Jesus of Nazareth

The Grail lineage traces the sacred guardianship of the Holy Grail from the time of Christ to the knights of King Arthur. Medieval romances describe a succession of keepers—saints, bishops, and kings—who preserved the relic until it was finally revealed during the Grail Quest.

A blood-dripping spear which appears in the Grail Procession. Feared as a weapon of destruction yet revered as a holy relic.

The Circle of Gold is a magical circlet set with jewels and a thorn from Christ's Crown, awarded to Perceval for defeating the Knight of the Burning Dragon. It symbolizes knightly valor, divine favor, and the fusion of chivalric heroism with sacred relics.

A sacred text, often a Gospel book, upon which Arthurian knights swore solemn oats.

A sacred book said to have been written by Christ himself, preserving the true history of the Holy Grail in the Vulgate Cycle.

Joseph of Arimathea is remembered in Arthurian tradition as the first keeper of the Holy Grail. A figure rooted in the Gospels, he bridges biblical history and medieval legend, carrying the relic of Christ’s Passion into the lineage that would one day lead to the Grail quest of Arthur’s knights.