Arthurian Characters

Pilgrims and penitents wander through Arthurian Britain seeking grace or forgiveness. Their journeys mirror the inner quest of knighthood — from pride to humility, from sin to redemption.

Withdrawn from the world, hermits and anchorites appear as voices of divine truth. They counsel errant knights, interpret visions, and remind the worldly of penance and mortality.

The guardians of faith and conscience, priests, monks, and nuns sustain the spiritual rhythm of Arthur’s realm. They bless, bury, and counsel those who live by the sword.

Educated in letters and Latin, the clerks of Arthurian legend preserve law, faith, and memory. They stand at the threshold between the sacred and the secular, giving form to the age through written word.

Squires stand between service and glory, learning the arts of arms, courtesy, and loyalty. In their obedience lies the seed of future knighthood.

Knights form the shining core of Arthurian society — bound by oaths of loyalty, courage, and courtesy. Their triumphs and failures define the moral fabric of Camelot’s age.

Messengers of kings and keepers of arms, heralds maintained the dignity of tournaments and the order of war. In their knowledge of lineage and honor, they were historians of knighthood itself.

Explore the White Hart in Arthurian legend — from Girart d’Amiens to Malory, a symbol of destiny, the Otherworld, and spiritual transformation.