below the Tor, in his exhausted state, he thrust his staff into the ground and then rested. By morning, his staff had taken root, turnint into a strange oriental thorn bush which is now known as the Glastonbury Thorn.

When William of Malmsbury, a noted historian, who is still respected for his attempts to accurately report the goings on of his life time, was a guest at the abbey during the 1130s he was commissioned to write a history of the saints associated with the abbey. He failed to produce that work but produced his De Antiquitate Glastoniensis Ecclesiae, instead. By Malmesbury's time, the story of the origins of the Old Church had been completely lost to history. Legend, though, was able to supply the missing information, attributing its construction to two early missionaries sent from Rome. Bede wrote that "in 156 Marcus Antonius Verus, 14th after Augustus, became co-emperor with his brother Aurelius Commodus. During their reign, when Eluetherius was Pope, a British King named Lucius wrote and asked to become a Christian. This wish was granted and the Britons held the Faith which they received in all its purity and fullness until the time of the Emperor Diocletian". Unfortunately for Bede, as well as Malmsbury and modern readers, none of the dates add up.


The association of Glastonbury with Avalon and the Arthurian legends came about in a curious way. Enterprising monks at Glastonbury Abbey in 1190 claimed to have discovered the grave and bones of King Arthur and his Queen. The discovery of the burial occurred when the new abbot of Glastonbury, Henry de Sully, commissioned a search of the abbey grounds shortly after the reign of Henry II. At a depth of five metres (16 feet) the monks discovered a massive treetrunk coffin and a leaden cross bearing the inscription: Hic jacet sepultus inclitus rex Arthurus in insula Avalonia (Here lies renowned King Arthur in the island of Avalon).

Accounts of the exact inscription vary, with five different versions existing. The earliest is by Gerald of Wales in the Liber de Principis Instructione written around 1193. He says he says he saw the cross and it read: "Here lies buried the famous King Arthur with Guinevere his second wife in the isle of Avalon".
Giraldus refers to two bodies being inside the coffin, identified as Arthur and his queen and the bones of the male body were described as being gigantic. The account of the burial by the chronicle of Margam Abbey however, says three bodies were found, the third being identified as that of Mordred.
In 1278, the remains were reburied with great ceremony, attended by King Edward I and his queen, before the High Altar at Glastonbury Abbey, where they were the focus of pilgrimages until the Reformation. Today, a plaque marks the spot at Glastonbury. A lead cross, last seen by William Camden in the 18th century, used to be displayed in the abbey. It read: "Here lies buried the renowned King Arthur in the Isle of Avalon". The burial discovery ensured that in later romances, histories based on them and in the popular imagination, Glastonbury became increasingly identified with Avalon, an identification that continues strongly today.

How Glastonbury came to be associated with King Arthur remains an argument historians have debated for centuries since. Was the burial simply a way for the monks to raise funds to rebuild their abbey after it almost burnt to the ground in 1184 or did they truly discover an ancient British burial site? We cannot ever know the answer as the Dissolution of the Monasteries, begun in the 1500s by King Henry VIII, raised to the ground what had once been the greatest monastic foundation and church in all of Britain, second only in wealth and size to Westminster.

Avalon on TV

http://alandofmythandatimeofmagic.weebly.com/uploads/1/0/3/1/10312660/7345546.jpg?533
The BBC's Lake of Avalon with the Sidhe's island home rising from the waters.

In the BBC's Merlin, Avalon refers to a number of things, most noticeably the lake to which Merlin consigns the body of both his love Freya and his King after the Battle of Camlann. It is also the final resting place of both Sir Lancelot and Guinevere's brother Sir Elyan.

It is also home to the Sidhe, the immortal race of winged blue creatures who Merlin battles with for Arthur's soul in The Gates of Avalon.

The Lake is the only other gateway to the land of the dead other than the Pool of Nemhain and it is also the final home of Arthur's great sword Excalibur.
Once she became the Lady of the Lake, Freya kept Excalibur in her keeping after Merlin was told by the great dragon to remove its power from the court of King Uther as if it fell into the wrong hands, its magic could be a force for great evil.


Merlin took Excalibur to the Lake of Avalon and entrusted its keeping to Freya. She, in turn, returned it to him at the time of Arthur's crisis of confidence and enabled him to sheathe it into the stone from which the King was encouraged to draw it and proclaim himself worthy of the throne of Camelot, then occupied by his half-sister Morgana's forces.


----------------------------------

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b7/Idylls_of_the_King_3.jpg/456px-Idylls_of_the_King_3.jpg
Gustave Doré’s illustration of Camelot from “Idylls of the King”, 1868.

Camelot is a castle and court associated with the legendary King Arthur. Absent in the early Arthurian material, Camelot first appeared in 12th-century French romances and eventually came to be described as the fantastic capital of Arthur's realm and a symbol of the Arthurian world. The stories locate it somewhere in Great Britain and sometimes associate it with real cities, though more usually its precise location is not revealed. Most scholars regard it as being entirely fictional, its geography being perfect for romance writers; Arthurian scholar Norris J. Lacy commented that "Camelot, located no where in particular, can be anywhere".[1] Nevertheless arguments about the location of the "real Camelot" have occurred since the 15th century and continue to rage today in popular works and for tourism purposes.

from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avalon
http://alandofmythandatimeofmagic.weebly.com/avalon.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camelot

Cidersomerset
30th March 2013, 18:28
I think this also may have a link to Alfred the Great who in the late 8th century
sought refuge in the Somerset levels and conducted a gorilla campaign before
defeating Guthrum,and driving them back to the Danelaw. This well known account
may have influenced the clergy into bringing Arthur back to life as the Duc
Brittanus ( nice little earner ) in an area known to be sparsely populated which
flooded in winter turning much of the area into lakelands as can be seen by last
years floods.

Cartomancer made a interesting vid about Burrow mump a lttle further down from
the Tor on the same Leyline.I agree there is something mystical about Somerset
being a native 'born & bred' ..LOL...



jy3pKi7ipqQ


A fun post ....
http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?57296-Beer-...-it-s-what-s-for-dinner-...&p=652990&viewfull=1#post652990

Ellisa
31st March 2013, 01:29
Glastonbury's claim to be the site of Avalon seems to rest on the legend of the Glastonbury Thorn and the connection between the Thorn and the Holy Grail. This along with the Knights, the Round Table and so on seems to have started in the 11th or 12th C with the stories of William of Malmesbury, as Chris82 suggests. William obviously tapped into a folk history which included Welsh, Cornish and West Country legends. They seem to have been inspired by the actions of the Romano-British chieftains left behind when the Romans left in the 5th C. This era is very much an unknown quantity until the 8th C, and so has great potential for legends or maybe carefully remembered truths such as the feats of Alfred the Great.

The legends that grew up about Arthur have fascinated me all my life. (I was born near Margam whose abbey is mentioned by Chris82). The stories have everything needed -drama, nobility, excitement and they still intrigue us today. I really enjoyed the recent TV series about the legend "Merlin", though at first it annoyed me with its, as I saw it, inaccuracies. Then I realised that there is no 'true' story of Arthur. People have been adding to the legend and leaving out some bits for its entire life. They have even set it to music!

Scorsha
2nd May 2013, 19:53
thank you for this information here!

avalon (as well as mythical places) is one of the myths/stories that has always fascinated me. :) the idea of camelot and avalon have inspired many movies as well as books, like BBC's Merlin and the Avalon Series written by Marion Zimmer Bradley.

i have heard from a few of my british friends that the stones in avebury, UK is believed to be connected to Arthurian Legend as well.

fascinating stuffs. ^__^