Percival

How Sir Galahad, Sir Bors and Sir Percival were Fed with the Sanc Grael; But Sir Percival's Sister Died by the Way, an 1864 watercolour by Dante Gabriel Rossetti.

Percival (/ˈpɜːrsvəl/) (also spelled Perceval, Percivale, and other variants) is one of King Arthur's legendary Knights of the Round Table. First made famous by the French author Chretien de Troyes, in the tale Conte du Graal (also known simply as Perceval), his story was allotted to the fictional figure of Peredur son of Efwc in the Welsh adaptation of Chretien's tale called Peredur ab Efrawc. He is most well known for being the original hero in the quest for the Grail before being replaced in later literature by Galahad.

Fictional background

Scenes from Perceval, from a medieval illumination.

Chrétien de Troyes wrote the first story of Perceval, le Conte du Graal. Wolfram von Eschenbach's Parzival, Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur, and the now lost Perceval of Robert de Boron are other famous accounts of his adventures.

There are many versions of Perceval's birth. In Robert de Boron's account Saint Graal, he is of noble birth; his father is stated to be either Alain le Gros, King Pellinore or another worthy knight. His mother is usually unnamed but plays a significant role in the stories. His sister is the bearer of the Holy Grail; she is sometimes named Dindrane. In tales where he is Pellinore's son, his brothers are Sir Aglovale, Sir Lamorak and Sir Dornar, and by his father's affair with a peasant woman, he also has a half-brother named Sir Tor.

After the death of his father, Perceval's mother takes him to the forests where she raises him ignorant to the ways of men until the age of 15. Eventually, however, a group of knights passes through his wood, and Perceval is struck by their heroic bearing. Wanting to be a knight himself, the boy leaves home to travel to King Arthur's court. In some versions his mother faints in shock upon seeing her son leave. After proving his worthiness as a warrior, he is knighted and invited to join the Knights of the Round Table.

Knight of the Round Table

In the earliest story about him he is connected to the grail. In Chrétien de Troyes' Perceval, the Story of the Grail, he meets the crippled Fisher King and sees a grail, not yet identified as "holy", but he fails to ask a question that would have healed the injured king. Upon learning of his mistake he vows to find the Grail castle again and fulfill his quest but Chretien's story breaks off soon after, to be continued in a number of different ways by various authors.

In later accounts, the true Grail hero is Galahad, Lancelot's son. But though his role in the romances had been diminished, Percival remained a major character and was one of only two knights (the other was Sir Bors) who accompanied Galahad to the Grail castle and completed the quest with him.

In early versions, Perceval's sweetheart was Blanchefleur and he became the King of Carbonek after healing the Fisher King, but in later versions he was a virgin who died after achieving the Grail. In Wolfram's version, Perceval's son is Lohengrin, the Knight of the Swan.

Parsival (Piercethevale) is the central subject in Trevor Ravencroft's book, "The Cup of Destiny".[1] By Trevor's account, Parsival was known as the "Virgin Knight" but failed in finding the Grail because He missed performing too many of his ritual Sun rites in the morning as for his being physically exhausted because of his sexual frustrations observing the other knights during their romantic encounters at night. This is not the way of a pious spiritual oriented soul that has taken a vow of celibacy but rather of a gallant and much beloved Knight that the ladies of his day all highly praised whose actions demonstrate that of a frustrated man that was born horribly deformed and answers the true reason why his mother had taken him deep into the forest and away from all humankind. He had the Elephant Man malady and likely was not all too pretty a sight. By Trevor's accounting, He and his mother were Manicheans by religion. He didn't obtain the Holy Grail but Sir Galahad did and for which Galahad was rewarded by being ascended up into Heaven by the Angels without having to suffer physical death. (By the estimation of some thus becoming one of the Great White Brotherhood...aka an "Ascended Master") Sir Parsival (Piercethevale) did make up some compensation by finding and retrieving the Spear of Lohengrin then bringing it to Britain. According to Rudolph Steiner and Trevor Ravenscroft, Sir Parsival would be reincarnate in time to be alive at the start of the 21st century and that many Templar Knights that chose to reincarnate along with him in order to assist Parsival's karmic mission of bringing true astrological knowledge to the world and which will subsequently establish the primacy or the first Christian Church founded at Glastonbury by Joseph of Arimathea and James the Just, First Bishop Of Jerusalem which will bring about the fall of the Vatican and the Papacy. Parsival will be known by the attributes of being the "Knight of the Sun, Knight of the Sword, Knight of the Word and He whom reads the Starry Script" There is also a legend that there was a thirteenth seat at the Round Table that was known as the Siege Perilous which was reserved for Judas and no one had ever been allowed to sit in it until Parsival arrived and did so. This is an implication by that unnamed source that Parsival was the reincarnation of Judas and that possibly any of the other Knights had been any of the 12 apostles, if not even all 12 did reincarnate over the two generations of the Knights of the Round Table.

Modern interpretations

Galahad, Bors, and Percival achieve the Grail, a tapestry with figures by Edward Burne-Jones.

In modern times his story has been used in such varied retellings as T. S. Eliot's modernist poem The Waste Land, Richard Wagner's opera Parsifal, John Boorman's Excalibur and the novel and film The Natural.[2] The 1991 movie The Fisher King is, in ways, a modern retelling in which the parallels shift between characters, who themselves discuss the legend. Éric Rohmer's 1978 film Perceval le Gallois is an eccentrically staged interpretation of Chrétien de Troyes's original poem.[3] Parsival or a Knight's Tale, by Richard Monaco, is a re-telling of the Percival legend.[4] The book Parzival by Katherine Patterson is a retelling of the story.

On the BBC television series Merlin,<ref name="Merlin", Season 3, Episode 13, "The Coming of Arthur: Part Two">Jeremy Webb (director) (2010-12-04). Merlin: Season 3, Episode 13, The Coming of Arthur: Part Two (Television Series). "Merlin", Season 3, Episode 13, "The Coming of Arthur: Part Two" at the Internet Movie Database: British Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 2013-08-08. </ref> Percival is a large, strong commoner. After helping to free Camelot from the occupation of Morgana, Morgause, and their immortal army (which is supplied by a grail-like goblet called the Cup of Life), he is knighted along with Lancelot, Elyan and Gwaine, against the common practice that knights are only of noble birth. He is also one of the few Round Table knights to survive Arthur's death.<ref name="Merlin", Season 5, Episode 13, "The Diamond of the Day: Part Two">Justin Molotnikov (director) (2012-12-24). Merlin: Season 5, Episode 13, The Diamond of the Day: Part Two (Television Series). "Merlin", Season 5, Episode 13, "The Diamond of the Day: Part Two" at the Internet Movie Database: British Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 2013-08-08. </ref>

In the comic books based on the television series Gargoyles, Peredur fab Ragnal (Percival's Welsh name) achieves the Holy Grail and becomes the Fisher King. To honor his mentor, Arthur, he establishes a secret order who will guide the world to greater prosperity and progress, which eventually becomes the Illuminati. Part of achieving the Holy Grail is the bestowal of immense longevity - bordering on immortality - upon Peredur and his wife, Fleur (born as "Blanchefleur"), along with certain other members of the order being granted longer lifespans. He is still alive and even appears young by 1996, when his organization comes into conflict with the re-awakened Arthur and the other characters of the Gargoyles story.[5]

A version of Percival appears in Season 5 of the American TV series Once Upon A Time. He acts against Regina without Arthur's consent.

The main character of Ernest Cline's novel Ready Player One names his virtual reality avatar "Parzival" as a reference to Percival and a to his role in Arthurian legend.

Notes

  1. Trevor Ravencrofts book, "The Cup of Destiny"
  2. Barry Levinson (director) (2007-04-03). Knights in Shining Armor (Documentary). Sony Pictures Entertainment.
  3. Lacy, Norris J. (1991). "Eric Rohmer". In Norris J. Lacy (Ed.), The New Arthurian Encyclopedia, p. 389. New York: Garland. ISBN 0-8240-4377-4.
  4. Fries, Maureen, and Thompson, Raymond H. (1991). "Richard Monaco". In Norris J. Lacy (Ed.), The New Arthurian Encyclopedia p. 326. New York: Garland. ISBN 0-8240-4377-4.
  5. Gargoyles: Clan-Building - Vol 2, #7 - "The Rock" - ISBN 978-1593621674

References

External links

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