1 / 9

Storytelling and Literature

Storytelling and Literature. Geoffrey Monmouth’s History of Kings of Britain September 7, 2018. History of the Kings of Britain.

mauli
Download Presentation

Storytelling and Literature

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Storytelling and Literature Geoffrey Monmouth’s History of Kings of Britain September 7, 2018

  2. History of the Kings of Britain • Geoffrey of Monmouth undertook to write a national history of Britain from its origin through the seventh century, some nineteen centuries of history by his reckoning. • Arranged in twelve books, on the pattern of Vergil’s Aeneid (29-19 b.c.e.), Geoffrey’s account traces the reigns of nearly a hundred British kings, beginning with the nation’s mythical founder Brutus.

  3. Britons against the Saxons • The original Trojans, Celts, and other tribes living in the land before the Roman conquest in the first century, as well as some Roman settlers, are all collectively labeled Britons. • In Geoffrey's account, they are arrayed against the Saxons, a collective name for the Germanic tribes that began invading the land in the fifth century. 

  4. Brutus’s odyssey to Britain • The country was founded by a descendant of the Trojan princes who dispersed after the fall of Troy. • Brutus, the mythic founder of Britain, is a great-grandson of the Trojan prince Aeneas, the legendary founder of Rome. • Brutus conquered a third of Greece • But decided to embark for Britain after a prophecy of Diana directed them to do so. • Defeated the giants who dominated the land and founded a kingdom.

  5. Vortigern • Vortigern, an ambitious Briton, betrayed King Constantine and his son Constans. With the help of Saxon allies, whom he invited to England as allies against the Picts and other rebellious Britons. • Vortigernseized the throne for himself. • Constantine’s two younger sons, Aurelius Ambrosius andUtherPendragon, fled to Europe.

  6. “Prophecy of Merlin” and the two remaining sons of Constantine • the “Prophecy of Merlin” is a troubling anticipation of chaos. • The two remaining sons of Constantine, who returned from exile, defeated Vortigern, and restored their line with Aurelius Ambrosius as king. • UtherPendragonled armies against enemies who were still in rebellion and became king after his brother was treacherously slain. • Through the trickery of Merlin, Utherbegat Arthur with Igerne, wife of Gorlois, duke of Cornwall, and, after Gorlois died in battle, married Igerne. 

  7. The exploits of Arthur • Arthur became king while still a boy, united his nation, and gathered chiefs and kings from outlying and remote areas. • Arthur ventured abroad to conquerGaul and Norway, and led an English army to the continent in battle with the Romans. • Lucius, the Roman emperor, was killed. • Arthur moved his army to the gates of Rome, before being called back to Britain by a treasonous rebellion by his nephew Mordred.  

  8. Arthur’s final battle with Mordred • Mordred raised an immense army of 800,000, but Arthur’s war-hardened veterans prevailed against the huge force. • A final great battle led to the deaths of Arthur and of Mordred. • The queen entered a convent, and the Briton crown went to Constantine, son of the duke of Cornwall. 

  9. The Saxons gained dominance • Following Arthur’s death, other kings, notably Constantine, Cadwallo, and Cadwallader, continued the struggle against the Saxons. • In 689, King Cadwallader, the last of the Briton line, died in exile in Rome. • The Saxons gained dominance over the kingdom by returning and resettling before the native Britons. • The narrative ends with prophecies that suggest the Britons will someday reclaim their land.

More Related