jusplay4fun wrote:jimboston wrote:jonesthecurl wrote:My Dad used to tell me that when he was a kid the Welsh-speakers could converse (with a little confusion) with visitng Bretons,
Incidentally, when I got into conversations about King Arthur, the locals were amazed that we thought he lived in Britain, not Brittany.
Yet he lived in neither.
Most of the current theories suggest that King Arthur was a real person, likely a conscript and leader in the Roman Legion, living in Britain (before the Anglo-Saxon-Jute invasions) as Roman forces were pulled out of Brittania. He stayed behind to help the native Celts/Bretons fight the Anglo-Saxon-Jute invaders. I cannot recall when his exploits were written down; I think they were "adopted" by the Normans to validate their conquest of Britain, starting in 1066.
Everything I’ve read, every show I’ve watched, every podcast I’ve listened to on the subject… all disagree with your assertion.
Google it…
https://www.google.com/search?q=was+kin ... ent=safari
Some people do believe that King Arthur could have been a real person, but despite the occasional news story about an archaeological discovery that may provide clues, experts on Arthurian legend tell TIME that there is no evidence — no primary source from the time — to confirm that King Arthur was ever a real person.
Methinks this is ANOTHER example of JP4 reading one website article on the subject, assuming it’s right, and then quoting it forevermore as if it’s a fact he’s personally researched.