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Guinevere

Guinevere (/ˈɡwɪnɪvɪər/ (listen) GWIN-iv-eer; Welsh: Gwenhwyfar pronunciation ; Breton: Gwenivar, Cornish: Gwynnever), also often written in Modern English as Guenevere or Guenever,[1] was, according to Arthurian legend, an early-medieval queen of Great Britain and the wife of King Arthur. First mentioned in popular literature in the early 12th century, nearly 700 years after the purported times of Arthur, Guinevere has since been portrayed as everything from a fatally flawed, villainous and opportunistic traitor to a noble and virtuous lady. Many records of the legend also feature the variably recounted story of her abduction and rescue as a major part of the tale.

Guinevere
Matter of Britain character
Guinevere watching the mortally wounded Arthur being sailed off to Avalon in Queen Guinevere by James Archer (c. 1860)
In-universe information
TitlePrincess, Queen, Mother Superior
OccupationHigh Queen of Britain
Later tradition: Queen of Logres and Britain (or England), convent head
FamilyVaried, including her father and her sister
SpouseArthur, occasionally also Mordred
Significant otherVaried, including either Lancelot, Mordred or Yder
ChildrenUsually none, occasionally a son with Arthur or children with Mordred
RelativesVaried, including a cousin
ReligionChristian
HomeMalory version: Cameliard, Camelot, Tower of London, Amesbury Priory
NationalityBritish

The earliest datable appearance of Guinevere is in Geoffrey of Monmouth's pseudo-historical British chronicle Historia Regum Britanniae, in which she is seduced by Mordred during his ill-fated rebellion against Arthur. In a later medieval Arthurian romance tradition from France, a prominent story arc is the queen's tragic love affair with her husband's chief knight and trusted friend, Lancelot, indirectly causing the death of Arthur and the downfall of the kingdom. This motif had originally appeared in nascent form in the poem Lancelot prior to its vast expansion in the prose cycle Lancelot-Grail, consequently forming much of the narrative core of Thomas Malory's seminal English compilation Le Morte d'Arthur. Other themes found in Malory and other texts include Guinevere's usual barrenness, the scheme of Guinevere's evil twin to replace her, and the particular hostility displayed towards Guinevere by her sister in law Morgan.

Guinevere has continued to be a popular character featured in numerous adaptations of the legend since the 19th-century Arthurian revival. Many modern authors, usually following or inspired by Malory's telling, typically still show Guinevere in her illicit relationship with Lancelot as defining her character. In much of more recent Arthuriana, however, she assumes more active roles than in her medieval depictions, increasingly even being cast as protagonist.

Name

 
Guinevere by Henry Justice Ford (c. 1910)

The original Welsh form of the name Gwenhwyfar (also Guenhuibhar, Gwenhwyvar), which seems to be cognate with the Irish name Findabar (the name of the daughter of Queen Medb and Ailill mac Máta in the Ulster Cycle); Gwenhwyfar can be translated as "The White Fay/Ghost", from Proto-Celtic *Windo- "white" + *sēbro "phantom" (cognate with Old Irish síabar "a spectre, phantom, supernatural being [usually in pejorative sense]").[2][3][4][5] Some have suggested that the name may derive from Gwenhwy-fawr, or "Gwenhwy the Great", as a contrast to Gwenhwy-fach, or "Gwenhwy the less". Gwenhwyfach (also spelled Gwenhwyach) appears in Welsh literature as a sister of Gwenhwyfar, but Welsh scholars Melville Richards and Rachel Bromwich both dismiss this etymology (with Richards suggesting that Gwenhwyfach was a back-formation derived from an incorrect interpretation of Gwenwhy-far as Gwenhwy-fawr).[6] A cognate name in Modern English is Jennifer, from Cornish.[7]

The name is given as Guennuuar (Guennimar) in an early Latin text Vita Gildae. Geoffrey of Monmouth rendered it as Ganhumara (G[u/w]enhumara) in a Latinised form in his Historia Regum Britanniae, further turned into Wenhauer (Wenhaiuer) by Layamon (Gwenayfer in one manuscript) and into both Genoivre and Gahunmare in Wace's Roman de Brut. Chronicler Gerald of Wales refers to her as Wenneuereia (Wenneveria) and the popular romancer Chrétien de Troyes calls her Guenievre (Guenièvre). The latter form was retained by the authors of Chrétien-influenced French prose cycles, who would use also its variants such as Genievre (Genièvre) or Gueneure. Her many other various names appearing through the different periods and regions of medieval Europe include both Gaynour and Waynour (Waynor[e]) in the English poems Alliterative Morte Arthure and The Awntyrs off Arthure, Genure (Gaynor) in the Stanzaic Morte Arthur, Guenloie in the Romanz du reis Yder, Guenore in Sir Gawayn and þe Grene Knyȝt, Gwenvere (Guennevere, Guenera, Gwenner) in the Polychronicon, and Gwendoloena (Gwendolen) in De Ortu Waluuanii. Her name is invariably Ginover (Ginovere) in the Middle German romances by Hartmann von Aue and Ulrich von Zatzikhoven but was written Jenover by Der Pleier, and the audience of Italian romances got to know her as Ginevra (Zenevra, Zenibra). In the 15th-century Britain, she was called Gwynnever in the Middle Cornish play Bewnans Ke, while the Middle English author Thomas Malory originally wrote her name as Gwenever or Gwenivere (Guenever, Guenivere) in his seminal compilation Le Morte d'Arthur.[8] Some assorted other forms of her name in the Middle Ages and Renaissance literature of various countries and languages have included Ganor, Ganora, Gainor, Gainovere, Geneura, Guanora, Gueneour, Guenevera, Gwenore, Gwinore, Ntzenebra, Vanour, Vanore (Wanore).[9][10]

Medieval literature

Family relations

 
Lady Guinevere, Howard Pyle's illustration for The Story of King Arthur and His Knights (1903)

In one of the Welsh Triads (Trioedd Ynys Prydein, no. 56), the 13th-century series of texts based on the earlier oral tales of the bards of Wales, there are three Gwenhwyfars married to King Arthur. The first is the daughter of Cywryd of Gwent, the second of Gwythyr ap Greidawl, and the third of (G)ogrfan Gawr ("the Giant").[11] In a variant of another Welsh Triad (Trioedd Ynys Prydein, no. 54), only the daughter of Gogfran Gawr is mentioned. There was once a popular folk rhyme known in Wales concerning Gwenhwyfar: "Gwenhwyfar ferch Ogrfan Gawr / Drwg yn fechan, gwaeth yn fawr (Gwenhwyfar, daughter of Ogrfan Gawr / Bad when little, worse when great)."[12]

Welsh tradition remembers the queen's sister Gwenhwyfach and records the enmity between them. Two Triads (Trioedd Ynys Prydein, no. 53, 84) mention Gwenhwyfar's contention with her sister, which was believed to be the cause of the disastrous Battle of Camlann. In the Welsh prose Culhwch and Olwen (possibly the first known text featuring Guinevere if indeed correctly dated c. 1100[13]), Gwenhwyfach is also mentioned alongside Gwenhwyfar, the latter appearing as Guinevere's evil twin in some later prose romances. German romance Diu Crône gives Guinevere two other sisters by their father, King Garlin of Gore: Gawain's love interest Flori and Queen Lenomie of Alexandria.

Guinevere is childless in most stories.[14] The few exceptions of that include Arthur's son named Loholt or Ilinot in Perlesvaus and Parzival (first mentioned in Erec and Enide).[15] In the Alliterative Morte Arthure, Guinevere willingly becomes Mordred's consort and bears him two sons, although the dying Arthur commands Mordred's infant children to be killed (yet Guinevere herself to be spared, as he forgives her). There are mentions of Arthur's sons in the Welsh Triads, though their exact parentage is not clear. Besides the issue of her biological children, or lack thereof, Guinevere also raises the illegitimate daughter of Sagramore and Senehaut in the Livre d'Artus.

Other relations are equally obscure. A half-sister and a brother named Gotegin play the antagonistic roles in the Vulgate Cycle (Lancelot–Grail) and Diu Crône respectively, but neither character is mentioned elsewhere (besides the Vulgate-inspired tradition). While later literature almost always named King Leodegrance as Guinevere's father, her mother was usually unmentioned, although she was sometimes said to be dead (this is the case in the Middle English romance The Adventures of Arthur, in which the ghost of Guinevere's mother appears to her and Gawain in Inglewood Forest). Some works name cousins of note, though these too do not usually appear more than once. One of such cousins is Guiomar, an early lover of Morgan le Fay in several French romances; other cousins of Guinevere include her confidante Elyzabel (Elibel) and Morgan's knight Carrant (or Garaunt,[16] apparently Geraint[17]). In Perlesvaus, after the death of Guinevere, her relative King Madaglan(s) d'Oriande is major villain who invades Arthur's lands trying to force him to abandon Christianity and to marry his sister, Queen Jandree.[18]

Portrayals

 
Guinevere Takes Refuge in a Convent, Edmund H. Garrett's illustration for Legends of King Arthur and His Court (1911)

The earliest datable mention of Guinevere (as Guanhumara, with numerous spelling variations in the surviving manuscripts) is in Geoffrey's Historia, written c. 1136. It relates that Guinevere, described as one of the great beauties of Britain, was descended from a noble Roman family on her mother's side and educated under Cador, Duke of Cornwall.[19] Arthur leaves her as a regent[20] in the care of his nephew Modredus (Mordred) when he crosses over to Europe to go to war with the Roman leader Lucius Tiberius. While her husband is absent, Guinevere is seduced by Modredus and marries him, and Modredus declares himself king and takes Arthur's throne. Consequently, Arthur returns to Britain and fights Modredus at the fatal Battle of Camlann.[21] The Roman de Brut (Geste des Bretons) makes Mordred's love for Guinevere the very motive of his rebellion.[22]

 
Guinevere with Enid and Vivien by George and Louis Rhead (1898)

Early texts tend to portray her inauspiciously or hardly at all. One of them is Culhwch and Olwen, in which she is mentioned as Arthur's wife Gwenhwyfar and listed among his most prized possessions,[23] but little more is said about her.[24] It can not be securely dated; one recent assessment of the language by linguist Simon Rodway places it in the second half of the 12th century.[25] The works of Chrétien de Troyes were some of the first to elaborate on the character Guinevere beyond simply the wife of Arthur. This was likely due to Chrétien's audience at the time, the court of Marie, Countess of Champagne, which was composed of courtly ladies who played highly social roles.[26]

 
Guinevere and Iseult by William Morris (1862)

Later authors use her good and bad qualities to construct a deeper character who plays a larger role in the stories. In Chrétien's Yvain, the Knight of the Lion, for instance, she is praised for her intelligence, friendliness, and gentility. On the other hand, in Marie de France's probably late-12th-century Anglo-Norman poem Lanval (and Thomas Chestre's later Middle English version, Sir Launfal), Guinevere is a vindictive adulteress and temptress who plots the titular protagonist's death after failing to seduce him. She ends up punished when she is magically blinded by his secret true love from Avalon, the fairy princess Lady Tryamour (identified by some as the figure of Morgan le Fay[27]). Guinevere herself wields magical powers in The Rise of Gawain, Nephew of Arthur. The Alliterative Morte Arthure has Guinevere commit the greatest treason[28] by giving Arthur's sword kept in her possession to her lover Mordred in order to be used against her husband.

Such stories can be radically different in their depictions of Guinevere and the manners of her demise. In the Italian 15th-century romance La Tavola Ritonda, Guinevere drops dead from grief upon learning of her husband's fate after Lancelot rescues her from the siege by Arthur's slayer Mordred. In Perlesvaus, it is Kay's murder of Loholt that causes Guinevere to die of anguish and she is then buried in Avalon with her son's severed head. Alternatively, in what Arthurian scholars Geoffrey Ashe and Norris J. Lacy call one of "strange episodes"[29] of Ly Myreur des Histors, a romanticized historical/legendary work by Belgian author Jean d'Outremeuse, Guinevere is a wicked queen who rules with the victorious Mordred until she is killed by Lancelot, here the last of the Knights of the Round Table; her corpse is then entombed with the captured Mordred who eats it before starving to death. Layamon's Brut (c. 1200) features a prophetic dream sequence in which Arthur himself hacks Guinevere to pieces after beheading Mordred.[30] Historically, the bones of Guinevere were claimed to have been found buried alongside those of Arthur during the exhumation of their purported graves by the monks of Glastonbury Abbey in 1091.[31]

Abduction stories

 
"Winlogee" depicted on the Italian Modena Archivolt (c. 1120-1240)

Welsh cleric and author Caradoc of Llancarfan, who wrote his Life of Gildas sometime between 1130 and 1150,[32] recounts her being kidnapped and raped (violatam et raptam) by Melwas, king of the "Summer Country" (Aestiva Regio, perhaps meaning Somerset), and held prisoner at his stronghold at Glastonbury. The story states that Arthur spent a year searching for her and assembling an army to storm Melwas' fort when Gildas negotiates a peaceful resolution and reunites husband and wife.[33] The episode seems to be related to an Old Irish abduction motif called the aithed in which a mysterious stranger kidnaps a married woman and takes her to his home; the husband of the woman then rescues her against insurmountable odds.[34] A seemingly related account was carved into the archivolt of Modena Cathedral in Italy, which most likely predates that telling (as well as any other known written account of Arthurian legend). Here, Artus de Bretania and Isdernus approach a tower in which Mardoc is holding Winlogee, while on the other side Carrado (most likely Caradoc) fights Galvagin (Gawain) as the knights Galvariun and Che (Kay) approach. Isdernus is most certainly an incarnation of Yder (Edern ap Nudd), a Celtic hero whose name appears in Culhwch and Olwen. Yeder is actually Guinevere's lover in a nearly-forgotten tradition mentioned in Béroul's 12th-century Tristan. This is reflected in the later Romance of King Yder, where his lover is Queen Guenloie of Carvain (possibly Caerwent in Wales[35]).

 
Ritter und Dame (Sir Lancelot und Guinevere) by Wilhelm List (c. 1902)

Chrétien de Troyes tells another version of Guinevere's abduction, this time by Meliagant (Maleagant, derived from Melwas) in the 12th-century Lancelot, the Knight of the Cart. The abduction sequence is largely a reworking of that recorded in Caradoc's work, but here the queen's rescuer is not Arthur (or Yder) but Lancelot, whose adultery with the queen is dealt with for the first time in this poem. In Chrétien's love triangle of Arthur-Guinevere-Lancelot, Guinevere consummated her love affair with Lancelot when Arthur and his knights are trying to rescue Guinevere from the land of Gorre. It has been suggested that Chrétien invented their affair to supply Guinevere with a courtly extramarital lover (as requested by his patroness, princess Marie); Mordred could not be used as his reputation was beyond saving, and Yder had been forgotten entirely.[36] This version has become popular. Today it is most familiar from its expansion in the prose cycles, where Lancelot comes to her rescue on more than one occasion.

There are furthermore several other variants of this motif in medieval literature. In Ulrich's Lanzelet, Valerin, the King of the Tangled Wood, claims the right to marry her and carries her off to his castle in a struggle for power that reminds scholars of her prescient connections to the fertility and sovereignty of Britain. Arthur's company saves her, but Valerin kidnaps her again and places her in a magical sleep inside another castle surrounded by snakes, where only the powerful sorcerer Malduc can rescue her. In Heinrich's Diu Crône, Guinevere's captor is her own brother Gotegrim, intending to kill her for refusing to marry the fairy knight Gasozein who falsely[37] claims to be her lover and rightful husband (and who also appears as the young Guinevere's human lover named Gosangos in the Livre d'Artus),[38] and her saviour is Gawain. In Durmart le Gallois, Guinevere is delivered from her peril by the eponymous hero. In the Livre d'Artus, she is briefly taken prisoner by King Urien during his rebellion against Arthur. The 14th-century Welsh poet Dafydd ap Gwilym alludes to Guinevere's abduction in two of his poems.

 
Meigle stone detail

A version of the narrative of Guinevere is associated in local folklore with Meigle in Scotland, known for its carved Pictish stones. One of the stones, now in the Meigle Sculptured Stone Museum, is said to depict Vanora, the local name for Guinevere.[39] She is said to have been abducted by King Modred (Mordred). When she is eventually returned to Arthur, he has her condemned to death for infidelity and orders that she be torn to pieces by wild beasts, an event said to be shown on Meigle Stone 2 (Queen Venora's Stone).[39] This stone was one of two that originally stood near a mound that is identified as Vanora's grave.[39] Modern scholars interpret the Meigle Stone 2 as a depiction of the Biblical tale of Daniel in the lions' den. One Scotland-related story takes place in Hector Boece's Historia Gentis Scotorum, where Guinevere is taken by the Picts following Mordred's and Arthur's deaths at Camlann and spends the rest of her life in their captivity; after her death she is buried beside Arthur.

Medievalist Roger Sherman Loomis suggested that this recurring motif shows that Guinevere "had inherited the role of a Celtic Persephone" (a figure from Greek mythology).[40] All of these similar tales of abduction by another suitor – and this allegory includes Lancelot, who whisks her away when she is condemned to burn at the stake for their adultery – are demonstrative of a recurring 'Hades-snatches-Persephone' theme, positing that Guinevere is similar to the Celtic Otherworld bride Étaín, whom Midir, king of the Underworld, carries off from her earthly life.[41] According to Kenneth G. T. Webster, the scenarios such as the one from Diu Crône may be an echo of a more ancient lore in which Guinevere is "a fairy queen ravished from her supernatural husband by Arthur of this world, and therefore subject to raids which the other world would regard as rescues, but which to the Arthurian world appear as abductions."[42]

Life in popular tradition

 
A scene preceding the kidnapping by Maleagant: "How Queen Guenever rode a maying into the woods and fields beside Westminster."
Arthur Rackham's illustration from The Romance of King Arthur (1917), abridged from Thomas Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur by Alfred W. Pollard

In the 13th-century French cyclical chivalric romances and the later works based on them, including the influential Le Morte d'Arthur by Thomas Malory, Guinevere is the daughter of King Leodegrance, who had served Arthur's father Uther Pendragon and was entrusted with the Round Table after Uther's death. In these stories, Leodegrance's kingdom typically lies near the Breton city of Carhaise (the modern Carhaix-Plouguer in Brittany, France). In the fields to the south and east of Carhaise, Arthur defends Leodegrance by defeating King Rience, which leads to his first meeting with the young Guinevere. An arranged marriage of state soon commences and Arthur receives the Round Table as Guinevere's dowry. This version of the legend has her betrothed to Arthur early in his career, while he was garnering support and being pressured to produce an heir (which Guinevere, barren as in most other versions, will fail to deliver). Malory has Arthur also ignore Merlin's prophetic advice warning him not to marry her.

 
Lancelot and Guinevere by Herbert James Draper (c. 1890)
 
King Arthur's sister Morgan shows him the room where Lancelot had painted his relationship with Guinevere in Évrard d'Espinques' illumination for the Vulgate Cycle's La Mort du roi Arthur in BNF fr. 116 f. 688v.

The following narrative is largely based on the Lancelot-Grail (Vulgate) prose cycle, telling the story of Lancelot and Guinevere in accordance to the courtly love conventions still popular in the early 13th-century France (Guinevere's role in this romance is Lancelot's "female lord", just as the Lady of the Lake is his "female master"[43]), however soon afterwards directly condemned as sinful in the Post-Vulgate Cycle retelling that also influenced Malory. When the mysterious White Knight (Lancelot) arrives from the continent, Guinevere is instantly smitten. The teenage Lancelot first joins the Queen's Knights to serve Guinevere after having been knighted by her. Following Lancelot's early rescue of Guinevere from Maleagant (in Le Morte d'Arthur this episode only happens much later on) and his admission into the Round Table, and with the Lady of the Lake's and Galehaut's assistance, the two then begin an escalating romantic affair that in the end will inadvertently lead to Arthur's fall.

Lancelot refuses the love of many other ladies, dedicates all his heroic deeds to Guinevere's honor, and sends her the redeemable knights he has defeated in battle and who must appeal to her for forgiveness. In the Vulgate Cycle, Lancelot's stepmother Ninianne, the Lady of the Lake gifts them an identical pair of magic rings of protection against enchantements. In this version, the lovers spend their first night together just as Arthur sleeps with the beautiful Saxon princess named Camille or Gamille (an evil enchantress whom he later continues to love even after she betrays and imprisons him, though it was suggested that he was enchanted[44]). Arthur is also further unfaithful during the episode of the "False Guinevere" (who had Arthur drink a love potion to betray Guinevere), her own twin half-sister (born on the same day but from a different mother) whom Arthur takes as his second wife in a very unpopular bigamous move, even refusing to obey the Pope's order for him not to do it, as Guinevere escapes to live with Lancelot in Galehaut's kingdom of Sorelais. The French prose cyclical authors thus intended to justify Guinevere and Lancelot's adultery by blackening Arthur's reputation and thus making it acceptable and sympathetic for their medieval courtly French audience. Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur, however, portrays Arthur as absolutely faithful to Guinevere, even successfully resisting the forceful advances of the sorceress Annowre for her sake, except as a victim of a spell in a variant of the "False Guinevere" case. On her side, Guinevere is often greatly jealous for Lancelot, especially in the case of Elaine of Corbenic, when her reaction to learning about their relationship (which, unknown to her, by this time has been limited only to him being raped-by-deceit by Elaine, including an earlier act of the fathering of Galahad) causes Lancelot to fall into his longest period of madness (which only Elaine is able to eventually cure with the power of the Holy Grail itself). The episode of Lancelot's exile and madness is also included in the Post-Vulgate Suite du Merlin, where it instead serves to accent the pathetic and humiliating nature of Lancelot's illicit relationship with the queen.[45] Malory is silent regarding Guinevere's feelings for Arthur, but goes so far as to suggest she uses charms or enchantments to win Lancelot's love.

 
The Rescue of Guinevere by William Hatherell (1910)
 
Arthur's Tomb (The Last Meeting of Launcelot and Guenevere) by Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1855)

Years later, following the Grail Quest, Malory tells his readers that the pair started behaving carelessly in public, stating that "Launcelot began to resort unto the Queene Guinevere again and forget the promise and the perfection that he made in the Quest... and so they loved together more hotter than they did beforehand." They indulged in "privy draughts together" and behaved in such a way that "many in the court spoke of it." Guinevere is charged with adultery on three occasions, including once when she is also accused of sorcery.[46] Their now not-so secret affair is finally exposed by Guinevere's sworn enemy and Arthur's half-sister, the enchantress Morgan le Fay who had schemed against her on various occasions (sometimes being foiled in that by Lancelot, who had also defended Guinevere on many other occasions and performed assorted feats in her honour), and proven by two of the late King Lot's sons, Agravain and Mordred. Revealed as a betrayer of his king and friend, Lancelot kills several of Arthur's knights and escapes. Incited to defend honour, Arthur reluctantly sentences his wife to be burned at the stake. Knowing Lancelot and his family would try to stop the execution, the king sends many of his knights to defend the pyre, though Gawain refuses to participate. Lancelot arrives with his kinsmen and followers and rescues the queen. Gawain's unarmed brothers Gaheris and Gareth are killed in the battle (among others, including fellow Knights of the Round Aglovale, Segwarides and Tor, and originally also Gawain's third brother Agravain), sending Gawain into a rage so great that he pressures Arthur into a direct confrontation with Lancelot.

Guinevere later returns to Arthur from Lancelot's castle and is forgiven (Arthur starts to doubt that Guinevere ever betrayed him). When Arthur goes after Lancelot to France, he leaves her in the care of Mordred, who plans to marry the queen himself and take Arthur's throne. While in some versions of the legend (like the Alliterative Morte Arthure, which removed French romantic additions) Guinevere assents to Mordred's proposal, in the tales of Lancelot she hides in the Tower of London, where she withstands Mordred's siege, and later takes refuge in a nun convent.[47] Hearing of the treachery, Arthur returns to Britain and slays Mordred at Camlann, but his wounds are so severe that he is taken to the isle of Avalon by Morgan. During the civil war, Guinevere is portrayed as a scapegoat for violence without developing her perspective or motivation. However, after Arthur's death, Guinevere retires to a convent in penitence for her infidelity. (Malory was familiar with the Fontevraud daughter house at Nuneaton,[48] and given the royal connections of its sister house at Amesbury, he chose Amesbury Priory as the monastery to which Guinevere retires as "abbas and rular",[49] to find her salvation in a life of penance.[50]) Her contrition is sincere and permanent; Lancelot is unable to sway her to come away with him.[51] Guinevere meets Lancelot one last time, refusing to kiss him, then returns to the convent. She spends the remainder of her life as an abbess in joyless sorrow contrasting with her earlier merry nature. Following her death, Lancelot buries her next to Arthur's (real or symbolic) grave.

Modern culture

 
The Parting of Sir Lancelot and Queen Guinevere. 1874 photograph by Julia Margaret Cameron published in Alfred Tennyson's Idylls of the King and Other Poems (1875).

Modern adaptations of Arthurian legend vary greatly in their depiction of Guinevere, largely because certain aspects of her story must be fleshed out by the modern author. In spite of her iconic doomed romance with Lancelot, a number of modern reinterpretations portray her as being manipulated into her affair with Lancelot, with Arthur being her rightful true love. Others present her love for Lancelot as stemming from a relationship that existed prior to her arranged marriage to Arthur. Some do not include the affair at all.

Literature

  • In the Deverry Cycle book Darkspell, the character of Gweniver is a warrior priestess sworn to the Goddess of the Moon in Her Darktime, also known as She of The Sword-Struck Heart. An inspirational warleader, Gweniver is a berserker in combat.
  • In Marion Zimmer Bradley's The Mists of Avalon, Gwenhwyfar is brought up by a cold, unloving father, which leaves her with a deep inferiority complex and intense agoraphobia. Failing to produce an heir and unable to be with the love of her life, Lancelot, she falls into a deep depression and – hoping for salvation – becomes an increasingly fanatical Christian. Bradley's version is notable for popularising the Welsh spelling, which many subsequent writers have adopted.
  • Guinevere is a supporting character in Gerald Morris' The Squire's Tales. She starts the series as King Arthur's newly-wedded queen and ends it as Sister Arthur, peacefully living in a convent after Arthur's departure.
  • Bernard Cornwell's Arthurian series of novels The Warlord Chronicles depicts Guinevere as the princess of Henis Wyren in North Wales. She is fiercely anti-Christian as a devoted follower of the Ancient Egyptian goddess Isis and has ambitions of becoming queen of Dumnonia through her marriage with Arthur, the illegitimate son of Uther Pendragon in the novels. Guinevere is the cause of a civil war in The Winter King and later conspires with Lancelot against Arthur in Enemy of God, albeit later they reconcile as she plays a vital role in the victory at Badon and eventually she and her son accompany the wounded Arthur to exile in Brittany after Camlann at the end of Excalibur.

Other media

 
Ellen Terry as Guinevere in the 1895 play King Arthur by J. Comyns Carr in the Lyceum Theatre production. Portrait by Sir Edward Burne-Jones.
 
A 1961 photo of Robert Goulet as Lancelot and Julie Andrews as Guenevere in the musical Camelot
  • Guinevere is played by Ellen Terry in the 1895 West End production King Arthur by J. Comyns Carr, with incidental music by Arthur Sullivan.[52]
  • Guinevere is a central character in the 1960 Broadway musical Camelot, in which she was initially portrayed by Julie Andrews and later by Sally Ann Howes. She was also played by Vanessa Redgrave in the 1967 film adaptation, and by Phillipa Soo in the 2023 Broadway revival.
  • "Guinnevere" was a song written in 1968 by David Crosby that appears on Crosby, Stills and Nash's eponymous debut album.
  • Guinevere is portrayed by Cherie Lunghi in the 1981 epic fantasy film Excalibur.
  • In the 1983 DC Comics maxi-series Camelot 3000, Guinevere appears reincarnated in the body of Commander Joan Acton, American-born leader of the United Earth Defense Forces, and is reunited with King Arthur to defend Earth from a race of extraterrestrial invaders.
  • In the 1992 cartoon series King Arthur and the Knights of Justice, Queen Guinevere is voiced by Kathleen Barr. She is Camelot's queen and the real King Arthur's wife who often wonders about the change in Arthur's demeanor and manner of acting, unaware of him being the time-stranded Arthur King.
  • In the 1994 television film Guinevere, she is portrayed by Sheryl Lee. This story follows Guinevere's point of view and offers a more feminist perspective.
  • In the American original version of the 1994 cartoon series Princess Gwenevere and the Jewel Riders, Gwenevere (Gwen) is the show's titular main heroine and protagonist, voiced by Kerry Butler in the first season and Jean Louisa Kelly in the second season. Gwen is a daughter of the royal family of the magical kingdom of Avalon, who leads the all-girl Jewel Riders on their quest to rescue her mentor Merlin and to defeat the witches Lady Kale (Gwen's evil aunt) and Morgana who plot to rule Avalon. The show is set more than 1,000 after the reign of Arthur, with Gwenevere described as having inherited the qualities of courage, a strong will and impulsiveness from "her famous namesake".[53] She was renamed as Starla for the show's international version, Starla and the Jewel Riders.
  • Guinevere is portrayed by Julia Ormond in 1995 film First Knight.
  • In the 1998 television miniseries Merlin, Guinevere is played by Lena Headey.
  • In the 2002 television series Guinevere Jones, Guinevere is reincarnated into the main protagonist Gwen Jones portrayed by Tamara Hope.
  • In the 2004 film King Arthur, Guinevere, played by British actress Keira Knightley, is depicted as a Pictish princess in captivity of a Roman noble family in the far north of Britain. Arthur, charged by Bishop Germanus with escorting the family to safety in light of an impending Saxon invasion, discovers her captivity and liberates her. While travelling back to Roman territory, she introduces Arthur to Merlin who attempts to persuade Arthur to lead the Picts (called Woads in the film) to battle the Saxon army. Once back in Roman territory, their relationship culminates in a brief romance, after which Arthur decides to remain at the Roman outpost to fight the Saxons at Hadrian's Wall while his knights return to Rome. In the climactic Battle of Badon Hill, Guinevere leads a Pictish detachment of archers against the first wave of Saxon invaders and is nearly killed there before being rescued by Lancelot. Following the battle, Arthur and Guinevere are married by Merlin in a ceremony at Stonehenge.
  • Guinevere appears in the 2005 animated series King Arthur's Disasters, where she is voiced by Morwenna Banks.
  • In the 2005 French television series Kaamelott, and the 2021 film, Guinevere is a humorous and cheerful queen with a big heart, portrayed by Anne Girouard. Her story with Arthur, her true love, is one of the longest slow burns in French television.
  • Guinevere, or Gwen, appears in the 2007 DreamWorks animated film Shrek the Third, as a student at Worcestershire Academy. She is voiced by Latifa Ouaou.
  • In the 2008 television series Merlin, Guinevere (called "Gwen" by most of the characters) is portrayed by Angel Coulby and is shown as the daughter of a blacksmith and maid to Morgana along with being her best friend. Elyan the White is portrayed as her brother, and, eventually, one of Arthur's knights. At first, Guinevere is implied as the love interest of Merlin (who is far younger in the series than in usual tales) and is also shown as having an attraction to Lancelot. However, in this version of the story, Guinevere's true love is Arthur. Gwen and Arthur marry, despite Uther's and Morgana's attempts to keep them apart. Following Arthur's death, Gwen becomes the queen regnant of Camelot.[54]
  • Guinevere appears in the 2011 television series Once Upon a Time, played by actress Joana Metrass [pt]. This version of Guinevere is portrayed with a noticeable Castilian accent. She was stated by production in this adaptation to be Lancelot's true love while being deceived and manipulated into continuing her marriage with Arthur by a "fixing" spell that "fixed" all the problems between the two, inadvertently making her forget her love for Lancelot.
  • In the 2011 television series Camelot, Guinevere is depicted by Tamsin Egerton. An ambitious and strong-willed woman, she is a great support to Arthur and they develop a strong undeniable attraction. However, she is married to Leontes, one of Arthur's most loyal knights, which frustrates their relationship.
  • In the 2016 video game Mobile Legends: Bang Bang, there is a playable character named Guinevere. Unlike in other stories, Guinevere is portrayed as the sister of Lancelot and is instead in a relationship with Gusion Paxley.
  • In the 2016 television series Legends of Tomorrow episode "Camelot/3000", Guinevere is portrayed by Elyse Levesque.[55] In the episode, she is a knight who became queen because of her loyalty to Merlin. In response to Sara letting her know of her affection for Guinevere; Sara Lance felt attraction to her, and after Merlin, who was actually Stargirl, confessed her love to King Arthur, she and Sara shared a kiss.
  • In the 2020 television series Cursed, Bella Dayne portrays the Viking warrior woman Red Spear also known as Guinevere.
  • In the 2020 cartoon series Wizards: Tales of Arcadia, Guinevere is Morgana's friend whose accidental death by her husband Arthur causes Morgana to turn to evil.
  • In the 2022 Pixelberry Studios' video game Guinevere, she is the main character who suffers from visions predicting the downfall of both Camelot and Arthur and Lancelot, both of whom the player can have Guinevere romance.

See also

References

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  3. ^ Hamp, Eric P. (1996). "Varia: 1. 1 sál m. '(eau de) mer'; 2. 1 sed 'cerf'; 3. slabar; 4. slice 'coquille'; 5. ta- 'obtenir, trouver, pouvoir (féad-<ét-)'; 6. 1 tadg 'poète', 1 tál 'asciam'; 7. Irish tarr, torrach; 8. tinaid; 9. tindabrad, Findabair; 10. 1 úall, úabar, úais; 11. *uern~?". Études Celtiques. 32: 87–90. doi:10.3406/ecelt.1996.2087.
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  30. ^ Göller, Karl Heinz (1981). The Alliterative Morte Arthure: A Reassessment of the Poem. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. ISBN 978-0859910750.
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  37. ^ Samples, Susann Therese (2012). "An Unlikely Hero: The Rapist-Knight Gasozein in "Diu Crône"". Arthuriana. 22 (4): 101–119. doi:10.1353/art.2012.a494786. JSTOR 43485991. S2CID 160239206.
  38. ^ Thomas, Neil (2002). Diu Crône and the Medieval Arthurian Cycle. ISBN 9780859916363.
  39. ^ a b c "Historic Environment Scotland". historicenvironment.scot. Retrieved 22 December 2018.
  40. ^ Loomis, Roger Sherman (2000). The Development of Arthurian Romance. Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-40955-9.
  41. ^ Thomas, Neil (2002). Diu Crône and the medieval Arthurian cycle. D.S. Brewer. ISBN 978-0-85991-636-3.
  42. ^ "'Siner tugende anegenge sagen': The re-writing of Arthurian (hi)story in 'Diu Crone'. - Free Online Library". www.thefreelibrary.com.
  43. ^ Longley, Anne P. (2002). "Guinevere as Lord". Arthuriana. 12 (3): 49–62. doi:10.1353/art.2002.0074. JSTOR 27870447. S2CID 161075853.
  44. ^ Archibald, Elizabeth; Putter, Ad (2009). The Cambridge Companion to the Arthurian Legend. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521860598.
  45. ^ The Arthur of the French: The Arthurian Legend in Medieval French and Occitan Literature. 15 October 2020. ISBN 9781786837431.
  46. ^ Spisak, James W. (1985). Studies in Malory. Medieval Institute Publications, Western Michigan University. ISBN 978-0918720542.
  47. ^ "While King Arthur was Away, Did Guinevere with Mordred Play?". Children of Authur. 19 June 2011. Retrieved 7 December 2018.
  48. ^ Edward Hicks, Sir Thomas Malory: His Turbulent Career, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts 1928, pp. 25-27; Gweneth Whitteridge, The Identity of Sir Thomas Malory, Knight-Prisoner, in The Review of English Studies 24:95 (1973) 257-265.
  49. ^ Eugene Vinaver & P.J.C. Field (edd.), The Works of Sir Thomas Malory, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 3rd edition 1990, vol. 3, p. 1249, lines 2-3.
  50. ^ On Malory's Guinevere, see Peter Korrel, An Arthurian Triangle: A Study of the Origin, Development and Characterization of Arthur, Guinevere and Mordred, Brill, Leiden, 1984; Fiona Tolhurst, The Once and Future Queen: The Development of Guenevere from Geoffrey of Monmouth to Malory, in Bibliographical Bulletin of the International Arthurian Society 50 (1998) 272-308; Sue Ellen Holbrook, Guenevere: the Abbess of Amesbury and the Mark of Reparation in Arthuriana 20: 1 (2010) 25-51.
  51. ^ Roberts, Sandye; Jones, Arthur (2010). Divine Intervention II: A Guide to Twin Flames, Soul Mates, and Kindred Spirits. AuthorHouse. ISBN 978-1-4567-1255-6.
  52. ^ Information about King Arthur including an image of the program 20 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  53. ^ Salda, Michael N. (17 July 2013). Arthurian Animation: A Study of Cartoon Camelots on Film and Television. McFarland. ISBN 9780786474684 – via Google Books.
  54. ^ "Merlin". Merlin TV Series Fansite. Retrieved 5 April 2012.
  55. ^ Abrams, Natalie (12 December 2016). "Legends of Tomorrow books The Originals alum". Entertainment Weekly.

Bibliography

  • Bromwich, Rachel (2006). Trioedd Ynys Prydein: The Triads of the Island of Britain (3 ed.). University of Wales Press. ISBN 978-0708313862.
  • Bruce, Christopher W. (1999). The Arthurian Name Dictionary. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-8153-2865-0.
  • Coghlan, Ronan (1991). Encyclopaedia of Arthurian Legends. Element Books. ISBN 978-1-85230-199-6.
  • Hopkins, Andrea (2004). The Book of Guinevere: Legendary Queen of Camelot. Saraband. ISBN 9781887354042.
  • Korrel, Peter (1984). An Arthurian Triangle: A Study of the Origin, Development, and Characterization of Arthur, Guinevere, and Modred. Brill Archive. ISBN 978-9004072725.
  • Mediavilla, Cindy (1999). Arthurian Fiction: An Annotated Bibliography. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-3644-0.
  • Noble, Peter (1972). "The Character of Guinevere in the Arthurian Romances of Chretien de Troyes". The Modern Language Review. 67 (3): 524–35. doi:10.2307/3726121. ISSN 0026-7937. JSTOR 3726121.
  • Walters, Lori (2001). Lancelot and Guinevere: A Casebook. Routledge. ISBN 978-0415939119.
  • Webster, Kenneth Grant Tremayne (1951). Guinevere: A study of her abductions. Turtle Press.

External links

  • Guinevere at The Camelot Project

guinevere, other, uses, disambiguation, ɪər, listen, gwin, welsh, gwenhwyfar, pronunciation, help, info, breton, gwenivar, cornish, gwynnever, also, often, written, modern, english, guenevere, guenever, according, arthurian, legend, early, medieval, queen, gre. For other uses see Guinevere disambiguation Guinevere ˈ ɡ w ɪ n ɪ v ɪer listen GWIN iv eer Welsh Gwenhwyfar pronunciation help info Breton Gwenivar Cornish Gwynnever also often written in Modern English as Guenevere or Guenever 1 was according to Arthurian legend an early medieval queen of Great Britain and the wife of King Arthur First mentioned in popular literature in the early 12th century nearly 700 years after the purported times of Arthur Guinevere has since been portrayed as everything from a fatally flawed villainous and opportunistic traitor to a noble and virtuous lady Many records of the legend also feature the variably recounted story of her abduction and rescue as a major part of the tale GuinevereMatter of Britain characterGuinevere watching the mortally wounded Arthur being sailed off to Avalon in Queen Guinevere by James Archer c 1860 In universe informationTitlePrincess Queen Mother SuperiorOccupationHigh Queen of Britain Later tradition Queen of Logres and Britain or England convent headFamilyVaried including her father and her sisterSpouseArthur occasionally also MordredSignificant otherVaried including either Lancelot Mordred or YderChildrenUsually none occasionally a son with Arthur or children with MordredRelativesVaried including a cousinReligionChristianHomeMalory version Cameliard Camelot Tower of London Amesbury PrioryNationalityBritishThe earliest datable appearance of Guinevere is in Geoffrey of Monmouth s pseudo historical British chronicle Historia Regum Britanniae in which she is seduced by Mordred during his ill fated rebellion against Arthur In a later medieval Arthurian romance tradition from France a prominent story arc is the queen s tragic love affair with her husband s chief knight and trusted friend Lancelot indirectly causing the death of Arthur and the downfall of the kingdom This motif had originally appeared in nascent form in the poem Lancelot prior to its vast expansion in the prose cycle Lancelot Grail consequently forming much of the narrative core of Thomas Malory s seminal English compilation Le Morte d Arthur Other themes found in Malory and other texts include Guinevere s usual barrenness the scheme of Guinevere s evil twin to replace her and the particular hostility displayed towards Guinevere by her sister in law Morgan Guinevere has continued to be a popular character featured in numerous adaptations of the legend since the 19th century Arthurian revival Many modern authors usually following or inspired by Malory s telling typically still show Guinevere in her illicit relationship with Lancelot as defining her character In much of more recent Arthuriana however she assumes more active roles than in her medieval depictions increasingly even being cast as protagonist Contents 1 Name 2 Medieval literature 2 1 Family relations 2 2 Portrayals 2 3 Abduction stories 2 4 Life in popular tradition 3 Modern culture 3 1 Literature 3 2 Other media 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksName Edit Guinevere by Henry Justice Ford c 1910 The original Welsh form of the name Gwenhwyfar also Guenhuibhar Gwenhwyvar which seems to be cognate with the Irish name Findabar the name of the daughter of Queen Medb and Ailill mac Mata in the Ulster Cycle Gwenhwyfar can be translated as The White Fay Ghost from Proto Celtic Windo white sebro phantom cognate with Old Irish siabar a spectre phantom supernatural being usually in pejorative sense 2 3 4 5 Some have suggested that the name may derive from Gwenhwy fawr or Gwenhwy the Great as a contrast to Gwenhwy fach or Gwenhwy the less Gwenhwyfach also spelled Gwenhwyach appears in Welsh literature as a sister of Gwenhwyfar but Welsh scholars Melville Richards and Rachel Bromwich both dismiss this etymology with Richards suggesting that Gwenhwyfach was a back formation derived from an incorrect interpretation of Gwenwhy far as Gwenhwy fawr 6 A cognate name in Modern English is Jennifer from Cornish 7 The name is given as Guennuuar Guennimar in an early Latin text Vita Gildae Geoffrey of Monmouth rendered it as Ganhumara G u w enhumara in a Latinised form in his Historia Regum Britanniae further turned into Wenhauer Wenhaiuer by Layamon Gwenayfer in one manuscript and into both Genoivre and Gahunmare in Wace s Roman de Brut Chronicler Gerald of Wales refers to her as Wenneuereia Wenneveria and the popular romancer Chretien de Troyes calls her Guenievre Guenievre The latter form was retained by the authors of Chretien influenced French prose cycles who would use also its variants such as Genievre Genievre or Gueneure Her many other various names appearing through the different periods and regions of medieval Europe include both Gaynour and Waynour Waynor e in the English poems Alliterative Morte Arthure and The Awntyrs off Arthure Genure Gaynor in the Stanzaic Morte Arthur Guenloie in the Romanz du reis Yder Guenore in Sir Gawayn and the Grene Knyȝt Gwenvere Guennevere Guenera Gwenner in the Polychronicon and Gwendoloena Gwendolen in De Ortu Waluuanii Her name is invariably Ginover Ginovere in the Middle German romances by Hartmann von Aue and Ulrich von Zatzikhoven but was written Jenover by Der Pleier and the audience of Italian romances got to know her as Ginevra Zenevra Zenibra In the 15th century Britain she was called Gwynnever in the Middle Cornish play Bewnans Ke while the Middle English author Thomas Malory originally wrote her name as Gwenever or Gwenivere Guenever Guenivere in his seminal compilation Le Morte d Arthur 8 Some assorted other forms of her name in the Middle Ages and Renaissance literature of various countries and languages have included Ganor Ganora Gainor Gainovere Geneura Guanora Gueneour Guenevera Gwenore Gwinore Ntzenebra Vanour Vanore Wanore 9 10 Medieval literature EditFamily relations Edit Lady Guinevere Howard Pyle s illustration for The Story of King Arthur and His Knights 1903 In one of the Welsh Triads Trioedd Ynys Prydein no 56 the 13th century series of texts based on the earlier oral tales of the bards of Wales there are three Gwenhwyfars married to King Arthur The first is the daughter of Cywryd of Gwent the second of Gwythyr ap Greidawl and the third of G ogrfan Gawr the Giant 11 In a variant of another Welsh Triad Trioedd Ynys Prydein no 54 only the daughter of Gogfran Gawr is mentioned There was once a popular folk rhyme known in Wales concerning Gwenhwyfar Gwenhwyfar ferch Ogrfan Gawr Drwg yn fechan gwaeth yn fawr Gwenhwyfar daughter of Ogrfan Gawr Bad when little worse when great 12 Welsh tradition remembers the queen s sister Gwenhwyfach and records the enmity between them Two Triads Trioedd Ynys Prydein no 53 84 mention Gwenhwyfar s contention with her sister which was believed to be the cause of the disastrous Battle of Camlann In the Welsh prose Culhwch and Olwen possibly the first known text featuring Guinevere if indeed correctly dated c 1100 13 Gwenhwyfach is also mentioned alongside Gwenhwyfar the latter appearing as Guinevere s evil twin in some later prose romances German romance Diu Crone gives Guinevere two other sisters by their father King Garlin of Gore Gawain s love interest Flori and Queen Lenomie of Alexandria Guinevere is childless in most stories 14 The few exceptions of that include Arthur s son named Loholt or Ilinot in Perlesvaus and Parzival first mentioned in Erec and Enide 15 In the Alliterative Morte Arthure Guinevere willingly becomes Mordred s consort and bears him two sons although the dying Arthur commands Mordred s infant children to be killed yet Guinevere herself to be spared as he forgives her There are mentions of Arthur s sons in the Welsh Triads though their exact parentage is not clear Besides the issue of her biological children or lack thereof Guinevere also raises the illegitimate daughter of Sagramore and Senehaut in the Livre d Artus Other relations are equally obscure A half sister and a brother named Gotegin play the antagonistic roles in the Vulgate Cycle Lancelot Grail and Diu Crone respectively but neither character is mentioned elsewhere besides the Vulgate inspired tradition While later literature almost always named King Leodegrance as Guinevere s father her mother was usually unmentioned although she was sometimes said to be dead this is the case in the Middle English romance The Adventures of Arthur in which the ghost of Guinevere s mother appears to her and Gawain in Inglewood Forest Some works name cousins of note though these too do not usually appear more than once One of such cousins is Guiomar an early lover of Morgan le Fay in several French romances other cousins of Guinevere include her confidante Elyzabel Elibel and Morgan s knight Carrant or Garaunt 16 apparently Geraint 17 In Perlesvaus after the death of Guinevere her relative King Madaglan s d Oriande is major villain who invades Arthur s lands trying to force him to abandon Christianity and to marry his sister Queen Jandree 18 Portrayals Edit Guinevere Takes Refuge in a Convent Edmund H Garrett s illustration for Legends of King Arthur and His Court 1911 The earliest datable mention of Guinevere as Guanhumara with numerous spelling variations in the surviving manuscripts is in Geoffrey s Historia written c 1136 It relates that Guinevere described as one of the great beauties of Britain was descended from a noble Roman family on her mother s side and educated under Cador Duke of Cornwall 19 Arthur leaves her as a regent 20 in the care of his nephew Modredus Mordred when he crosses over to Europe to go to war with the Roman leader Lucius Tiberius While her husband is absent Guinevere is seduced by Modredus and marries him and Modredus declares himself king and takes Arthur s throne Consequently Arthur returns to Britain and fights Modredus at the fatal Battle of Camlann 21 The Roman de Brut Geste des Bretons makes Mordred s love for Guinevere the very motive of his rebellion 22 Guinevere with Enid and Vivien by George and Louis Rhead 1898 Early texts tend to portray her inauspiciously or hardly at all One of them is Culhwch and Olwen in which she is mentioned as Arthur s wife Gwenhwyfar and listed among his most prized possessions 23 but little more is said about her 24 It can not be securely dated one recent assessment of the language by linguist Simon Rodway places it in the second half of the 12th century 25 The works of Chretien de Troyes were some of the first to elaborate on the character Guinevere beyond simply the wife of Arthur This was likely due to Chretien s audience at the time the court of Marie Countess of Champagne which was composed of courtly ladies who played highly social roles 26 Guinevere and Iseult by William Morris 1862 Later authors use her good and bad qualities to construct a deeper character who plays a larger role in the stories In Chretien s Yvain the Knight of the Lion for instance she is praised for her intelligence friendliness and gentility On the other hand in Marie de France s probably late 12th century Anglo Norman poem Lanval and Thomas Chestre s later Middle English version Sir Launfal Guinevere is a vindictive adulteress and temptress who plots the titular protagonist s death after failing to seduce him She ends up punished when she is magically blinded by his secret true love from Avalon the fairy princess Lady Tryamour identified by some as the figure of Morgan le Fay 27 Guinevere herself wields magical powers in The Rise of Gawain Nephew of Arthur The Alliterative Morte Arthure has Guinevere commit the greatest treason 28 by giving Arthur s sword kept in her possession to her lover Mordred in order to be used against her husband Such stories can be radically different in their depictions of Guinevere and the manners of her demise In the Italian 15th century romance La Tavola Ritonda Guinevere drops dead from grief upon learning of her husband s fate after Lancelot rescues her from the siege by Arthur s slayer Mordred In Perlesvaus it is Kay s murder of Loholt that causes Guinevere to die of anguish and she is then buried in Avalon with her son s severed head Alternatively in what Arthurian scholars Geoffrey Ashe and Norris J Lacy call one of strange episodes 29 of Ly Myreur des Histors a romanticized historical legendary work by Belgian author Jean d Outremeuse Guinevere is a wicked queen who rules with the victorious Mordred until she is killed by Lancelot here the last of the Knights of the Round Table her corpse is then entombed with the captured Mordred who eats it before starving to death Layamon s Brut c 1200 features a prophetic dream sequence in which Arthur himself hacks Guinevere to pieces after beheading Mordred 30 Historically the bones of Guinevere were claimed to have been found buried alongside those of Arthur during the exhumation of their purported graves by the monks of Glastonbury Abbey in 1091 31 Abduction stories Edit Winlogee depicted on the Italian Modena Archivolt c 1120 1240 Welsh cleric and author Caradoc of Llancarfan who wrote his Life of Gildas sometime between 1130 and 1150 32 recounts her being kidnapped and raped violatam et raptam by Melwas king of the Summer Country Aestiva Regio perhaps meaning Somerset and held prisoner at his stronghold at Glastonbury The story states that Arthur spent a year searching for her and assembling an army to storm Melwas fort when Gildas negotiates a peaceful resolution and reunites husband and wife 33 The episode seems to be related to an Old Irish abduction motif called the aithed in which a mysterious stranger kidnaps a married woman and takes her to his home the husband of the woman then rescues her against insurmountable odds 34 A seemingly related account was carved into the archivolt of Modena Cathedral in Italy which most likely predates that telling as well as any other known written account of Arthurian legend Here Artus de Bretania and Isdernus approach a tower in which Mardoc is holding Winlogee while on the other side Carrado most likely Caradoc fights Galvagin Gawain as the knights Galvariun and Che Kay approach Isdernus is most certainly an incarnation of Yder Edern ap Nudd a Celtic hero whose name appears in Culhwch and Olwen Yeder is actually Guinevere s lover in a nearly forgotten tradition mentioned in Beroul s 12th century Tristan This is reflected in the later Romance of King Yder where his lover is Queen Guenloie of Carvain possibly Caerwent in Wales 35 Ritter und Dame Sir Lancelot und Guinevere by Wilhelm List c 1902 Chretien de Troyes tells another version of Guinevere s abduction this time by Meliagant Maleagant derived from Melwas in the 12th century Lancelot the Knight of the Cart The abduction sequence is largely a reworking of that recorded in Caradoc s work but here the queen s rescuer is not Arthur or Yder but Lancelot whose adultery with the queen is dealt with for the first time in this poem In Chretien s love triangle of Arthur Guinevere Lancelot Guinevere consummated her love affair with Lancelot when Arthur and his knights are trying to rescue Guinevere from the land of Gorre It has been suggested that Chretien invented their affair to supply Guinevere with a courtly extramarital lover as requested by his patroness princess Marie Mordred could not be used as his reputation was beyond saving and Yder had been forgotten entirely 36 This version has become popular Today it is most familiar from its expansion in the prose cycles where Lancelot comes to her rescue on more than one occasion There are furthermore several other variants of this motif in medieval literature In Ulrich s Lanzelet Valerin the King of the Tangled Wood claims the right to marry her and carries her off to his castle in a struggle for power that reminds scholars of her prescient connections to the fertility and sovereignty of Britain Arthur s company saves her but Valerin kidnaps her again and places her in a magical sleep inside another castle surrounded by snakes where only the powerful sorcerer Malduc can rescue her In Heinrich s Diu Crone Guinevere s captor is her own brother Gotegrim intending to kill her for refusing to marry the fairy knight Gasozein who falsely 37 claims to be her lover and rightful husband and who also appears as the young Guinevere s human lover named Gosangos in the Livre d Artus 38 and her saviour is Gawain In Durmart le Gallois Guinevere is delivered from her peril by the eponymous hero In the Livre d Artus she is briefly taken prisoner by King Urien during his rebellion against Arthur The 14th century Welsh poet Dafydd ap Gwilym alludes to Guinevere s abduction in two of his poems Meigle stone detailA version of the narrative of Guinevere is associated in local folklore with Meigle in Scotland known for its carved Pictish stones One of the stones now in the Meigle Sculptured Stone Museum is said to depict Vanora the local name for Guinevere 39 She is said to have been abducted by King Modred Mordred When she is eventually returned to Arthur he has her condemned to death for infidelity and orders that she be torn to pieces by wild beasts an event said to be shown on Meigle Stone 2 Queen Venora s Stone 39 This stone was one of two that originally stood near a mound that is identified as Vanora s grave 39 Modern scholars interpret the Meigle Stone 2 as a depiction of the Biblical tale of Daniel in the lions den One Scotland related story takes place in Hector Boece s Historia Gentis Scotorum where Guinevere is taken by the Picts following Mordred s and Arthur s deaths at Camlann and spends the rest of her life in their captivity after her death she is buried beside Arthur Medievalist Roger Sherman Loomis suggested that this recurring motif shows that Guinevere had inherited the role of a Celtic Persephone a figure from Greek mythology 40 All of these similar tales of abduction by another suitor and this allegory includes Lancelot who whisks her away when she is condemned to burn at the stake for their adultery are demonstrative of a recurring Hades snatches Persephone theme positing that Guinevere is similar to the Celtic Otherworld bride Etain whom Midir king of the Underworld carries off from her earthly life 41 According to Kenneth G T Webster the scenarios such as the one from Diu Crone may be an echo of a more ancient lore in which Guinevere is a fairy queen ravished from her supernatural husband by Arthur of this world and therefore subject to raids which the other world would regard as rescues but which to the Arthurian world appear as abductions 42 Life in popular tradition Edit Further information Lancelot A scene preceding the kidnapping by Maleagant How Queen Guenever rode a maying into the woods and fields beside Westminster Arthur Rackham s illustration from The Romance of King Arthur 1917 abridged from Thomas Malory s Le Morte d Arthur by Alfred W PollardIn the 13th century French cyclical chivalric romances and the later works based on them including the influential Le Morte d Arthur by Thomas Malory Guinevere is the daughter of King Leodegrance who had served Arthur s father Uther Pendragon and was entrusted with the Round Table after Uther s death In these stories Leodegrance s kingdom typically lies near the Breton city of Carhaise the modern Carhaix Plouguer in Brittany France In the fields to the south and east of Carhaise Arthur defends Leodegrance by defeating King Rience which leads to his first meeting with the young Guinevere An arranged marriage of state soon commences and Arthur receives the Round Table as Guinevere s dowry This version of the legend has her betrothed to Arthur early in his career while he was garnering support and being pressured to produce an heir which Guinevere barren as in most other versions will fail to deliver Malory has Arthur also ignore Merlin s prophetic advice warning him not to marry her Lancelot and Guinevere by Herbert James Draper c 1890 King Arthur s sister Morgan shows him the room where Lancelot had painted his relationship with Guinevere in Evrard d Espinques illumination for the Vulgate Cycle s La Mort du roi Arthur in BNF fr 116 f 688v The following narrative is largely based on the Lancelot Grail Vulgate prose cycle telling the story of Lancelot and Guinevere in accordance to the courtly love conventions still popular in the early 13th century France Guinevere s role in this romance is Lancelot s female lord just as the Lady of the Lake is his female master 43 however soon afterwards directly condemned as sinful in the Post Vulgate Cycle retelling that also influenced Malory When the mysterious White Knight Lancelot arrives from the continent Guinevere is instantly smitten The teenage Lancelot first joins the Queen s Knights to serve Guinevere after having been knighted by her Following Lancelot s early rescue of Guinevere from Maleagant in Le Morte d Arthur this episode only happens much later on and his admission into the Round Table and with the Lady of the Lake s and Galehaut s assistance the two then begin an escalating romantic affair that in the end will inadvertently lead to Arthur s fall Lancelot refuses the love of many other ladies dedicates all his heroic deeds to Guinevere s honor and sends her the redeemable knights he has defeated in battle and who must appeal to her for forgiveness In the Vulgate Cycle Lancelot s stepmother Ninianne the Lady of the Lake gifts them an identical pair of magic rings of protection against enchantements In this version the lovers spend their first night together just as Arthur sleeps with the beautiful Saxon princess named Camille or Gamille an evil enchantress whom he later continues to love even after she betrays and imprisons him though it was suggested that he was enchanted 44 Arthur is also further unfaithful during the episode of the False Guinevere who had Arthur drink a love potion to betray Guinevere her own twin half sister born on the same day but from a different mother whom Arthur takes as his second wife in a very unpopular bigamous move even refusing to obey the Pope s order for him not to do it as Guinevere escapes to live with Lancelot in Galehaut s kingdom of Sorelais The French prose cyclical authors thus intended to justify Guinevere and Lancelot s adultery by blackening Arthur s reputation and thus making it acceptable and sympathetic for their medieval courtly French audience Malory s Le Morte d Arthur however portrays Arthur as absolutely faithful to Guinevere even successfully resisting the forceful advances of the sorceress Annowre for her sake except as a victim of a spell in a variant of the False Guinevere case On her side Guinevere is often greatly jealous for Lancelot especially in the case of Elaine of Corbenic when her reaction to learning about their relationship which unknown to her by this time has been limited only to him being raped by deceit by Elaine including an earlier act of the fathering of Galahad causes Lancelot to fall into his longest period of madness which only Elaine is able to eventually cure with the power of the Holy Grail itself The episode of Lancelot s exile and madness is also included in the Post Vulgate Suite du Merlin where it instead serves to accent the pathetic and humiliating nature of Lancelot s illicit relationship with the queen 45 Malory is silent regarding Guinevere s feelings for Arthur but goes so far as to suggest she uses charms or enchantments to win Lancelot s love The Rescue of Guinevere by William Hatherell 1910 Arthur s Tomb The Last Meeting of Launcelot and Guenevere by Dante Gabriel Rossetti 1855 Years later following the Grail Quest Malory tells his readers that the pair started behaving carelessly in public stating that Launcelot began to resort unto the Queene Guinevere again and forget the promise and the perfection that he made in the Quest and so they loved together more hotter than they did beforehand They indulged in privy draughts together and behaved in such a way that many in the court spoke of it Guinevere is charged with adultery on three occasions including once when she is also accused of sorcery 46 Their now not so secret affair is finally exposed by Guinevere s sworn enemy and Arthur s half sister the enchantress Morgan le Fay who had schemed against her on various occasions sometimes being foiled in that by Lancelot who had also defended Guinevere on many other occasions and performed assorted feats in her honour and proven by two of the late King Lot s sons Agravain and Mordred Revealed as a betrayer of his king and friend Lancelot kills several of Arthur s knights and escapes Incited to defend honour Arthur reluctantly sentences his wife to be burned at the stake Knowing Lancelot and his family would try to stop the execution the king sends many of his knights to defend the pyre though Gawain refuses to participate Lancelot arrives with his kinsmen and followers and rescues the queen Gawain s unarmed brothers Gaheris and Gareth are killed in the battle among others including fellow Knights of the Round Aglovale Segwarides and Tor and originally also Gawain s third brother Agravain sending Gawain into a rage so great that he pressures Arthur into a direct confrontation with Lancelot Guinevere later returns to Arthur from Lancelot s castle and is forgiven Arthur starts to doubt that Guinevere ever betrayed him When Arthur goes after Lancelot to France he leaves her in the care of Mordred who plans to marry the queen himself and take Arthur s throne While in some versions of the legend like the Alliterative Morte Arthure which removed French romantic additions Guinevere assents to Mordred s proposal in the tales of Lancelot she hides in the Tower of London where she withstands Mordred s siege and later takes refuge in a nun convent 47 Hearing of the treachery Arthur returns to Britain and slays Mordred at Camlann but his wounds are so severe that he is taken to the isle of Avalon by Morgan During the civil war Guinevere is portrayed as a scapegoat for violence without developing her perspective or motivation However after Arthur s death Guinevere retires to a convent in penitence for her infidelity Malory was familiar with the Fontevraud daughter house at Nuneaton 48 and given the royal connections of its sister house at Amesbury he chose Amesbury Priory as the monastery to which Guinevere retires as abbas and rular 49 to find her salvation in a life of penance 50 Her contrition is sincere and permanent Lancelot is unable to sway her to come away with him 51 Guinevere meets Lancelot one last time refusing to kiss him then returns to the convent She spends the remainder of her life as an abbess in joyless sorrow contrasting with her earlier merry nature Following her death Lancelot buries her next to Arthur s real or symbolic grave Modern culture EditSee also List of works based on Arthurian legends The Parting of Sir Lancelot and Queen Guinevere 1874 photograph by Julia Margaret Cameron published in Alfred Tennyson s Idylls of the King and Other Poems 1875 Modern adaptations of Arthurian legend vary greatly in their depiction of Guinevere largely because certain aspects of her story must be fleshed out by the modern author In spite of her iconic doomed romance with Lancelot a number of modern reinterpretations portray her as being manipulated into her affair with Lancelot with Arthur being her rightful true love Others present her love for Lancelot as stemming from a relationship that existed prior to her arranged marriage to Arthur Some do not include the affair at all Literature Edit In the Deverry Cycle book Darkspell the character of Gweniver is a warrior priestess sworn to the Goddess of the Moon in Her Darktime also known as She of The Sword Struck Heart An inspirational warleader Gweniver is a berserker in combat In Marion Zimmer Bradley s The Mists of Avalon Gwenhwyfar is brought up by a cold unloving father which leaves her with a deep inferiority complex and intense agoraphobia Failing to produce an heir and unable to be with the love of her life Lancelot she falls into a deep depression and hoping for salvation becomes an increasingly fanatical Christian Bradley s version is notable for popularising the Welsh spelling which many subsequent writers have adopted Guinevere is a supporting character in Gerald Morris The Squire s Tales She starts the series as King Arthur s newly wedded queen and ends it as Sister Arthur peacefully living in a convent after Arthur s departure Bernard Cornwell s Arthurian series of novels The Warlord Chronicles depicts Guinevere as the princess of Henis Wyren in North Wales She is fiercely anti Christian as a devoted follower of the Ancient Egyptian goddess Isis and has ambitions of becoming queen of Dumnonia through her marriage with Arthur the illegitimate son of Uther Pendragon in the novels Guinevere is the cause of a civil war in The Winter King and later conspires with Lancelot against Arthur in Enemy of God albeit later they reconcile as she plays a vital role in the victory at Badon and eventually she and her son accompany the wounded Arthur to exile in Brittany after Camlann at the end of Excalibur Other media Edit Ellen Terry as Guinevere in the 1895 play King Arthur by J Comyns Carr in the Lyceum Theatre production Portrait by Sir Edward Burne Jones A 1961 photo of Robert Goulet as Lancelot and Julie Andrews as Guenevere in the musical CamelotGuinevere is played by Ellen Terry in the 1895 West End production King Arthur by J Comyns Carr with incidental music by Arthur Sullivan 52 Guinevere is a central character in the 1960 Broadway musical Camelot in which she was initially portrayed by Julie Andrews and later by Sally Ann Howes She was also played by Vanessa Redgrave in the 1967 film adaptation and by Phillipa Soo in the 2023 Broadway revival Guinnevere was a song written in 1968 by David Crosby that appears on Crosby Stills and Nash s eponymous debut album Guinevere is portrayed by Cherie Lunghi in the 1981 epic fantasy film Excalibur In the 1983 DC Comics maxi series Camelot 3000 Guinevere appears reincarnated in the body of Commander Joan Acton American born leader of the United Earth Defense Forces and is reunited with King Arthur to defend Earth from a race of extraterrestrial invaders In the 1992 cartoon series King Arthur and the Knights of Justice Queen Guinevere is voiced by Kathleen Barr She is Camelot s queen and the real King Arthur s wife who often wonders about the change in Arthur s demeanor and manner of acting unaware of him being the time stranded Arthur King In the 1994 television film Guinevere she is portrayed by Sheryl Lee This story follows Guinevere s point of view and offers a more feminist perspective In the American original version of the 1994 cartoon series Princess Gwenevere and the Jewel Riders Gwenevere Gwen is the show s titular main heroine and protagonist voiced by Kerry Butler in the first season and Jean Louisa Kelly in the second season Gwen is a daughter of the royal family of the magical kingdom of Avalon who leads the all girl Jewel Riders on their quest to rescue her mentor Merlin and to defeat the witches Lady Kale Gwen s evil aunt and Morgana who plot to rule Avalon The show is set more than 1 000 after the reign of Arthur with Gwenevere described as having inherited the qualities of courage a strong will and impulsiveness from her famous namesake 53 She was renamed as Starla for the show s international version Starla and the Jewel Riders Guinevere is portrayed by Julia Ormond in 1995 film First Knight In the 1998 television miniseries Merlin Guinevere is played by Lena Headey In the 2002 television series Guinevere Jones Guinevere is reincarnated into the main protagonist Gwen Jones portrayed by Tamara Hope In the 2004 film King Arthur Guinevere played by British actress Keira Knightley is depicted as a Pictish princess in captivity of a Roman noble family in the far north of Britain Arthur charged by Bishop Germanus with escorting the family to safety in light of an impending Saxon invasion discovers her captivity and liberates her While travelling back to Roman territory she introduces Arthur to Merlin who attempts to persuade Arthur to lead the Picts called Woads in the film to battle the Saxon army Once back in Roman territory their relationship culminates in a brief romance after which Arthur decides to remain at the Roman outpost to fight the Saxons at Hadrian s Wall while his knights return to Rome In the climactic Battle of Badon Hill Guinevere leads a Pictish detachment of archers against the first wave of Saxon invaders and is nearly killed there before being rescued by Lancelot Following the battle Arthur and Guinevere are married by Merlin in a ceremony at Stonehenge Guinevere appears in the 2005 animated series King Arthur s Disasters where she is voiced by Morwenna Banks In the 2005 French television series Kaamelott and the 2021 film Guinevere is a humorous and cheerful queen with a big heart portrayed by Anne Girouard Her story with Arthur her true love is one of the longest slow burns in French television Guinevere or Gwen appears in the 2007 DreamWorks animated film Shrek the Third as a student at Worcestershire Academy She is voiced by Latifa Ouaou In the 2008 television series Merlin Guinevere called Gwen by most of the characters is portrayed by Angel Coulby and is shown as the daughter of a blacksmith and maid to Morgana along with being her best friend Elyan the White is portrayed as her brother and eventually one of Arthur s knights At first Guinevere is implied as the love interest of Merlin who is far younger in the series than in usual tales and is also shown as having an attraction to Lancelot However in this version of the story Guinevere s true love is Arthur Gwen and Arthur marry despite Uther s and Morgana s attempts to keep them apart Following Arthur s death Gwen becomes the queen regnant of Camelot 54 Guinevere appears in the 2011 television series Once Upon a Time played by actress Joana Metrass pt This version of Guinevere is portrayed with a noticeable Castilian accent She was stated by production in this adaptation to be Lancelot s true love while being deceived and manipulated into continuing her marriage with Arthur by a fixing spell that fixed all the problems between the two inadvertently making her forget her love for Lancelot In the 2011 television series Camelot Guinevere is depicted by Tamsin Egerton An ambitious and strong willed woman she is a great support to Arthur and they develop a strong undeniable attraction However she is married to Leontes one of Arthur s most loyal knights which frustrates their relationship In the 2016 video game Mobile Legends Bang Bang there is a playable character named Guinevere Unlike in other stories Guinevere is portrayed as the sister of Lancelot and is instead in a relationship with Gusion Paxley In the 2016 television series Legends of Tomorrow episode Camelot 3000 Guinevere is portrayed by Elyse Levesque 55 In the episode she is a knight who became queen because of her loyalty to Merlin In response to Sara letting her know of her affection for Guinevere Sara Lance felt attraction to her and after Merlin who was actually Stargirl confessed her love to King Arthur she and Sara shared a kiss In the 2020 television series Cursed Bella Dayne portrays the Viking warrior woman Red Spear also known as Guinevere In the 2020 cartoon series Wizards Tales of Arcadia Guinevere is Morgana s friend whose accidental death by her husband Arthur causes Morgana to turn to evil In the 2022 Pixelberry Studios video game Guinevere she is the main character who suffers from visions predicting the downfall of both Camelot and Arthur and Lancelot both of whom the player can have Guinevere romance See also EditKing Arthur s family Tristan and IseultReferences Edit Google Books Ngram Viewer books google com Schrijver Peter 1995 Studies in British Celtic Historical Phonology Rodopi pp 249 250 ISBN 978 9051838206 Hamp Eric P 1996 Varia 1 1 sal m eau de mer 2 1 sed cerf 3 slabar 4 slice coquille 5 ta obtenir trouver pouvoir fead lt et 6 1 tadg poete 1 tal asciam 7 Irish tarr torrach 8 tinaid 9 tindabrad Findabair 10 1 uall uabar uais 11 uern Etudes Celtiques 32 87 90 doi 10 3406 ecelt 1996 2087 Koch John T 2006 Celtic culture a historical encyclopedia Abc clio p 861 ISBN 978 1851094400 Dictionary of the Irish Language ed E G Quin et al Royal Irish Academy Dublin 1913 76 Letter S Column 205 electronic version at http www DIL ie Richards Melville Arthurian Onomastics in Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion vol 2 1969 p 257 Cleveland Evans Jennifer went from strange to popular Omaha Judy Shoaf College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Brewer Ebenezer Cobham 21 March 1890 The Reader s Handbook of Allusions References Plots and Stories with Three Appendices Chatto and Windus via Google Books Bruce Christopher W 21 March 1999 The Arthurian Name Dictionary Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9780815328650 via Google Books Bromwich 2006 p 154 John Rhys Studies in the Arthurian Legend Clarendon Press 1891 p 49 Walters Lori J 3 December 2015 Lancelot and Guinevere A Casebook Routledge ISBN 9781317721550 via Google Books Walters Lori 21 March 1996 Lancelot and Guinevere A Casebook Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9780815306535 via Google Books Mediavilla Cindy 21 March 1999 Arthurian fiction an annotated bibliography Lanham Md Scarecrow Press via Internet Archive Bruce Christopher W 1999 The Arthurian Name Dictionary Christopher W Bruce Google Books ISBN 9780815328650 Ashley Mike 1 September 2011 The Mammoth Book of King Arthur Little Brown Book Group ISBN 9781780333557 via Google Books Matthews John 1997 Sources of the Grail An Anthology ISBN 9780940262867 Baron Hallam Tennyson Tennyson Baron Alfred Tennyson Tennyson 1908 Works of Tennyson Volume 5 p 506 Ashley Mike September 2011 The Mammoth Book of King Arthur ISBN 9781780333557 Wilentz Abigail 2009 Relationship Devotional 365 Lessons to Love amp Learn Sterling p 215 ISBN 978 1 4027 5577 4 Goller Karl Heinz 5 March 1981 The Alliterative Morte Arthure A Reassessment of the Poem Boydell amp Brewer Ltd ISBN 9780859910750 via Google Books Koch John T Minard Antone 1 April 2012 The Celts History Life and Culture ABC CLIO ISBN 9781598849646 via Google Books Christopher W Bruce 2013 The Arthurian Name Dictionary p 243 Routledge Rodway Simon Dating Medieval Welsh Literature Evidence from the Verbal System CMCS Publications Aberystwyth 2013 pp 16 168 70 Noble 1972 pp 524 35 Hebert Jill M 2013 Morgan le Fay Shapeshifter Springer ISBN 978 1137022653 King Arthur s incest Lacy Norris J Ashe Geoffrey Mancoff Debra N 2014 The Arthurian Handbook Second Edition Routledge ISBN 978 1317777434 Goller Karl Heinz 1981 The Alliterative Morte Arthure A Reassessment of the Poem Boydell amp Brewer Ltd ISBN 978 0859910750 Celtic Culture A Celti ABC CLIO 21 March 2006 ISBN 9781851094400 via Google Books Caradoc of Llangarfan The Life of Gildas Fordham University Medieval Sourcebook Fordham University Archived from the original on 6 September 2015 Retrieved 9 April 2016 Bruce Christopher W 21 March 1999 The Arthurian Name Dictionary Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9780815328650 via Google Books Kibler William W The Romance of Arthur New York amp London Garland Publishing Inc 1994 p 121 The Evolution of Arthurian Romance i Slatkine via Google Books de Troyes Chretien 1990 Lancelot or The Knight of the Cart University of Georgia Press ISBN 978 0 8203 1213 2 Samples Susann Therese 2012 An Unlikely Hero The Rapist Knight Gasozein in Diu Crone Arthuriana 22 4 101 119 doi 10 1353 art 2012 a494786 JSTOR 43485991 S2CID 160239206 Thomas Neil 2002 Diu Crone and the Medieval Arthurian Cycle ISBN 9780859916363 a b c Historic Environment Scotland historicenvironment scot Retrieved 22 December 2018 Loomis Roger Sherman 2000 The Development of Arthurian Romance Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 40955 9 Thomas Neil 2002 Diu Crone and the medieval Arthurian cycle D S Brewer ISBN 978 0 85991 636 3 Siner tugende anegenge sagen The re writing of Arthurian hi story in Diu Crone Free Online Library www thefreelibrary com Longley Anne P 2002 Guinevere as Lord Arthuriana 12 3 49 62 doi 10 1353 art 2002 0074 JSTOR 27870447 S2CID 161075853 Archibald Elizabeth Putter Ad 2009 The Cambridge Companion to the Arthurian Legend Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521860598 The Arthur of the French The Arthurian Legend in Medieval French and Occitan Literature 15 October 2020 ISBN 9781786837431 Spisak James W 1985 Studies in Malory Medieval Institute Publications Western Michigan University ISBN 978 0918720542 While King Arthur was Away Did Guinevere with Mordred Play Children of Authur 19 June 2011 Retrieved 7 December 2018 Edward Hicks Sir Thomas Malory His Turbulent Career Harvard University Press Cambridge Massachusetts 1928 pp 25 27 Gweneth Whitteridge The Identity of Sir Thomas Malory Knight Prisoner in The Review of English Studies 24 95 1973 257 265 Eugene Vinaver amp P J C Field edd The Works of Sir Thomas Malory Clarendon Press Oxford 3rd edition 1990 vol 3 p 1249 lines 2 3 On Malory s Guinevere see Peter Korrel An Arthurian Triangle A Study of the Origin Development and Characterization of Arthur Guinevere and Mordred Brill Leiden 1984 Fiona Tolhurst The Once and Future Queen The Development of Guenevere from Geoffrey of Monmouth to Malory in Bibliographical Bulletin of the International Arthurian Society 50 1998 272 308 Sue Ellen Holbrook Guenevere the Abbess of Amesbury and the Mark of Reparation in Arthuriana 20 1 2010 25 51 Roberts Sandye Jones Arthur 2010 Divine Intervention II A Guide to Twin Flames Soul Mates and Kindred Spirits AuthorHouse ISBN 978 1 4567 1255 6 Information about King Arthur including an image of the program Archived 20 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine Salda Michael N 17 July 2013 Arthurian Animation A Study of Cartoon Camelots on Film and Television McFarland ISBN 9780786474684 via Google Books Merlin Merlin TV Series Fansite Retrieved 5 April 2012 Abrams Natalie 12 December 2016 Legends of Tomorrow books The Originals alum Entertainment Weekly Bibliography EditBromwich Rachel 2006 Trioedd Ynys Prydein The Triads of the Island of Britain 3 ed University of Wales Press ISBN 978 0708313862 Bruce Christopher W 1999 The Arthurian Name Dictionary Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 8153 2865 0 Coghlan Ronan 1991 Encyclopaedia of Arthurian Legends Element Books ISBN 978 1 85230 199 6 Hopkins Andrea 2004 The Book of Guinevere Legendary Queen of Camelot Saraband ISBN 9781887354042 Korrel Peter 1984 An Arthurian Triangle A Study of the Origin Development and Characterization of Arthur Guinevere and Modred Brill Archive ISBN 978 9004072725 Mediavilla Cindy 1999 Arthurian Fiction An Annotated Bibliography Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 3644 0 Noble Peter 1972 The Character of Guinevere in the Arthurian Romances of Chretien de Troyes The Modern Language Review 67 3 524 35 doi 10 2307 3726121 ISSN 0026 7937 JSTOR 3726121 Walters Lori 2001 Lancelot and Guinevere A Casebook Routledge ISBN 978 0415939119 Webster Kenneth Grant Tremayne 1951 Guinevere A study of her abductions Turtle Press External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Guinevere Guinevere at The Camelot Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guinevere amp oldid 1171661218, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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