Geraint The Son Of Erbin
Geraint The Son Of Erbin is a tale from the Mabinogion. The following translation by Lady Charlotte Guest was published in 1877.
Folklore / Folktales / King Arthur / Legends / Welsh Folktales
by Ian · Published March 15, 2012 · Last modified December 31, 2018
Geraint The Son Of Erbin is a tale from the Mabinogion. The following translation by Lady Charlotte Guest was published in 1877.
Folklore / Folktales / King Arthur / Legends / Welsh Folktales
by Ian · Published March 4, 2012 · Last modified December 31, 2018
Peredur The Son Of Evrawc is one the tales in the Mabinogion. This English translation by Lady Charlotte Guest was published in 1877.
Folklore / Folktales / King Arthur / Legends / Welsh Folktales
by Ian · Published March 2, 2012 · Last modified December 31, 2018
The Lady Of The Fountain is one the tales in the Mabinogion. This English translation by Lady Charlotte Guest was published in 1877.
Folklore / Folktales / King Arthur / Legends / Welsh Folktales
by Ian · Published March 17, 2011 · Last modified December 31, 2018
The following is the tale of Kilhwch and Olwen or the Twrch Trwyth as told by Lady Charlotte Guest in her 1877 translation of The Mabinogion.
Aquatic Monsters / Cryptozoology
by Ian · Published April 12, 2009 · Last modified November 15, 2018
Lake Memphremagog (meaning "where there is a big expanse of water" in native Algonkian) is a thin twenty seven mile long freshwater glacial lake which some believe is the home to a huge serpent like creature known as Memphré. Lake Memphremagog spans across the border between Canada and the United States of America.
Ancient Sites / King Arthur / Legends / Roman
by Ian · Published September 11, 2008 · Last modified December 31, 2018
This is the best example of a Roman amphitheatre in Britain. Until 1926 when serious excavations were undertaken at the site, it was considered to be a circular earthwork and linked to the legend of King Arthur being known as his Round Table.
Carisbrooke castle is one of the most impressive historic sites on the Isle of Wight, and was the chief medieval stronghold on the Isle of Wight, so much so that tradition asserts that whoever owned the castle also controlled the Isle of Wight.
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