Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jn8rn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T00:31:33.089Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Are These the Walls of Camelot?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Extract

The latest despatch from the South Cadbury (Somerset) campaign takes the form of a symposium volume of essays, edited by Geoffrey Ashe. It is a handsome book with a well-chosen range of illustrations, some in colour, and will win popular acclaim as a landmark in British post-Roman studies. Two opening chapters by Mr Ashe ('The Visionary Kingdom' and 'The Arthurian Fact') provide historical summaries of Arthur's background, times, and supposed career, We then have five archaeological contributions. Dr C. A. Ralegh Radford writes on Tintagel and Castle Dore, in Cornwall (Ch. 3), and on his Glastonbury Abbey excavations (Ch. 5). Philip Rahtz deals with his work on Glastonbury Tor (Ch. 6), and Leslie Alcock examines post-Roman Wales (Ch. 4) and the South Cadbury excavations up to the end of 1967 (Ch. 7). This last chapter, the crux of the book, was (rather oddly) edited and arranged by Mr Ashe, who explains (p. ix) that Mr. Alcock 'owing to the pressure of professional duties . . . regrettably had no time to put his material in a form that harmonized with the rest of the book'. There are then four more chapters by Mr Ashe. 'Extending the Map' is concerned with the distribution of Arthurian attributions in folklore and recent times;

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 1969

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Notes

[1] King Arthur’s Avalon: The Story of Glastonbury (Collins, 1957).Google Scholar

[2] From Caesar to Arthur (Collins, 1960).Google Scholar

[3] Hencken, H. O’N., The Archaeology of Cornwall and Scilly (Methuen, 1932), 103.Google Scholar

[4] Whitcombe, Mrs H. P., Bygone Days in Devon & Cornwall (1874), 203Google Scholar: Henderson, C., St Columb Major Church and Parish (1930), 62.Google Scholar

[5] Journ. Celtic Studies, II. 2, Dec. 1958, 1525.Google Scholar

[6] (Ed.) Grisewood, Harman, Epoch and Artist: selected writings by David Jones (Faber, 1959), section III, 189264.Google Scholar

[7] Some Remarks on the Celtic Sources of “Tristan”’, Trans. Hon. Soc. Cymmr., 1953 (1955), 3260 Google Scholar: The Colonization of Brittany from Celtic Britain’ (Rhys Lecture, 1965), Proc. Brit. Acad., LI, 1965, 23599.Google Scholar

[8] Class A as Late Roman B and C, Proc. West Cwll. F.C., II. 5, 1957, 15 Google Scholar: exact East Medit. parallels for Class B, Med. Arch. III, 1959, 91.Google Scholar

[9] (Ed.) Foster, I. Ll. and Alcock, L., Culture and Environment: essays in honour of Sir Cyril Fox, 1963, ch. XI, 281–302Google Scholar; (ed.), Foster, I. Ll. and Daniel, G., Prehistoric and Early Wales (1965), ch. VII, 177–212.Google Scholar

[10] There are too many to list here, but some outstanding puzzles include the Carlwark (antiquity, 1951, 210), Oldaport ( Proc. Devon A.E.S., II. 3, 1935, 213 Google Scholar), and Dunragit ( Trans. Dumfr. Gall. N.H.A.S., XXIX, 1952, 155 Google Scholar).

[11] Antiq. J., XLVIII, 1968, 617.Google Scholar

[12] J. W. Hayes, D. P. S. Peacock, and A. C. Thomas: forthcoming paper, probably in Antiq. J.

[13] Antiquity, 1967, 52.

[14] Chun Castle, Coygan Camp, Congresbury, Dinas Emrys, Dinas Powys, Degannwy, Garranes, and High Peak.