- /ˈmoʊdrɛd/; Welsh:
Medraut or Medrawt) is a
major figure in the
legend of King Arthur. The
earliest known mention of a
possibly historical Medraut is in the Welsh...
- Lot by
their other son Agravain, to the
despair of her and Arthur's son
Medraut.
Marion Zimmer Bradley in her
influential novel The
Mists of
Avalon (1983)...
-
story of
Mordred (here
Medraut),
detailing Medraut's complicated,
intense relationship with his
legitimate half-brother Lleu.
Medraut, the
illegitimate son...
-
which Arthur and
Medraut fell, and
there was
great mortality in
Britain and Ireland." This is also the
first written mention of
Medraut (the
later Mordred)...
-
Cambriae record for the year 537: "The
Battle of Camlann, in
which Arthur and
Medraut fell, and
there was
great mortality in
Britain and Ireland." In Chinese...
- (Phillimore 1888).
There are two
entries in the
Annales on King Arthur, one on
Medraut (Mordred), and one on Merlin.
These entries have been
presented in the...
- is clever, but a poor fighter,
favored by his mother. Finally,
there is
Medraut, who
resembles Lot so
little that many
question his parentage. Lot and...
- to 516–518, and also
mention the
Battle of Camlann, in
which Arthur and
Medraut (Mordred) were both killed,
dated to 537–539.
These details have often...
-
Modredus (Mordred) was made into her
second son (a
status he did not have as
Medraut in the
Welsh material). In the
chivalric romance branch of such common...
- d'Arthur
Abductor of Guinevere.
Mordred Modred (Welsh: Medrawd, Latin:
Medraut)
Annales Cambriae, c. 970 Many In the
Round Table stories, Arthur's illegitimate...