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See also: Lat
.
Walganus, Walwanus; Dutch, Walwein, Welsh, Gwalchmei), son of See also: King Loth of
See also: Orkney, and See also: nephew to Arthur on hismother's See also: side, the most famous See also: hero of Arthurian See also: romance
.
The first mention of his name is in a passage of See also: William of
See also: Malmesbury, recording the See also: discovery of his See also: tomb in the province of See also: Ros in See also: Wales
.
He is there described as " Walwen qui fuit See also: hand degener Arturis ex sorore nepos." Here he is said to have reigned over Galloway; and there is certainly some connexion, the character of which is now not easy to determine, between the two
.
In the later Historia of Goeffrey of See also: Monmouth, and its French See also: translation by See also: Wace, See also: Gawain plays an important and " pseudo-historic " role
.
On the See also: receipt by Arthur of the insulting message of the See also: Roman emperor, demanding tribute, it is he who is despatched as ambassador to the enemy's See also: camp, where his arrogant and insulting behaviour brings about the outbreak of hostilities
.
On receipt of the tidings of Mordred's treachery, Gawain accompanies Arthur to See also: England, and is slain in the See also: battle which ensues on their landing
.
Wace, however, evidently knew more of Gawain than he has included in his translation, for he speaks of him as
Li quens Walwains
Qui taut fu preudom de ses mains (I1
.
9057-58). and later on says
Prous fu et de mult See also: grant mesure,
D'orgoil et de forfait n'ot qure
Plus vaut faire qu'il ne dist
Et plus doner qu'il ne pramist (to
.
Io6-109)
.
The
See also: English Arthurian poems regard him as the type and See also: model of chivalrous courtesy, " the See also: fine See also: father of nurture," and as Professor Maynadier has well remarked, " previous to the appearance of See also: Malory's compilation it was Gawain rather than Arthur, who was the typical English hero." It is thus rather surprising to find that in the earliest preserved See also: MSS. of Arthurian romance, i.e. in the poems of Chretien de See also: Troyes, Gawain, though generally placed first in the See also: list of knights, is by no means the hero See also: par excellence
.
The latter See also: part of the See also: Perceval is indeed devoted to the recital of his adventures at the Chastel Merveilleus, but of none of Chretien's poems is he the protagonist
.
The See also: anonymous author of the Chevalier a l'See also: epee indeed makes this apparent neglect of Gawain a ground of reproach against Chretien
.
At the same See also: time the majority of the See also: short episodic poems connected with the See also: cycle have Gawain for their hero
.
In the earlier See also: form of the See also: prose romances, e.g. in the Merlin proper, Gawain is a dominant See also: personality, his feats rivalling in importance those ascribed to Arthur, but in the later forms such as the Merlin continuations, the See also: Tristan, and the final Lancelot compilation, his character and position have undergone a See also: complete change, he is represented as cruel, cowardly and treacherous, and of indifferent moral character
.
Most unfortunately our English version of the romances, Malory's Morte Arthur, being derived from these later forms (though his treatment of Gawain is by no means uniformly consistent), this unfavourable aspect is that under which the hero has become known to the See also: modern reader
.
See also: Tennyson, who only knew the Arthurian See also: story through the See also: medium of Malory, has, by exaggeration, largely contributed to this misunderstanding
.
See also: Morris, in The Defence of Guinevere, speaks of " gloomy Gawain "; perhaps the most absurdly misleading epithet which could possibly have been applied to the " gay, gratious, and See also: gude " knight of early English tradition
.
The truth appears to be that Gawain, the See also: Celtic and mythic origin of whose character was frankly admitted by the See also: late M
.
Gaston See also: Paris, belongs to the very earliest stage of Arthurian tradition, long antedating the See also: crystallization of such tradition into See also: literary form
.
He was certainly known in See also: Italy at a very early date; Professor Rajna has found the names of Arthur and Gawain in charters of the early 12th century, the bearers of those names being then gtown to manhood; and Gawain is figured in the architrave of the See also: north doorway of See also: Modena See also: cathedral, a 12th-century See also: building
.
See also: Recent discoveries have made it practically certain that there existed, See also: prior to the extant romances, a collection of short episodic poems, devoted to the glorification of Arthur's famous nephew and his immediate kin (his See also: brother Ghaeris, or Gareth, and his son Guinglain), the authorship of which was attributed to a Welshman, Bleheris; fragments of this
collection have been preserved to us alike in the first continuation of Chretien de Troyes Perceval, due to Wauchier de See also: Denain, and in our vernacular Gawain poems
.
Among these " Bleheris " poems was one dealing with Gawain's adventures at the Grail See also: castle,where the Grail is represented as non-Christian, and See also: present s features strongly reminiscent of the See also: ancient Nature mysteries
.
There is See also: good ground for believing that as Grail quester and winner, Gawain preceded alike Perceval and Galahad, and that the solution of the mysterious Grail problem is to be sought rather in the tales connected with the older hero than in those devoted to the glorification of the younger knights
.
The explanation of the very perplexing changes which the character of Gawain has undergone appears to lie in a misunderstanding of theSee also: original See also: sources of that character
.
Whether or no Gawain was a See also: sun-hero, and he certainly possessed some of the features—we are constantly told how his strength waxed with the waxing of the sun till noontide, and then gradually decreased; he owned a steed known by a definite name le Gringalet; and a See also: light-giving sword, Escalibur (which, as a See also: rule, is represented as belonging to Gawain, not to Arthur)—all traits of a sun-hero—he certainly has much in See also: common with the See also: primitive Irish hero Cuchullin
.
The famous See also: head-cutting challenge, so admirably told in Syr Gawayne and the Grene Knighte, was originally connected with the Irish champion
.
Nor was the lady of Gawain's love a mortal See also: maiden, but the See also: queen of the other-See also: world
.
In Irish tradition the'other-world is often represented as an See also: island, inhabited by See also: women only; and it is this " Isle of Maidens " that Gawain visits in See also: Diu Crone; returning therefrom dowered with the gift of eternal youth
.
The Chastel Merveilleus adventure, related at length by Chretien and Wolfram is undoubtedly such an " other-world " story
.
It seems probable that it was this connexion which won for Gawain the title of the " Maidens' Knight," a title for which no satisfactory explanation is ever given
.
When the source of the name was forgotten its meaning was not unnaturally misinterpreted, and gained for Gawain the reputation of a facile morality, which was exaggerated by the pious compilers of the later Grail romances into persistent and aggravated wrong-doing; at the same time it is to be noted that Gawain is never like Tristan and Lancelot, the hero of an illicit connexion maintained under circumstances- of falsehood and treachery
.
Gawain, however, belonged to the pre-Christian stage of Grail tradition, and it is not surprising that writers, bent on spiritual edification, found him somewhat of a stumbling-See also: block
.
See also: Chaucer, when he spoke of Gawain coming " again out of faerie," spoke better than he knew; the home of that very gallant and courteous knight is indeed Fairy-See also: land, and the true Gawain-tradition is informed with fairy glamour and See also: grace
.
See Syr Gawayne, the English poems relative to that hero, edited by See also: Sir See also: Frederick See also: Madden for the See also: Bannatyne See also: Club, 1839 (out of See also: print and difficult to procure); Histoire litteraire de la See also: France, vol. See also: xxx.; introduction-and See also: summary of episodic " Gawain " poems by Gaston Paris; The See also: Legend of Sir Gawain, by Jessie L
.
See also: Weston, See also: Grimm Library, vol. vii.; The Legend of Sir Perceval, by Jessie L
.
Weston, Grimm Library, vol. xvii . ; " Sir Gawain and the See also: Green Knight," " Sir Gawain at the Grail Castle " and " Sir Gawain and the Lady of Lys," vols. i., vi and vii. of Arthurian Romances (Nutt)
.
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