The Knights of the Round Table were characters in the leg end of King Arthur in England. It is not quite clear which leg end it was, the right or left; but it doesn't seem to matter anyway.
In those days of Olde England they had many restless knights. This is because people used to eat cheese and drink mead just before going to bed. Also, it was very difficult to get to sleep with all that metal armour on. It was like asking a sardine to go to sleep inside its tin can. It must have been somewhat cumbersome when having to get up in the night to go to the toilet. Especially since in those days of Merry Olde England toilets were outside in the garden and not part of the house.
They had many restless days too when the womenfolks the next morning told off their husbands for staying up all night drinking and wassailing. "What time did you get up to bed?" they would ask, "I heard you get up the stairs making quite a racket with your rusty armour. Why don't you put some oil on the joints? And whilst you're at it put some oil on your creaky body parts too!"
No body seems to know what wassailing is but it seems to be something to do with saying "cheers" before drinking, or it may refer to the festival itself of drinking alcoholic beverages. Anyway, they did a lot of it in the times of King Arthur and his restless Knights ... or is it nights? Either way, we've established that wassailing has nothing to do with sailing a boat since you cannot get a boat on a Round Table. Which is the subject of this lesson.
So pay attention and let's get on.
King Arthur had a lot of restless Knights each thinking he was more important than the other. They had names like Lancelot and Runalot, and Laughalot and so on, depending on what they did the most. There was a knight who ate a lot of beans ... can't remember his name!
In order to prove that none of them was more important than the other King Arthur asked a carpenter to make him a large Round Table. It had to be large enough to enable twelve knights as well as the king himself to sit around it. And it had to be made of one piece of wood so that none of them would complain they sat where two pieces were joined together and thus mean he was less important than the other knights.
Some records say that King Arthur had as many as twenty-five knights, others say fifty or perhaps even more; as many as 150 !!!. Which leads one to wonder how big the Round Table must have been. Also, how difficult it must have been to call a meeting and have all of them attending on the same day. Believe me, I've tried at work to set up a meeting of just six or so people and there's always one person who can't attend when the others can.
Anyway, eventually a very large round table was made by a carpenter named Ivor Woodenheade. The problem was, having made the Round Table, how do we get it into the big Round Room which is at the top of the Castle in Camelot? (Presumably they had a lot of camels there!).
Remember those were the days after the wheel had been invented many years previously; so making a round table was in itself easy. Some historians believe that the wheel is the greatest invention of mankind after laxative. Being an eminent historian myself ... I disagree. I think the second wheel was the greatest invention of mankind because then we had the bicycle. But I digress once again.
So the carpenter and his crew decided to stand the Round Table upright and roll it up the hill like a wheel all the way to the castle, into the big hall, up the stairs and into the Round Room which was right at the top of the castle.
Problem !!!
Once they reached the Round Room at the top of the castle they found that the door is too low for the table to get through.
The carpenter was fired and another carpenter hired to build a new Round Table INSIDE the Round Room.
Clever, don't you think?
So the second carpenter, Ivan Idea, brought all the wood he needed and his tools and made the table inside the Round Room to save having to roll it up the hill and through the small door.
Another problem !!!
Once the table was built there was not enough room in the Round Room for 150 chairs to be put around the Round Table in the Round Room.
The second carpenter was fired.
A third carpenter, known as Aye Fearalot, was very reluctant to take on the job and be fired like his predecessors. In order to avoid such dire fate he convinced King Arthur to build a smaller Round Table, inside the Round Room, around which he put enough chairs for just thirteen people. The other Knights could stay outside the castle and listen to the goings on on the loudspeakers - reasoned the carpenter. King Arthur agreed.
Contrary to popular opinion, all these Knights did not speak in different accents depending on which part of Olde England they came from.
They all spoke in perfect English as you can see in the various films which have been made over the years about King Arthur and Camelot. Not in any of these films do you find a Knight speaking in a London cockney accent or a Liverpudlian tone.
Once Knighted a Knight had to promise not to commit murder, treason or be cruel. He had to be nice to ladies, "gentlewomen", (presumably he could be nasty to those not gentle), and widows, (not windows), and to help them cross the road whether they wanted to or not.
In those days many women spent time crossing the road for no apparent reason.
Just for the record, and to prove I do research my History Lessons, here are some names of the Knights of the Round Table:
King Arthur, Sir Galahad, Sir Lancelot du Lac, Sir Gawain, Sir
Percivale, Sir Lionell, Sir Bors de Ganis, Sir Kay, Sir Tristram de
Lyones, Sir Gareth, Sir Bedivere, Sir Bleoberis, La Cote Male Taile, Sir
Lucan, Sir Palomedes, Sir Lamorak, Sir Safer, Sir Pelleas, Sir Ector de
Maris, Sir Dagonet, Sir Degore, Sir Brunor le Noir, Le Bel Desconneu,
Sir Alymere, and Sir Mordred.
There was also one called Sir Ywain the Bastard. I bet he wasn't very happy about that !!!
LOL! I was trying to tell my son about King Arthur and his knights a few days ago. I should have read him this blog. Perhaps Sir Yawain the Bastard was named such because he wouldn't go Wassailing. :)
ReplyDeleteI had a thought. Perhaps they got the word wassailing from King Arthur's navy. The admiral must have come in to that round room with the round table and gave the excuse for his lateness that he was-sailing. :-P
You make a great point about sailing, Manny. Did King Arthur have a navy? I suppose they did in those days. As for Sir Ywain, he actually existed.
DeleteDid you notice they were all addressed as "Sir". Even today in the UK, when someone is Knighted, he is addressed as "Sir" - like Sir Cliff Richard. I doubt many have heard of him in the US.
God bless.
Oh I've heard of Cliff Richard. I don't own any of his music though. But I have just about every thing from Sir. Mick Jagger.
DeleteI can get no ... satisfaction.
DeleteLook up Cliff Richard on this Blog and on You Tube.
God bless.
Hi Victor! I bet I know what they called that knight with the gas problem!!
ReplyDeleteThe names you came up with for the characters here are so funny. What a light-hearted read for this Saturday :)
Blessings,
Ceil
Hello Ceil,
DeleteI can assure you that the names of the Knights of the Round Table are all true and accurate. They all existed. Just ask any carpenter who was around at the time.
God bless.
((( I can assure you that the names of the Knights of the Round Table are all true and accurate. They all existed. Just ask any carpenter who was around at the time. )))
DeleteHey #1 Victor, when you uttered the above, I was a little skeptical. Although sinner vic told me that you were telling the truth, "I" was still a little Mrs. Doubtful so I Googled "IT" and this is what I found below....
https://www.google.ca/webhp?source=search_app#q=Runalot+was+a+knights+of+the+round+table
I guess YA must know what you were talking about cause they had your site in there. (LOL)
God Bless
There ye go ... I am accurate in my History Lessons.
DeleteGod bless.
You have now taught me more than all my history teachers ever did. Sure, they will argue that their lessons were all 100% accurate, but I'd counter with "Yes, but how hard did I laugh during yours??"
ReplyDeleteGod Bless.
Hey, I'm glad you're laughing Michael. Plenty of truths in my Lessons as well as laughter. I have a few more History Lessons written and ready for publications. So see you again here soon.
DeleteGod bless.
This all sounds vaguely familiar...
ReplyDeleteSir Runalot and Sir Laughalot - Were they the knights quoted here?:
Knight 1: We are now no longer the Knights who say Ni.
Knight 2: NI
Other Knights: Shh...
Knight 1: We are now the Knights who say: "Ekki-Ekki-Ekki-Ekki-PTANG. Zoom-Boing. Z'nourrwringmm.
Brilliant, Hand-Maid. I'm sure those two fought for a best place at the Round Table.
DeleteI wonder, at the Round Table, is it better to sit NEXT to the King, (left or right), or opposite the King, so you could see each other eye to eye?
God bless.