Arthurian Themes

The court of King Arthur, as described in "Culhwch and Olwen", teems with legendary heroes, bards, queens, and mysterious figures.

The Grail is the sacred vessel sought by King Arthur’s knights in the later Arthurian romances. It is most often described as the cup used at the Last Supper and the vessel that received Christ’s blood at the Crucifixion. The quest for the Grail becomes the highest spiritual trial of the Round Table, attainable only by the purest knight.

In the Grail romances, the Fisher King's castle is a sacred stage where divine objects - the Bleeding Lance, Candlesticks, the Grail, Carving Dish, and Table - are revealed in a solemn procession.

The Eddas — the Poetic and Prose Edda — are the principal medieval sources for Norse mythology, preserving the voices of gods, heroes, and the northern imagination.

The Black Horse is a proposed Arthurian symbol, advanced by S. G. Wildman, who suggested that it may represent a surviving emblem of the Arthurian Britons.

Galahad

The Grail Quest — the supreme adventure of Arthurian legend. Follow Sir Galahad, Lancelot, and the knights of the Round Table as they seek the Holy Grail through visions, trials, and divine revelation — a tale of purity, prophecy, and mystical grace.

The symbolic and allegorical themes of Arthurian legend — from the Round Table’s ideal of unity to prophecies of doom, the enchantments of magic, and the timeless conflict between love and duty.

The world of duels and trials by combat in Arthurian legend and medieval Europe, where honor, justice, and courage were tested in legendary battles and heroic confrontations.