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Bleddyn

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Posts posted by Bleddyn

  1. Gildas was to busy bashing the other kings for a plethora of sins. Yes and as you have clearly pointed out the stories as old as they are are re-written for a its contemporary audience. So in the translation from one generation to the next... small details and pieces change. But I am not a literature detective, I think though that I am clever enough to see the remnants of the told tales in the above mentioned works.

    Beowulf is a clear example of it. Old pagan collection of heroic tales rewritten in a christian context.

  2. OK. It sounds like there's a lively debate going on here. Allow me to jump in.

    If I were to do a supplement like this, I'd take the lead set forth by Simon on his very enjoyable Merrie England. The book would not be about Arthur. Instead it would be a look at a version of Late Antiquity/Early Medieval* Britain and environs. "Arthur" could be present. Even better, the various people that some "scholars" think might have been Arthur are all included. Allow the gamers to decide which one to include. Focus on the culture, beliefs, and society of the tribes at the time.

    *If it really were a "dark ages", would you be able to reference the sources that you do? Yes, literature and knowledge was lost, but not to the extent to create the dark ages that some very early scholars posited. Sorry -- my graduate degree in Late Antiquity/Early Medieval Europe had to kick in there for a second.

    Good luck with your project.

    There was a bbc program that illuminated the last point you made.... it pointed out political and trade contacts with Byzantium, a higher fluency of Latin, etc... so I agree it wasn't so dark in Britain. I have to ask why Arthur is such a sticking point with so many people when I have posted about several other documented personalities.... it would be an age or Era oriented supplement. Also thanks for the well wishes.:D

  3. Does anyone still love, play and or want to shoot the breeze about it?

    I just broke out my 1st edition that has yellow pages and is smelling of moth balls.... God I love this game....

    My perfect Stormbringer RPG edition would be 1st edition rules with the Unmapped East magic spheres, 4th ed/Elric!Spells, MRQ- background skills,

    Please share what you loved or disliked and experienced?;t)

    stormbringer1box.jpg

  4. What stories are you thinking of? As the OP stated, and as I reiterated, we're talking here specifically about a game based on Y Gododdin (Arthur is mentioned once, perhaps, and is "off-screen"), the Welsh Triads (Arthur gets a few mentions, but is one among many, many names), the tales of The Mabinogion (Arthur plays no part whatever in most of the stories, although he pops up to help his cousin in Culhwch and Olwen, and is dreamed about by the eponymous protagonist of The Dream of Rhonabwy), and such elliptical poems as "The Spoils of Annwn" (in which we are told that a company of heroes went sailing with Arthur to the Otherworld, but little else). Arthur, while clearly a widely recognised character, remains an elusive, shadowy presence, and is by no means a central figure. Far less so, for example, than Cu Chulainn in the Ulster legends, or Finn mac Cumaill in the tales of the Fian.

    Exactly that what I wanted to build it on ......and the sketchy historical and archeological evidence of the time period.

    By the way I have all the above said welsh lit on my iphone kindle app B-)

    Guess now with all the flap I am going to have to write it!

  5. Of course. :)

    My point was just that when looking for the "real Arthur" or the background of this legendary

    personality it would be useful to take a look at writers like Beda and Gildas, whose works are

    somewhat less "tainted" by an attempt to show off a hero and therefore are probably a little

    closer to the real history behind the legend.

    Bede and Gildas (especially the latter) still need to be taken with some circumspection "the age of tyrants" c.400-600 ad in Britain is directly attributed to him; and he (gildas) is writing from a church/ecclesiastical point of view. Bede on the other hand I can't comment on nor have I read much criticism about him. Its a shame to think the vikings may have destroyed records that may have weathered the test of time and shed more light on the subject.

  6. It matters when someone types "But the fluff and puff of chivalry doesn't hold up to the heroic culture of the time."

    Since there was no "time" or "heroic" culture, the rest of the statement is ridiculous. It's like complaining about a King Arthur movie being historically inaccurate. It's a mythical figure. Even if someone believes that there was a (or several) histrocial Arthur that inspired the legends, we are still dealing with legend.

    Although said properties tend to change depending on which source you decide to use.

    My point exactly. I'm not opposed to other interpretations of Arthur. I'm just saying that the Chivaric one is no more right or wrong than any of the others. Is it anachronistic, sure. It was so back when the medieval stories were written and people knew it.

    Exactly. It is entirely subjective, as there is no known Arthur to go back to. It's not like we have a biography. Sure, lots of different approaches are fine and all are just about as accurate as any other as we are dealing with a mythical figure.

    Yes. Exactly. But when someone says one "doesn't fit the times." he blurs the subjective with the objective. If this were a actual historical figure then claims that one view was a better fit would be valid. But since we are deal with myth and legend, then claims to "fitting the times" are humorous. Now claims that a particular view doesn't fit the legends would be something else. By not fitting the times implies that there were actual times to be fitted to.

    It is certainly an acceptable interpretation based upon what little factual evidence we have. As would several other theories. But that is what all the interpretations are, theories. Most of the historians I've read seem to think that the mythical Arthur is, a best, a composite figure, with other myths, legends and people (both legendary and historical) attached to him over time.

    Great here we go ..... I am not getting into it. Simple fact the literature of the time period 450 -700 AD is heroic. Arthur whether fantasy, fusion ( most likely), or by slim chance a real man has defiantly made his mark on the English speaking world's culture and pysch. As far as the "fluff and puff" comment... it must have rubbed you the wrong way .... sorry if it did.

  7. One event/person/time period that I would find absolutely fascinating would cover the very early 5th century and the events surrounding Constantine III. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantine_III This period is dripping with intrigue, myth and legend that would make for a great campaign. Every time I read about it I am flabbergasted that their is not more history, or even fiction, based on the events surrounding the rise and demise of Constantine III. There are great characters: Stilicho, Honorius, Alaric, Geronidus as well as Constantine himself. Plots are so thick that historians still cannot figure out what was going on. At the same time and sometimes in the same places waves of barbarians are blasting through the area. If I remember right, in the History of the Kings of Britain, Geoffrey of Monmouth places Constantine III as the third brother to Uther and Ambrosius. Great Stuff and although tied into legend, Constantine III really was a real character.

    For me it is Vortigern of Gwent or Powys ( I can't remember off the top of my head), Uriens of Rheged ( got his head sawed off by a rival brythonic king's assassin) and as I Have mentioned before Rydderech Hael of Ystradclud

  8. I do not think so. According to the few existing sources, there was a very successful Celtic mi-

    litary leader who managed to defeat the Saxons in a series of battles that stopped the Saxon

    conquest of Britain for many years. Whatever the name of this military leader - probably a ca-

    valry leader - might have been, Arthur / Artus or not, he doubtless was one of the most impor-

    tant and influential personalities of that time, able to convince the various regional rulers to

    support him and his force during the campaign against the Saxons.

    Huzzah... Keeping the faith

  9. To be fair, Bleddyn did specify in his original post that he was talking about a "Dark Age" (I don't like that terminology, but there we are) setting, from the 5th to the 7th century. So the chivalric approach is quite definitely wrong for the times, since the notion of the chivalric code originated in France no earlier than the 10th century, and only flowered in the centuries thereafter.

    Of course, the question of what's right for the times is a little more problematic. But, as I said before, I would take as my primary points of reference the British (and Irish) literary sources: Welsh and Irish sagas, tales, and saints' lives, and the tantalising glimpses provided by Y Gododdin, the Triads and other poems. The exact date of many of these is open to question, but indisputably they arise from native traditions, and in a purely literary sense they are "heroic" rather than "chivalric" in style and substance.

    I think Arthur himself, whether he existed or not, is largely irrelevant. He's rarely a central figure in the early literature anyway.

    Thanks for the back up there buddy

  10. So what if Arthur never existed? Probably neither did Robin Hood. It doesn't matter.

    In a Dark Age game set around this time, it makes perfect sense to have an Arthur with much of the properties of the mythical Arthur.

    The Chivalric approach is fine. Having medieval knights riding around on destriers with massive castles doesn't fit the period. Sure, have a code of chivalry and even have a Round Table. The Romans had knights and had certain ideas of chivalry. Charlemagne was only a couple of generations after this time and he had Paladins and Knights, so why not at Arthur's court?

    "Wrong for the times" is subjective. Medieval knights don't fit, as stated above. It's a matter of preference. Pendragon does the medieval knights in Britain very well. A BRP Dark Age setting would be better, in my opinion.

    Every roleplaying supplement is subjective and has to make value judgements all the way through. One might have a Dark Age Arthur, riding on a pony and fighting Saxons. Another might have ancient survivors of Atlantis trying to found a new kingdom in Britannia. Another would have knights in shiny armour riding out from medieval castles and jousting in tournaments. Still another would have Celtic Priestesses trying to take control of the remnants of Rome and fighting the Saxon Priests. Another would have the descendants of Jesus living in Glastonbury and spreading their version of Christianity.

    Each one would make a reasonable supplement.

    I know which one I'd prefer.

    Maybe, maybe not. I'd have put him as a Romano-British Knight, descended from minor nobility. The theories of him being Samartian don't really fit for me, although having Samartian horsemen as mercenaries is fine - everyone used mercenaries, after all that's what apparently attracted the Angles, Saxons and Jutes to Britannia in the first place.

    Knight/Penteulu/or come-whatever (germanic hearthtroop) I still think there is a big difference between the equestrian order (knights ) of roman culture and post roman cutlure and the knights of the mediveal romances.

    I agree I don't think he is/was Sarmatian and that movie king arthur sucked hairy bachi balls. Keira Knightly was cute though.

  11. I was thinking of the supplement GURPS Celtic Myth:

    http://www.sjgames.com/gurps/books/celtic/

    While I do not know the subject well enough to comment on the content of this supplement,

    it is written with the usual high quality of GURPS sourcebooks. If you do not know it, I think

    it could well be worth the money for the PDF (I think the print edition is no longer available).

    I have the D20 Pdf's ( I hate d20... but it is reference point as well as some of the pendragon material does touch some the Dark Age myths

    Also Looking at the time I know most of the europeans are hitting the rack I hope to talk again with you guys tomorrow.

  12. Rust but there was so much more than that going on. The Palegian Heresy!. St Germain came over a few times to return the people of the civitias to oxthordoxy ( Catholisim).. Did you know in cambridge is the stone of a welsh bishop lamenting the loss of his wife ..... 6th century AD .... ( I am anglo-Catholic) take that as mud in your eye on Dogma. and to quote the Professor " the latin practiced in the remaing civitais was truer to form than the latin spoken on the continent at the time.

    I guess what I am trying to say it was more than Celtic... the Roman Compound bow was still in use, the famous Cavalry of the Oleggd Hen was descendant of the Romano Gothic Equites Honoriani Taifali Seniores! I could go on ..... but it was a clash of Brythonic ( welsh is a Saxon term for foreigner), Germanic, and Romans.... the red headed sarmatians , and I better shut up.

  13. My feelings exactly. I remember encountering Pendragon in the '80s and, while I appreciate its oft-lauded merits as a game system, I have never been very turned on by the kind of courtly, chivalric Romance approach of Chretien de Troyes and, after him, Malory. Pendragon does that stuff very well, but I like my Arthurian lore darker, more mad and elemental, with more intermingling of early mystical Christianity and surviving paganism - damn it all, more Welsh. I'm thinking of the tone of bardic poems like "The Spoils of Annwn": http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preiddeu_Annwfn

    In the dim and distant past, I started (and never finished) writing some Irish/Welsh-influenced Iron Age adventures for AD&D 2e using the (pretty decent) Celts supplement. I can easily imagine a fun, mythic setting for BRP sitting somewhere in the dim, forested marches between that and Pendragon.

    we need to be drinking buddies!

  14. I disagree authur as mythical as he may be is mentioned in early Northern Welsh poems.... and he was never mentioned as a king or High king for that mater just a "Dux Bellorum" (Master of Battles). The Heroric times of cattle/border raiding and such was very in context .... how one made the climb through a Welsh/Brythonic King's Teulu was due to Martial Prowess and conduct. Maybe I don't understand your point. I hope that doesn't offend you?

    Other scholary and John Morris questionable scholarship"

    The age of Arthur, John Morris

    The Quest of Arthur's Britian, Geoffry ashe

    Historical figuires of the Aurthurain Era, Frank Reno

    An Age of Tyrants by Christopher Snyder

    Welsh Military Institutions, Sean Davies ( I highly recommend it)

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