Nothing that I have heard about the new cinematic King Arthur — certainly not the prospect of watching Keira Knightley cavort in blue paint — encourages me to see it, but I do approve of the concept of Arthur without the romantic panoply that sprang up around his legend in the Middle Ages. A quasi-historical Arthurian epic would be stripped of Guinevere, Lancelot, knights in armor, the Grail and such like accretions. If Arthur was a real man, he probably (though probabilities are faint in this fog) spoke Latin and Welsh, fought on foot, styled himself "Imperator" and clung to tradition by appointing Roman consuls each year. It would be possible, as several historical novelists have attempted, to devise a stirring (not to mention timely) tale of his struggles to stave off the advancing tide of barbarism.
None of the novels directly devoted to that theme is memorable enough for me to recall at the moment, but I'll use this hook to plug Alfred Duggan, whose Conscience of the King, scheduled for reprinting in the near future, introduces Arthur on its periphery. Its anti-hero Cerdic (reputed ancestor of the Anglo-Saxon kings) is a kind of counter-Arthur, working, albeit unconsciously, to sweep away rather than preserve the shards of the Roman order. Duggan, also a favorite of John Derbyshire, was going out of fashion in my youth, during the general collapse of the market for historicals, but appears to be reviving in these latter days. According to the Amazon U.K. Web site, several of his novels are back in print or will be soon, and used copies are easy to find at ABEBooks. Conscience of the King happens to be one of his best, but I also especially recommend Lord Geoffrey's Fancy (set in Crusader-occupied Greece), Leopards and Lilies (the reign of King John), Count Bohemond (the First Crusade, which was the setting for both this, his last book and his first, Knight With Armor), Winter Quarters (Gallic mercenaries on Rome's Parthian frontier) and Castles and Elephants (a/k/a Besieger of Cities, Demetrios Poliorcetes).
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