Le Morte d'Arthur | Introduction
Although Le Morte d'Arthur is thought to have been written in 1469, the first known publication was in 1485, by William Caxton. Caxton's edition was divided into 21 books and 506 chapters. In 1934 another manuscript was discovered in the Fellows Library of Winchester College. The text of this second manuscript is more fully developed in sections than the earlier known edition and it is divided into ten parts, forming five larger sections. This later manuscript was published in 1947 as The Works of Sir Thomas Malory. This second text, with the divisions into five books, is the text most commonly used text today.
In composing this work, Malory took a body of legends, mostly French in origin, and adapted them to English life, with an English perspective. Malory's sources, dating from 1225-1230, are largely a selection of courtly romances about Launcelot. These stories purport to be historical accounts of King Arthur and his knights and of their quest for the Holy Grail. In addition to the French sources, Malory added material from a fourteenth century English alliterative poem, the Morte Arthur. Although it is probable that a real Arthur did exist (it is a common name), there is little actual historical basis for the stories, which are largely legend and folklore. Many scholars have attempted to prove the veracity of the work, but the attraction of Malory's work has always been the text itself, with its emphasis on courtly love, honor and virtue, valor and devotion, magic and miracles. Le Morte d'Arthur was immediately popular with readers and critics and has remained so. It has been an influential source for many writers, including Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene and Alfred Tennyson's Idylls of the King.
New in Le Morte d'Arthur Group 
- kwoo1213 answered a question:
First there is a love triangle between Arthur, Guinevere, and Lancelot. Lancelot... - amy-lepore answered a question:
One conflict arises from the simple miscommunication of action. Both Mordred and... - linda-allen answered a question:
Two "moral conflicts" help to bring down Camelot, and both deal with... - riveav asked a question:
What moral or other conflicts between different characters and different value... - riveav asked a question:
What moral or other conflicts between different characters and value systems bring...
Join eNotes
Get total access to this content with the:
Le Morte d'Arthur Summary and Analysis – Themes – Characters – And much more...

