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Constantine (Briton)

Constantine (/ˈkɒnstəntn/, Welsh: Cystennin, fl. 520–523) was a 6th-century king of Dumnonia in sub-Roman Britain, who was remembered in later British tradition as a legendary King of Britain. The only contemporary information about him comes from Gildas, who castigated him for various sins, including the murder of two "royal youths" inside a church. The historical Constantine is also known from the genealogies of the Dumnonian kings, and possibly inspired the tradition of Saint Constantine, a king-turned-monk venerated in Southwest Britain and elsewhere.

Constantine
King of Dumnonia
PredecessorArthur
SuccessorAurelius Conanus
Bornc. 6th century
Diedc. 6th century
IssueErbin (son)
Names
Constantine of Dumnonia
FatherCador

In the 12th century, Geoffrey of Monmouth included Constantine in his pseudohistorical chronicle Historia Regum Britanniae, adding details to Gildas' account and making Constantine the successor to King Arthur as King of Britain. Under Geoffrey's influence, Constantine appeared as Arthur's heir in later chronicles. Less commonly, he also appeared in that role in medieval Arthurian romances and prose works, and in some modern versions of the legend.

History edit

 
Southern Britain in c. 540, the time of Gildas. Constantine's likely kingdom of Dumnonia is in the southwest; the territory of the Damnonii is in the northwest.

The 6th-century monk Gildas mentions Constantine in chapters 28 and 29 of work De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae.[1] Constantine is one of five Brittonic kings whom the author rebukes and compares to Biblical beasts. Gildas calls Constantine the "tyrannical whelp of the unclean lioness of Damnonia", a reference to the books of Daniel and Revelation, and apparently also a slur directed at his mother. This Damnonia is generally identified as the kingdom of Dumnonia in Southwestern Britain.[2] Scholars such as Lloyd Laing and Leslie Alcock note the possibility that Gildas may have instead intended the territory of the Damnonii, a tribe in present-day Scotland mentioned by Ptolemy in the 2nd century, but others such as Thomas D. O'Sullivan consider this unlikely.[3]

Gildas says that despite swearing an oath against deceit and tyranny, Constantine disguised himself in an abbot's robes and attacked two "royal youths" praying before a church altar, killing them and their companions. Gildas is clear that Constantine's sins were manifold even before this, as he had committed "many adulteries" after casting off his lawfully wedded wife. Gildas encourages Constantine, whom he knows to still be alive at the time, to repent his sins lest he be damned.[1] The murders may relate to a 6th-century cult in Brittany honoring the Saints Dredenau, two young princes killed by an ambitious uncle.[4]

Scholars generally identify Gildas' Constantine with the figure Custennin Gorneu or Custennin Corneu (Constantine of Cornwall) who appears in the genealogies of the kings of Dumnonia.[5] Custennin is mentioned as the father of Erbin and the grandfather of the hero Geraint in the Bonedd y Saint, the prose romance Geraint and Enid, and after emendation, the genealogies in Jesus College MS 20.[6][7] Based on Custennin's placement in the genealogies, Thomas D. O'Sullivan suggests a floruit for Constantine of 520–523.[8]

Saint Constantine edit

 
Saint Constantine's Church in Constantine, Cornwall, perhaps connected to the historical king of Dumnonia

The historical Constantine of Dumnonia may have influenced later traditions, known in Southwestern Britain as well as in Wales, Ireland, and Scotland, about a Saint Constantine who is usually said to have been a king who gave up his crown to become a monk. The Cornish and Welsh traditions especially may have been influenced by Gildas, in particular his adjuration for Constantine to repent; the belief may have been that the reproach eventually worked.[9]

The two major centers for the cultus of Saint Constantine were the church in Constantine Parish and the Chapel of Saint Constantine in St Merryn Parish (now Constantine Bay), both in Cornwall. The former was established by at least the 11th century, as it is mentioned in Rhygyfarch's 11th-century Life of Saint David. At this time it may have supported a clerical community, but in later centuries it was simply a parish church. The Chapel at Constantine Bay had a holy well, and was the center of its own sub-parish.[9]

The Annales Cambriae (Welsh Annals) and the Annals of Ulster record the conversion of a certain Constantine; these may be a reference to the Cornish saint and therefore to the historical figure.[9] Several subsequent religious texts refer to Constantine, generally associating him with Cornwall, often specifically as its king. The Life of Saint David says that Constantine, King of Cornwall, gave up his crown and joined Saint David's monastery at Menevia. The Vitae Petroci includes an episode in which Saint Petroc protects a stag being hunted by a wealthy man named Constantine, who eventually converts and becomes a monk. Here Constantine is not said to be king, but a 12th-century text referring to this story, the Miracula, specifically names him as such, further adding that upon his conversion he gave Petroc an ivory horn that became one of the saint's chief relics.[10] A number of other traditions attested across Britain describe saints or kings named Constantine, suggesting a confusion and conflation of various figures.[11]

Other sites in Southwestern Britain associated with figures named Constantine include the church of Milton Abbot, Devon; a chapel in nearby Dunterton, Devon; and a chapel in Illogan, Cornwall. The two Devon sites may have been dedicated instead to Constantine the Great, as local churches were subject to Tavistock Abbey, dedicated to Constantine the Great's mother Helena. In Wales, two churches were dedicated to Constantine: Llangystennin (in Conwy) and Welsh Bicknor (now in Herefordshire, England).[9] The church in Govan, a parish in present-day Scotland, was also dedicated to a Saint Constantine.[12]

Geoffrey of Monmouth and the chronicle tradition edit

Historia Regum Britanniae edit

 
King Arthur from a 15th-century Welsh adaptation of Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae. Geoffrey made Constantine Arthur's successor

Geoffrey of Monmouth includes Constantine in a section of his Historia Regum Britanniae adapted from Gildas. As he does throughout the work, Geoffrey alters his source material, recasting Gildas' reproved kings as successors, rather than contemporaries as in De Excidio.[13] In addition to Gildas, Geoffrey evidently knew the Dumnonian genealogy essentially as it appears in Geraint and Enid and similar sources. He further adds a number of other details not found in earlier sources, identifying Constantine as a son of Cador, a Cornish ruler known in Welsh tradition as Cadwy mab Geraint. Notably, Geoffrey's Constantine is King Arthur's kinsman and succeeds him as King of the Britons.[14] Norris J. Lacy and Geoffrey Ashe suggest Geoffrey made this Arthurian connection based on an existing tradition locating Arthur's birthplace in southwest Britain.[15] However, noting that the earliest references place Arthur in northern Britain rather than the southwest, Rachel Bromwich considers the connection an arbitrary invention by Geoffrey, perhaps suggested by his earlier inventions of familial ties between Arthur and Constantine the Great and the usurper Constantine III.[16] Geoffrey calls Constantine Arthur's cognatus, or blood relative, but does not specify the exact relation, causing much confusion for later writers.[17]

In Geoffrey, Arthur passes his crown to his relative Constantine after being mortally wounded by the traitor Mordred in the Battle of Camlann. Geoffrey identifies Gildas' "royal youths" as Mordred's two sons, who, along with their Saxon allies, continue their father's insurrection after his death. After "many battles" Constantine routs the rebels, and Mordred's sons flee to London and Winchester, where they hide in a church and a friary, respectively. Constantine hunts them down and executes them before the altars of their sanctuaries. Divine retribution for this transgression comes three years later when Constantine is killed by his nephew Aurelius Conanus (Gildas' Aurelius Caninus), precipitating a civil war. He is buried at Stonehenge alongside other kings of Britain.[18]

Latin scholar Neil Wright considers Geoffrey's changes to Gildas to be deliberate reformulations that produce a more sympathetic picture of Constantine and his successors. For Wright, identifying the "royal youths" as traitors justifies the killing, reducing Constantine's offence from murder to sacrilege (for killing the traitors in sanctuary).[13] Overall, scholars regard Geoffrey's depiction of Constantine as pessimistic, highlighting how little of Arthur's legacy survives his death.[19]

Later chronicles edit

Geoffrey returned to Constantine's struggles and untimely murder in his later work Vita Merlini. The text, set during the reign of Aurelius Conanus, recounts how Constantine gave Mordred's sons a "cruel death" and ended their destructive rebellion, omitting details of the killing. According to the Vita, Constantine ruled only briefly before Conanus rose up, killed him, and seized the kingdom he now governs poorly. Rosemary Morris writes that Vita Merlini reinforces the Historia's message that Constantine was unable to perpetuate the glories of Arthur's reign.[19][20]

Variants of Geoffrey's version of Constantine appeared in the numerous later adaptations of the Historia, which were widely regarded as authentic in the Middle Ages. Such variants include Wace's Anglo-Norman Roman de Brut, the Welsh Brut y Brenhinedd, and Layamon's English Brut.[21] These typically reflect Geoffrey's cynicism about the character. Layamon, however, adds a touch of optimism, writing that Constantine successfully if briefly answered Arthur's charge to rule in his manner.[19] Following Geoffrey, many of these works do not expand upon Constantine's relation to Arthur, though others elaborate that he is Arthur's nephew. Taking hints from Geoffrey's version of Arthur's family tree, these writers make Constantine's father Cador a brother, or half-brother, of Arthur through Arthur's mother Igraine.[22][23]

Later traditions edit

Medieval romance and prose tradition edit

Constantine does not figure strongly in the Arthurian romance traditions or prose cycles. He is absent from the French Vulgate and Post-Vulgate Cycles, in which Lancelot and his kin kill off Mordred's sons, and no successor to Arthur appears.[24][25] Some scholars find this omission significant. Rosemary Morris suggests these versions downplay the issue of a designated heir to Arthur to heighten the stakes of Mordred's usurpation and to magnify Lancelot's role in the story.[24] Richard Trachsler writes that the exclusion of an heir adds a sense of finality to the Arthurian story after Arthur's death.[25]

Constantine does appear in some medieval works. In Jean d'Outremeuse's 14th-century Ly Myreur des Histors, Lancelot installs Constantine on the throne after Arthur's death.[21] He is king of Britain in some versions of the Havelok the Dane legend, beginning with Geoffrey Gaimar's 12th-century Estoire des Engleis.[26] He is also mentioned as Arthur's successor in the 14th-century English alliterative poem known as the Alliterative Morte Arthure, following Arthur's war with the Romans and his subsequent mortal battle with Mordred.[27] Other English romances that reference Constantine in passing include the 14th-century The Awntyrs off Arthure and Sir Gawain and the Carle of Carlisle, written around 1400.[28] Jorge Ferreira de Vasconcelos's 16th-century Portuguese novel Memorial das Proezas da Segunda Távola Redonda fuses Constantine with the ubiquitous Round Table knight Sagramore, creating "Sagramor Constantino", Arthur's son-in-law and heir. As king, he forms a new Round Table to defeat the old enemies and continue the glory of Arthurian Britain.[29][30][31] Constantine's relation to Arthur varies widely in these later works. Many works leave it unstated, while others follow the chronicles in making Constantine Arthur's nephew. Several romances, especially English works, cast him as Arthur's grand-nephew, with Cador being the son of a (generally unnamed) sister of the king.[32]

Constantine also appears as Arthur's heir in Thomas Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur, including sections adapted from the Alliterative Morte Arthure. Malory makes several changes to his source material that expand Constantine's role. Malory has Arthur designate Constantine and Baldwin of Britain as regents before going off to fight the Romans, a role that the Alliterative Morte ascribes to Mordred. Eugène Vinaver suggests that Malory modelled this change after Henry V's appointment of John, Duke of Bedford and Bishop Henry Beaufort as regents. Others finds it likelier that Malory simply wanted to replace Mordred in the Roman war narrative.[33][34] Malory also expands Constantine's role after Arthur's death, saying that he ruled honourably and restored the Bishop of Canterbury to his seat. Scholars note that this expansion closes the book on a much more optimistic note than Malory's sources, indicating that Arthurian ideals lived on under Constantine.[35][36][37]

Modern literature and media edit

Constantine features in some modern treatments of the legend. Katrina Trask's Under King Constantine, an 1892 book comprising three long romantic poems, is set in his reign.[38] He is an important unseen character in Henry Newbolt's 1895 play Mordred in his usual role as Arthur's successor.[39] He similarly appears in Rosemary Sutcliff's 1963 novel Sword at Sunset, in which the grievously wounded "Artos" voluntarily passes the crown to him.[40] In Parke Godwin's 1984 novel Beloved Exile, Constantine is one of several nobles fighting Guenevere, the protagonist, in a bid to succeed Arthur.[41] He is the chief protagonist of the 1990 computer game Spirit of Excalibur; players control Constantine and his allies as they defend the kingdom after Arthur's death.[42] Darrell Schweitzer's 1995 fantasy story "The Epilogue of the Sword" features an ageing Lancelot returning to serve Constantine against the Saxons.[43] Constantine elaborately figures into Arthur Phillips' 2011 novel The Tragedy of Arthur, which centers on an apocryphal Arthurian play attributed to William Shakespeare that the narrator, a fictional version of Phillips, insists is a hoax created by his father. In the play-within-the-novel, Constantine is Guenhera's brother and Arthur's vassal and heir; the novel's narrator claims that Constantine is based on his father's old nemesis, prosecutor Ted Constantine.[44][45]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae, ch. 28–29.
  2. ^ Lloyd, pp. 131–132.
  3. ^ O'Sullivan, p. 92 & note.
  4. ^ Wasyliw, pp. 80–81.
  5. ^ O'Sullivan, pp. 92–93.
  6. ^ Bromwich, pp. 318–319; 356–360.
  7. ^ Geraint and Enid.
  8. ^ O'Sullivan, p. 95.
  9. ^ a b c d Orme, pp. 95–96.
  10. ^ Jankulak, p. 17.
  11. ^ Bromwich, pp. 318–319, discusses the confusion of some of these various Constantines. Notable in the context of "Saint" Constantine is Custennin Vendigeit (The Blessed), the name for the historical usurper Constantine III in the Welsh Triads.
  12. ^ Clarkson 1999.
  13. ^ a b Wright, p. 10.
  14. ^ Bromwich, p. 319.
  15. ^ Lacy, Ashe, and Mancoff, p. 301.
  16. ^ Bromwich, p. 319, 358.
  17. ^ Moll, p. 166.
  18. ^ Historia Regum Britanniae, Book 11, ch. 2–4.
  19. ^ a b c Morris, p. 138.
  20. ^ Geoffrey of Monmouth, Vita Merlini lines 1128–1135. See: Geoffrey of Monmouth (2007). Huber, Emily Rebekah (ed.). "Arthur from the Vita Merlini". The Camelot Project. University of Rochester. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
  21. ^ a b Bruce, p. 218.
  22. ^ Molchan, pp. 31, 38, and notes.
  23. ^ Blaess, pp. 70–71.
  24. ^ a b Morris, p. 139.
  25. ^ a b Trachsler, p. 31.
  26. ^ Spence, p. 55, 83–85.
  27. ^ Benson & Foster, Alliterative Morte Arthure line 4316.
  28. ^ Blaess, p. 76 and note.
  29. ^ Vargas Díaz-Toledo 2006, pp. 233–234.
  30. ^ Vargas Díaz-Toledo 2013, para. 29–33.
  31. ^ Finazzi-Agrò, pp. 45–48.
  32. ^ Blaess, pp. 70–71, 76.
  33. ^ Dichmann, pp. 73–74.
  34. ^ Whitaker, pp. 15–16.
  35. ^ Whitaker, pp. 102–103.
  36. ^ Simko, pp. 167–168.
  37. ^ Benson, p. 247.
  38. ^ Lupack & Lupack, p. 12.
  39. ^ Fisher, p. 166.
  40. ^ Taylor & Brewer, p. 303.
  41. ^ Hoburg, pp. 72–73, 75–78.
  42. ^ Thompson & Lacy, p. 590.
  43. ^ Thompson, p. 605.
  44. ^ Grylls, David (9 October 2011). "The play's the thing – or is it? – A new 'Shakespeare' provokes both scholarly dispute and a teasingly postmodern domestic drama". The Sunday Times.
  45. ^ Phillips, pp. 254, 257–259, 297.

References edit

  • Benson, Larry D.; Foster, Edward E., eds. (1994). "Alliterative Morte Arthure". d.lib.rochester.edu. University of Rochester: TEAMS Middle English Texts Series. Retrieved 20 February 2014.
  • Benson, Larry D. (1976). Malory's Morte D'Arthur. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674543939.
  • Blaess, Madeleine (1956). "Arthur's Sisters". Bulletin Bibliographique de la Société Internationale Arthurienne. 8: 69–77.
  • Bromwich, Rachel (2006). Trioedd Ynys Prydein: The Triads of the Island of Britain. University of Wales Press. ISBN 0-7083-1386-8.
  • Bruce, Christopher W. (1999). The Arthurian Name Dictionary. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 0815328656. Retrieved 26 February 2014.
  • Clarkson, Tim (Winter 1999). . The Heroic Age. 1 (2). Archived from the original on 26 April 2010. Retrieved 15 September 2010.
  • Dichmann, Mary E. (1964). "The Tale of King Arthur and the Emperor Lucius". In Lumiansky, R. M. (ed.). Malory's Originality: A Critical Study of Le Morte Darthur. Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 67–90. ISBN 0801804035.
  • Finazzi-Agrò, Ettore (1978). (in Portuguese). Instituto de Cultura e Língua Portuguesa. pp. 45–48. ASIN B000ZQ4P8M. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 October 2014. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  • Fisher, IV, Benjamin Franklin (1990). "King Arthur Plays from the 1890s". Victorian Poetry. 28 (3/4): 153–176. JSTOR 40002298.
  • Grylls, David (9 October 2011). "The play's the thing - or is it? - A new 'Shakespeare' provokes both scholarly dispute and a teasingly postmodern domestic drama". The Sunday Times.
  • Geoffrey of Monmouth (2007). Huber, Emily Rebekah (ed.). "Arthur from the Vita Merlini". d.lib.rochester.edu/camelot-project. The Camelot Project, University of Rochester. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
  • Hoburg, Tom (1992). "In Her Own Right: The Guenevere of Parke Godwin". In Slocum, Sally K. (ed.). Popular Arthurian Traditions. Bowling Green State University Popular Press. pp. 68–79. ISBN 0879725621.
  • Jankulak, Karen (2000). The Medieval Cult of St Petroc. Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 0-85115-777-7. Retrieved 6 January 2010.
  • Lacy, Norris J.; Ashe, Geoffrey; Mancoff, Debra N. (2014). The Arthurian Handbook. Routledge. ISBN 978-1317777441. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  • Lloyd, John Edward (1912). A History of Wales from the Earliest Times to the Edwardian Conquest. Longmans, Green, and Co. Retrieved 6 January 2010. Lloyd history of Wales.
  • Lupack, Alan; Lupack, Barbara Tepa (1999). Arthurian Literature by Women. Psychology Press. ISBN 0815333056. Retrieved 3 March 2014.
  • Molchan, Greg (Spring 2014). "Anna and the King(s): Marriage Alliances, Ethnicity, and Succession in the Historia Regum Britanniae". Arthuriana. 21 (1): 25–48. doi:10.1353/art.2014.0004. S2CID 162393121.
  • Moll, Richard James (2003). Before Malory: Reading Arthur in Later Medieval England. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0802037224.
  • Morris, Rosemary (1982). The Character of King Arthur in Medieval Literature. Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 0815328656. Retrieved 26 February 2014.
  • O'Sullivan, Thomas D. (1978). The De Excidio of Gildas: Its Authenticity and Date. BRILL. ISBN 9004057935. Retrieved 4 February 2014.
  • Orme, Nicholas (2000). The Saints of Cornwall. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-820765-4. Retrieved 15 September 2010.
  • Phillips, Arthur (2011). The Tragedy of Arthur. Random House. ISBN 978-1400066476.
  • Simko, Jan (1993). "Modernity of the Middle English Stanzaic Romance Le Morte Arthur". In Noguchi, Shunʼichi; Suzuki, Takashi; Mukai, Tsuyoshi (eds.). Arthurian and Other Studies: Presented to Shunichi Noguchi. Boydell & Brewer. pp. 153–168. ISBN 0859913805.
  • Spence, John (2013). Reimagining History in Anglo-Norman Prose Chronicles. Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 978-1903153451. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
  • Taylor, Beverly; Brewer, Elisabeth (1983). The Return of King Arthur. Boydell & Brewer. p. 303. ISBN 0859911365. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  • Thompson, Raymond H.; Lacy, Norris J. (2013). "Games". In Lacy, Norris K. (ed.). The New Arthurian Encyclopedia. Routledge. p. 590. ISBN 978-1136606335. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  • Thompson, Raymond H. (2013). "Darrell Schweitzer". In Lacy, Norris K. (ed.). The New Arthurian Encyclopedia. Routledge. p. 605. ISBN 978-1136606335. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
  • Trachsler, Richard (2003). "A Question of Time: Romance and History". In Dover, Carol (ed.). A Companion to the Lancelot-Grail. D.S. Brewer. pp. 23–32. ISBN 0859917835. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  • Vargas Díaz-Toledo, Aurelio (2006). "Os livros de cavalarias renascentistas nas histórias da literatura portuguesa" (PDF). Peninsula: Revista de Estudos Ibéricos (in Portuguese). 3: 233–247. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
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Legendary titles
Preceded by Duke of Cornwall Unknown
Next known title holder:
Blederic
Preceded by King of Britain Succeeded by

constantine, briton, constantine, welsh, cystennin, century, king, dumnonia, roman, britain, remembered, later, british, tradition, legendary, king, britain, only, contemporary, information, about, comes, from, gildas, castigated, various, sins, including, mur. Constantine ˈ k ɒ n s t en t iː n Welsh Cystennin fl 520 523 was a 6th century king of Dumnonia in sub Roman Britain who was remembered in later British tradition as a legendary King of Britain The only contemporary information about him comes from Gildas who castigated him for various sins including the murder of two royal youths inside a church The historical Constantine is also known from the genealogies of the Dumnonian kings and possibly inspired the tradition of Saint Constantine a king turned monk venerated in Southwest Britain and elsewhere ConstantineKing of DumnoniaPredecessorArthurSuccessorAurelius ConanusBornc 6th centuryDiedc 6th centuryIssueErbin son NamesConstantine of DumnoniaFatherCadorIn the 12th century Geoffrey of Monmouth included Constantine in his pseudohistorical chronicle Historia Regum Britanniae adding details to Gildas account and making Constantine the successor to King Arthur as King of Britain Under Geoffrey s influence Constantine appeared as Arthur s heir in later chronicles Less commonly he also appeared in that role in medieval Arthurian romances and prose works and in some modern versions of the legend Contents 1 History 2 Saint Constantine 3 Geoffrey of Monmouth and the chronicle tradition 3 1 Historia Regum Britanniae 3 2 Later chronicles 4 Later traditions 4 1 Medieval romance and prose tradition 4 2 Modern literature and media 5 Notes 6 ReferencesHistory edit nbsp Southern Britain in c 540 the time of Gildas Constantine s likely kingdom of Dumnonia is in the southwest the territory of the Damnonii is in the northwest The 6th century monk Gildas mentions Constantine in chapters 28 and 29 of work De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae 1 Constantine is one of five Brittonic kings whom the author rebukes and compares to Biblical beasts Gildas calls Constantine the tyrannical whelp of the unclean lioness of Damnonia a reference to the books of Daniel and Revelation and apparently also a slur directed at his mother This Damnonia is generally identified as the kingdom of Dumnonia in Southwestern Britain 2 Scholars such as Lloyd Laing and Leslie Alcock note the possibility that Gildas may have instead intended the territory of the Damnonii a tribe in present day Scotland mentioned by Ptolemy in the 2nd century but others such as Thomas D O Sullivan consider this unlikely 3 Gildas says that despite swearing an oath against deceit and tyranny Constantine disguised himself in an abbot s robes and attacked two royal youths praying before a church altar killing them and their companions Gildas is clear that Constantine s sins were manifold even before this as he had committed many adulteries after casting off his lawfully wedded wife Gildas encourages Constantine whom he knows to still be alive at the time to repent his sins lest he be damned 1 The murders may relate to a 6th century cult in Brittany honoring the Saints Dredenau two young princes killed by an ambitious uncle 4 Scholars generally identify Gildas Constantine with the figure Custennin Gorneu or Custennin Corneu Constantine of Cornwall who appears in the genealogies of the kings of Dumnonia 5 Custennin is mentioned as the father of Erbin and the grandfather of the hero Geraint in the Bonedd y Saint the prose romance Geraint and Enid and after emendation the genealogies in Jesus College MS 20 6 7 Based on Custennin s placement in the genealogies Thomas D O Sullivan suggests a floruit for Constantine of 520 523 8 Saint Constantine editMain article Constantine British saint nbsp Saint Constantine s Church in Constantine Cornwall perhaps connected to the historical king of DumnoniaThe historical Constantine of Dumnonia may have influenced later traditions known in Southwestern Britain as well as in Wales Ireland and Scotland about a Saint Constantine who is usually said to have been a king who gave up his crown to become a monk The Cornish and Welsh traditions especially may have been influenced by Gildas in particular his adjuration for Constantine to repent the belief may have been that the reproach eventually worked 9 The two major centers for the cultus of Saint Constantine were the church in Constantine Parish and the Chapel of Saint Constantine in St Merryn Parish now Constantine Bay both in Cornwall The former was established by at least the 11th century as it is mentioned in Rhygyfarch s 11th century Life of Saint David At this time it may have supported a clerical community but in later centuries it was simply a parish church The Chapel at Constantine Bay had a holy well and was the center of its own sub parish 9 The Annales Cambriae Welsh Annals and the Annals of Ulster record the conversion of a certain Constantine these may be a reference to the Cornish saint and therefore to the historical figure 9 Several subsequent religious texts refer to Constantine generally associating him with Cornwall often specifically as its king The Life of Saint David says that Constantine King of Cornwall gave up his crown and joined Saint David s monastery at Menevia The Vitae Petroci includes an episode in which Saint Petroc protects a stag being hunted by a wealthy man named Constantine who eventually converts and becomes a monk Here Constantine is not said to be king but a 12th century text referring to this story the Miracula specifically names him as such further adding that upon his conversion he gave Petroc an ivory horn that became one of the saint s chief relics 10 A number of other traditions attested across Britain describe saints or kings named Constantine suggesting a confusion and conflation of various figures 11 Other sites in Southwestern Britain associated with figures named Constantine include the church of Milton Abbot Devon a chapel in nearby Dunterton Devon and a chapel in Illogan Cornwall The two Devon sites may have been dedicated instead to Constantine the Great as local churches were subject to Tavistock Abbey dedicated to Constantine the Great s mother Helena In Wales two churches were dedicated to Constantine Llangystennin in Conwy and Welsh Bicknor now in Herefordshire England 9 The church in Govan a parish in present day Scotland was also dedicated to a Saint Constantine 12 Geoffrey of Monmouth and the chronicle tradition editHistoria Regum Britanniae edit nbsp King Arthur from a 15th century Welsh adaptation of Geoffrey of Monmouth s Historia Regum Britanniae Geoffrey made Constantine Arthur s successorGeoffrey of Monmouth includes Constantine in a section of his Historia Regum Britanniae adapted from Gildas As he does throughout the work Geoffrey alters his source material recasting Gildas reproved kings as successors rather than contemporaries as in De Excidio 13 In addition to Gildas Geoffrey evidently knew the Dumnonian genealogy essentially as it appears in Geraint and Enid and similar sources He further adds a number of other details not found in earlier sources identifying Constantine as a son of Cador a Cornish ruler known in Welsh tradition as Cadwy mab Geraint Notably Geoffrey s Constantine is King Arthur s kinsman and succeeds him as King of the Britons 14 Norris J Lacy and Geoffrey Ashe suggest Geoffrey made this Arthurian connection based on an existing tradition locating Arthur s birthplace in southwest Britain 15 However noting that the earliest references place Arthur in northern Britain rather than the southwest Rachel Bromwich considers the connection an arbitrary invention by Geoffrey perhaps suggested by his earlier inventions of familial ties between Arthur and Constantine the Great and the usurper Constantine III 16 Geoffrey calls Constantine Arthur s cognatus or blood relative but does not specify the exact relation causing much confusion for later writers 17 In Geoffrey Arthur passes his crown to his relative Constantine after being mortally wounded by the traitor Mordred in the Battle of Camlann Geoffrey identifies Gildas royal youths as Mordred s two sons who along with their Saxon allies continue their father s insurrection after his death After many battles Constantine routs the rebels and Mordred s sons flee to London and Winchester where they hide in a church and a friary respectively Constantine hunts them down and executes them before the altars of their sanctuaries Divine retribution for this transgression comes three years later when Constantine is killed by his nephew Aurelius Conanus Gildas Aurelius Caninus precipitating a civil war He is buried at Stonehenge alongside other kings of Britain 18 Latin scholar Neil Wright considers Geoffrey s changes to Gildas to be deliberate reformulations that produce a more sympathetic picture of Constantine and his successors For Wright identifying the royal youths as traitors justifies the killing reducing Constantine s offence from murder to sacrilege for killing the traitors in sanctuary 13 Overall scholars regard Geoffrey s depiction of Constantine as pessimistic highlighting how little of Arthur s legacy survives his death 19 Later chronicles edit Geoffrey returned to Constantine s struggles and untimely murder in his later work Vita Merlini The text set during the reign of Aurelius Conanus recounts how Constantine gave Mordred s sons a cruel death and ended their destructive rebellion omitting details of the killing According to the Vita Constantine ruled only briefly before Conanus rose up killed him and seized the kingdom he now governs poorly Rosemary Morris writes that Vita Merlini reinforces the Historia s message that Constantine was unable to perpetuate the glories of Arthur s reign 19 20 Variants of Geoffrey s version of Constantine appeared in the numerous later adaptations of the Historia which were widely regarded as authentic in the Middle Ages Such variants include Wace s Anglo Norman Roman de Brut the Welsh Brut y Brenhinedd and Layamon s English Brut 21 These typically reflect Geoffrey s cynicism about the character Layamon however adds a touch of optimism writing that Constantine successfully if briefly answered Arthur s charge to rule in his manner 19 Following Geoffrey many of these works do not expand upon Constantine s relation to Arthur though others elaborate that he is Arthur s nephew Taking hints from Geoffrey s version of Arthur s family tree these writers make Constantine s father Cador a brother or half brother of Arthur through Arthur s mother Igraine 22 23 Later traditions editMedieval romance and prose tradition edit Constantine does not figure strongly in the Arthurian romance traditions or prose cycles He is absent from the French Vulgate and Post Vulgate Cycles in which Lancelot and his kin kill off Mordred s sons and no successor to Arthur appears 24 25 Some scholars find this omission significant Rosemary Morris suggests these versions downplay the issue of a designated heir to Arthur to heighten the stakes of Mordred s usurpation and to magnify Lancelot s role in the story 24 Richard Trachsler writes that the exclusion of an heir adds a sense of finality to the Arthurian story after Arthur s death 25 Constantine does appear in some medieval works In Jean d Outremeuse s 14th century Ly Myreur des Histors Lancelot installs Constantine on the throne after Arthur s death 21 He is king of Britain in some versions of the Havelok the Dane legend beginning with Geoffrey Gaimar s 12th century Estoire des Engleis 26 He is also mentioned as Arthur s successor in the 14th century English alliterative poem known as the Alliterative Morte Arthure following Arthur s war with the Romans and his subsequent mortal battle with Mordred 27 Other English romances that reference Constantine in passing include the 14th century The Awntyrs off Arthure and Sir Gawain and the Carle of Carlisle written around 1400 28 Jorge Ferreira de Vasconcelos s 16th century Portuguese novel Memorial das Proezas da Segunda Tavola Redonda fuses Constantine with the ubiquitous Round Table knight Sagramore creating Sagramor Constantino Arthur s son in law and heir As king he forms a new Round Table to defeat the old enemies and continue the glory of Arthurian Britain 29 30 31 Constantine s relation to Arthur varies widely in these later works Many works leave it unstated while others follow the chronicles in making Constantine Arthur s nephew Several romances especially English works cast him as Arthur s grand nephew with Cador being the son of a generally unnamed sister of the king 32 Constantine also appears as Arthur s heir in Thomas Malory s Le Morte d Arthur including sections adapted from the Alliterative Morte Arthure Malory makes several changes to his source material that expand Constantine s role Malory has Arthur designate Constantine and Baldwin of Britain as regents before going off to fight the Romans a role that the Alliterative Morte ascribes to Mordred Eugene Vinaver suggests that Malory modelled this change after Henry V s appointment of John Duke of Bedford and Bishop Henry Beaufort as regents Others finds it likelier that Malory simply wanted to replace Mordred in the Roman war narrative 33 34 Malory also expands Constantine s role after Arthur s death saying that he ruled honourably and restored the Bishop of Canterbury to his seat Scholars note that this expansion closes the book on a much more optimistic note than Malory s sources indicating that Arthurian ideals lived on under Constantine 35 36 37 Modern literature and media edit Constantine features in some modern treatments of the legend Katrina Trask s Under King Constantine an 1892 book comprising three long romantic poems is set in his reign 38 He is an important unseen character in Henry Newbolt s 1895 play Mordred in his usual role as Arthur s successor 39 He similarly appears in Rosemary Sutcliff s 1963 novel Sword at Sunset in which the grievously wounded Artos voluntarily passes the crown to him 40 In Parke Godwin s 1984 novel Beloved Exile Constantine is one of several nobles fighting Guenevere the protagonist in a bid to succeed Arthur 41 He is the chief protagonist of the 1990 computer game Spirit of Excalibur players control Constantine and his allies as they defend the kingdom after Arthur s death 42 Darrell Schweitzer s 1995 fantasy story The Epilogue of the Sword features an ageing Lancelot returning to serve Constantine against the Saxons 43 Constantine elaborately figures into Arthur Phillips 2011 novel The Tragedy of Arthur which centers on an apocryphal Arthurian play attributed to William Shakespeare that the narrator a fictional version of Phillips insists is a hoax created by his father In the play within the novel Constantine is Guenhera s brother and Arthur s vassal and heir the novel s narrator claims that Constantine is based on his father s old nemesis prosecutor Ted Constantine 44 45 Notes edit a b De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae ch 28 29 Lloyd pp 131 132 O Sullivan p 92 amp note Wasyliw pp 80 81 O Sullivan pp 92 93 Bromwich pp 318 319 356 360 Geraint and Enid O Sullivan p 95 a b c d Orme pp 95 96 Jankulak p 17 Bromwich pp 318 319 discusses the confusion of some of these various Constantines Notable in the context of Saint Constantine is Custennin Vendigeit The Blessed the name for the historical usurper Constantine III in the Welsh Triads Clarkson 1999 a b Wright p 10 Bromwich p 319 Lacy Ashe and Mancoff p 301 Bromwich p 319 358 Moll p 166 Historia Regum Britanniae Book 11 ch 2 4 a b c Morris p 138 Geoffrey of Monmouth Vita Merlini lines 1128 1135 See Geoffrey of Monmouth 2007 Huber Emily Rebekah ed Arthur from the Vita Merlini The Camelot Project University of Rochester Retrieved 22 September 2014 a b Bruce p 218 Molchan pp 31 38 and notes Blaess pp 70 71 a b Morris p 139 a b Trachsler p 31 Spence p 55 83 85 Benson amp Foster Alliterative Morte Arthure line 4316 Blaess p 76 and note Vargas Diaz Toledo 2006 pp 233 234 Vargas Diaz Toledo 2013 para 29 33 Finazzi Agro pp 45 48 Blaess pp 70 71 76 Dichmann pp 73 74 Whitaker pp 15 16 Whitaker pp 102 103 Simko pp 167 168 Benson p 247 Lupack amp Lupack p 12 Fisher p 166 Taylor amp Brewer p 303 Hoburg pp 72 73 75 78 Thompson amp Lacy p 590 Thompson p 605 Grylls David 9 October 2011 The play s the thing or is it A new Shakespeare provokes both scholarly dispute and a teasingly postmodern domestic drama The Sunday Times Phillips pp 254 257 259 297 References editBenson Larry D Foster Edward E eds 1994 Alliterative Morte Arthure d lib rochester edu University of Rochester TEAMS Middle English Texts Series Retrieved 20 February 2014 Benson Larry D 1976 Malory s Morte D Arthur Harvard University Press ISBN 0674543939 Blaess Madeleine 1956 Arthur s Sisters Bulletin Bibliographique de la Societe Internationale Arthurienne 8 69 77 Bromwich Rachel 2006 Trioedd Ynys Prydein The Triads of the Island of Britain University of Wales Press ISBN 0 7083 1386 8 Bruce Christopher W 1999 The Arthurian Name Dictionary Taylor amp Francis ISBN 0815328656 Retrieved 26 February 2014 Clarkson Tim Winter 1999 Rhydderch Hael The Heroic Age 1 2 Archived from the original on 26 April 2010 Retrieved 15 September 2010 Dichmann Mary E 1964 The Tale of King Arthur and the Emperor Lucius In Lumiansky R M ed Malory s Originality A Critical Study of Le Morte Darthur Johns Hopkins University Press pp 67 90 ISBN 0801804035 Finazzi Agro Ettore 1978 A novelistica portuguesa do seculo XVI in Portuguese Instituto de Cultura e Lingua Portuguesa pp 45 48 ASIN B000ZQ4P8M Archived from the original PDF on 10 October 2014 Retrieved 4 November 2014 Fisher IV Benjamin Franklin 1990 King Arthur Plays from the 1890s Victorian Poetry 28 3 4 153 176 JSTOR 40002298 Grylls David 9 October 2011 The play s the thing or is it A new Shakespeare provokes both scholarly dispute and a teasingly postmodern domestic drama The Sunday Times Geoffrey of Monmouth 2007 Huber Emily Rebekah ed Arthur from the Vita Merlini d lib rochester edu camelot project The Camelot Project University of Rochester Retrieved 8 July 2014 Hoburg Tom 1992 In Her Own Right The Guenevere of Parke Godwin In Slocum Sally K ed Popular Arthurian Traditions Bowling Green State University Popular Press pp 68 79 ISBN 0879725621 Jankulak Karen 2000 The Medieval Cult of St Petroc Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 0 85115 777 7 Retrieved 6 January 2010 Lacy Norris J Ashe Geoffrey Mancoff Debra N 2014 The Arthurian Handbook Routledge ISBN 978 1317777441 Retrieved 14 July 2014 Lloyd John Edward 1912 A History of Wales from the Earliest Times to the Edwardian Conquest Longmans Green and Co Retrieved 6 January 2010 Lloyd history of Wales Lupack Alan Lupack Barbara Tepa 1999 Arthurian Literature by Women Psychology Press ISBN 0815333056 Retrieved 3 March 2014 Molchan Greg Spring 2014 Anna and the King s Marriage Alliances Ethnicity and Succession in the Historia Regum Britanniae Arthuriana 21 1 25 48 doi 10 1353 art 2014 0004 S2CID 162393121 Moll Richard James 2003 Before Malory Reading Arthur in Later Medieval England University of Toronto Press ISBN 0802037224 Morris Rosemary 1982 The Character of King Arthur in Medieval Literature Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 0815328656 Retrieved 26 February 2014 O Sullivan Thomas D 1978 The De Excidio of Gildas Its Authenticity and Date BRILL ISBN 9004057935 Retrieved 4 February 2014 Orme Nicholas 2000 The Saints of Cornwall Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 820765 4 Retrieved 15 September 2010 Phillips Arthur 2011 The Tragedy of Arthur Random House ISBN 978 1400066476 Simko Jan 1993 Modernity of the Middle English Stanzaic Romance Le Morte Arthur In Noguchi Shunʼichi Suzuki Takashi Mukai Tsuyoshi eds Arthurian and Other Studies Presented to Shunichi Noguchi Boydell amp Brewer pp 153 168 ISBN 0859913805 Spence John 2013 Reimagining History in Anglo Norman Prose Chronicles Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 978 1903153451 Retrieved 11 March 2014 Taylor Beverly Brewer Elisabeth 1983 The Return of King Arthur Boydell amp Brewer p 303 ISBN 0859911365 Retrieved 7 July 2014 Thompson Raymond H Lacy Norris J 2013 Games In Lacy Norris K ed The New Arthurian Encyclopedia Routledge p 590 ISBN 978 1136606335 Retrieved 4 February 2013 Thompson Raymond H 2013 Darrell Schweitzer In Lacy Norris K ed The New Arthurian Encyclopedia Routledge p 605 ISBN 978 1136606335 Retrieved 22 September 2014 Trachsler Richard 2003 A Question of Time Romance and History In Dover Carol ed A Companion to the Lancelot Grail D S Brewer pp 23 32 ISBN 0859917835 Retrieved 28 February 2014 Vargas Diaz Toledo Aurelio 2006 Os livros de cavalarias renascentistas nas historias da literatura portuguesa PDF Peninsula Revista de Estudos Ibericos in Portuguese 3 233 247 Retrieved 4 November 2014 Vargas Diaz Toledo Aurelio Vargas 2013 A Materia Arturiana na literatura cavaleiresca portuguesa dos seculos XVI XVII E Spania in Portuguese 3 paragraphs 29 32 Retrieved 4 November 2014 Wasyliw Patricia Healy 2008 Martyrdom Murder and Magic Child Saints and Their Cults in Medieval Europe Peter Lang ISBN 9780820427645 Whitaker Muriel 1984 Arthur s Kingdom of Adventure The World of Malory s Morte Darthur Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 0859911659 Wright Neil 1982 Geoffrey of Monmouth and Gildas In Barber Richard ed Arthurian Literature Vol II Boydell amp Brewer pp 1 40 ISSN 0261 9946 Legendary titlesPreceded byCador Duke of Cornwall UnknownNext known title holder BledericPreceded byArthur King of Britain Succeeded byAurelius Conanus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Constantine Briton amp oldid 1183467380, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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