King Arthur’s Last Battle: Arthur’s Death in America

£19.95

PART I  ARTHUR IN BRITAIN

1  Arthurian Texts

2  Gildas

3  Arthur

4  Arthur’s Father

5  Arthur’s Bard

6  Catastrophe in Scotland

 

PART II   THE VOYAGE AND AFTERMATH

7  Disastrous Voyage to America

8  The Killing of Arthur

9  Decline in Arthur’s Kingdom

 

PART III   AMERICAN CLAIMS

10  Madoc

11  Inscriptions on Stone

12  Pre-Columbian white people in America

13  Irishman in West Virginia, AD 710

14  Ancient Roman coins in America

15  Arthur in America

SKU: 9780994510242 Categories: ,
Binding: Perfect Bound
Pages: 392Author: Robert MacCann
 

Description

This new study resolves important historical issues and shows that the current idea that Arthur was a myth is unlikely to be true. Robert MacCann places Arthur into a historical setting where his relationship to known kings is established, his location is shown, and his dating to the late 400s – early 500s is confirmed.

  • Building on the work of Welsh historian, John Lloyd, he identifies Arthur’s father, Uthr, with Einion Yrth, who conquered the Irish in north Wales. He shows that the epithets Uthr and Yrth have the same meaning and that Uthr and Einion lived at the same time and same location, in Rhôs, north Wales.
  • Robert MacCann investigates the Merlin figure and the historical poet, Taliesin and shows that neither was connected to the historical Arthur. From the work of Geraint Gruffydd he identifies Arthur’s bard as Talhaearn, who was called the ‘father of (poetic) inspiration’ and was the leading bard of the sixth century.
  • The heart of MacCann’s thesis is Arthur’s tragic voyage to Annwfyn, identified from features in the poetry as America. He brings together all the early poetic and prose sources to give a complete picture of Arthur’s death.
  • Arthur’s time was one of climate disasters. The first in AD 531 was probably caused by clumping in Halley’s meteoroid trail and the other in 536 by volcanic eruptions. The latter caused cold conditions, followed in Wales by the Yellow Pestilence. Arthur’s mysterious death and these disasters led to the view that he was ill-fated and to a superstition in Wales against using his name.
  • He analyzes claims for pre-Columbian visits to America: Madoc; the Irish in West Virginia; the slaughter of a white people in Kentucky; the DNA of bones dated to 710, found near ‘Ogam’ marks on rock; and ancient Roman coins found in America.

Additional information

Weight0.595 kg
Dimensions23.4 × 15.6 × 2.2 cm

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