Cath Palug

Cath Palug, also Cath Paluc, Cath Balug, Cath Balwg, Chapalu, Capalu, or Capalus, literally "Palug's cat", or maybe from the Welsh 'palug,' meaning 'clawing,' was a monstrous cat in French and Welsh legend. It was said to haunt the Isle of Anglesey, and to have killed and eaten nine score warriors.

Welsh writings

French writings

The french versions relate a battle between King Arthur himself and the Chapalu. Sometimes the beast wins, sometimes King Arthur wins.

German writings

Representation

The fight between King Arthur and Cath Palug is figurated on a moisaic in the Cathedral of Otranto[6]

Localisation

The french tradition associates it with the Mont du Chat in the Savoie region of France, near Lake Geneva, where Arthur was defeated by the Cat in a battle fought in a swamp (pallu) near that mountain.

The welsh tradition gives as localisation the Isle of Anglesey but born at Llanveir.

The Cath Palug is always localised nearby water ; lake of Bourget and Lake of Geneva in France, the sea in Wales.

References

  1. Bromwich, Rachel (ed), Trioedd Ynys Prydain (Cardiff, University of Wales Press, 1964), Triad 23: Three Powerful Swineherds of the Island of Britain.
  2. "The Black Book of Carmarthen". National Library of Wales. Retrieved 29 May 2014.
  3. Carolyne Larrington, King Arthur's enchantresses Morgan and her sisters in Arthurian tradition, London New York, I.B. Tauris, 2006 (ISBN 978-1-845-11113-7)
  4. Terry, Patricia; Nancy Vine (1993). The Romance of the Rose or Guillaume De Dole. U of Pennsylvania P. ISBN 0-8122-1388-2
  5. The article Holger Danske in Nordisk familjebok (1909)
  6. Helmut Nickel, « About Palug's cat and the mosaic of Otranto » dans Arthurian Interpretations, vol. 3, No. 2, sommer 1989, p. 96-105

External links

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