King of the Celts: Arthurian Legends and Celtic Tradition
By (Author) Jean Markale
Inner Traditions Bear and Company
Inner Traditions Bear and Company
1st November 1993
United States
General
Non Fiction
398.352
Paperback
320
Width 150mm, Height 230mm, Spine 24mm
1g
In a masterful blend of history, geography, and literature, Jean Markale re-creates the true King Arthur, the real-life Celtic warrior-hero who organized the resistance to the Saxon onslaught in fifth-century England. Markale's unsurpassed knowledge of Celtic history has enabled him to reconstruct for us the actual world in which King Arthur lived--its heros, its values, and its vicissitudes--and to define the position that Arthur occupied within it. . Explains how the Arthurian ideals of knightly virtue and chivalry are at the heart of Western literature and thought . Shows how the Celtic heritage continues to exert a unique formative power on our personal and moral concepts
"King Arthur fans, take note: your dreamy images of this rapturous medieval period will never be the same after you've read Markale's scholarly and luminous revision." * NAPRA Trade Journal *
"No student or lover of Arthurian bravado and myth should pass up this book. You will immediately be caught up in Markale's telling of the familiar tale, and enchanted by the new twists on the old story." * New Age Retailer *
Jean Markale (1928-2008), was a poet, philosopher, historian, and storyteller, who spent a lifetime researching pre-Christian and medieval culture and spirituality. He was a former specialist in Celtic studies at the Sorbonne and author of more than 40 books, including The Celts: Uncovering the Mythic and Historic Origins of Western Culture, Merlin, and Women of the Celts.