Sunday, September 9, 2012

Week 8: The Vulgate Cycle: Clerical Myth?


Walter Map taking down a story of the adventures of the Knights of the Round Table on the quest of the Holy Grail at the dictation of King Arthur, from the Manchester Arthurian Romance, c.1300


The elements of the Vulgate Cycle, comprising The History of the Holy Grail, The Story of Merlin, Lancelot, The Quest of the Holy Grail and The Death of King Arthur, are cleverly interlaced in a number of ways. The last two are linked, or better, locked together, by the introduction of a putative author, Walter Map. Here are the passages which outline this linking; first from the end of The Quest of the Holy Grail,

When they had dined King Arthur summoned his clerks who were keeping a record of all the adventures undergone by the knights of his household. When Bors had related to them the adventures of the Holy Grail as witnessed by himself, they were written down and the record kept  in the library at Salisbury, whence Master Walter Map extracted them in order to make his book of the Holy Grail for love of his lord King Henry, who had the story translated from Latin into French. And with that the tale falls silent and has no more to say about the Adventures of the Holy Grail. 

Next, from the beginning of The Death of King Arthur:

After Master Walter Map had put down in writing as much as he thought sufficient about the Adventures of the Holy Grail, his lord King Henry II felt that what he had done would not be satisfactory unless he told about the rest of the lives of those he had previously mentioned and the deaths of those whose prowess he had related in his book. So he began this last part; and when he had put it together he called it The Death of King Arthur, because the end of it relates how King Arthur was wounded at the battle of Salisbury and left Girflet who had long been his companion, and how no one ever again saw him alive. So Master Walter begins this last part accordingly.

And finally from the end of The Death of King Arthur:

At this point Master Walter Map will end the Story of Lancelot, because he has brought everything to a proper conclusion according to the way it happened; and he finishes his book here so completely that no one can afterwards add anything to the story that is not complete falsehood. 

This seems very convincing evidence that the author of these two last works and perhaps of the cycle as a whole was Master Walter Map. Unfortunately “Map died before the works attributed to him were written”.

The body of Elaine, the Maid of Astolat, arrives at Camelot


BLOG QUESTION: Why would the group of anonymous Cistercian monks responsible for constructing the Vulgate Cycle want to see the work attributed to Walter Map?

5 comments:

  1. From some very brief readings online, it would seem that Walter Map did not hold the Cistercians in very high regard. (www.newadvent.org). According to this source Map's writing was considered as profane literature with only one piece of work being genuinely attributed to him and that was only published after his death due to it's writing on some very high profile figures of the time. Without being sure of when the monks were attributing these works to Map, I would surmise that the purpose was either to make Map look bad in the eyes of the Church, try to prevent him from achieving position of the See of Hereford. Though despite this he is able to achieve Archdeacon of Oxford. It seems as though the monks are indicating that they don't want the work to be associated with them in any way, basically saying "we had no part in this" it must have been done by that Walter Map because his writing is full of nonsense and goes against Church teachings.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I believe the reason why the Cistercian monks attributed the work to Walter Map because the 5 stories partially go against the Christian beliefs and don't quite tie in with the story of Christ. The Holy grail part especially stems away from the traditional Christian story and thus I don't think the monk would want to be apart of that. The reason for attributing it to Walter was probably because he had written the 'mort Artu' and 'queste' and hence became an easy target of which the works could be attributed too regardless if it fitted in terms of his life.

    Ollie

    ReplyDelete
  3. I would argue that the monks wanted to distance themselves from the matireal so they attributed it to Map. As a figure who had held the Cistercians in a low regard, they had a target to place thier ungodly writing on.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I would think that by putting an actual historical figure throughout the stories, it connects them all to each other and gives them more weight and validity. As to why they did not attribute the stories to themselves? Probably because they, as part of the church, wanted to distance themselves away from the work as it did not follow the more christian type tales of Arthur as we usually see.

    ReplyDelete
  5. The monks did not want to take credit for the story of Arthur and the quest for the holy grail, so they attributed it to Walter Map. This way they were only copying and existing work, not claiming it as their own and showing that the Church accepted the myth of Arthur.

    ReplyDelete