
"How Mordred was Slain by Arthur, and How by Him Arthur was Hurt to the Death", by
Arthur Rackham
The 'Battle of Camlann' (''Cad Camlan'' in
Welsh) is best known as the final battle of
King Arthur, where he either died in battle, or was fatally wounded. As the surviving accounts of this battle are all generally little more than
legend or
myth (and all versions exhibit traces of
folklore), some historians doubt this battle even took place. In most non-contemporary accounts, the battle was caused by a knight on one side who drew blade against orders to kill a snake. As the unsheathing of cold steel was against the rules of the truce, and the metal shone, one army thought the other was breaking the truce. Both armies subsequently charged at each other, beginning the battle in earnest. Older Welsh tradition has the battle as the outcome of a feud between Arthur and
Medrod (Mordred) with its origins in a quarrel between Arthur's wife Gwenhwyfar (later
Guinevere) and her sister
Gwenhwyfach.
Historicity
The earliest known reference to this battle, however, is the entry in the ''
Annales Cambriae'' for the year 537, which does not specify that Arthur and Mordred were on opposite sides:
:'' Gueith camlann in qua Arthur et Medraut corruerunt.''
:(''The Strife of Camlann in which Arthur and Medraut (Mordred) perished".'')
Later accounts of this battle are in
Geoffrey of Monmouth's ''
Historia Regum Britanniae'', the ''
Alliterative Morte Arthure'', and in the 13th century
Welsh tale ''
The Dream of Rhonabwy''.
The location of the battle is unknown, but several candidates exist. One possible site is
Queen Camel in
Somerset which is close to the
hill fort near
South Cadbury (identified by some with King Arthur's
Camelot), where the River Cam flows beneath Camel Hill and Annis Hill. The site most consistent with the theory of a northern Arthur is the
Roman fort called, in
Latin, 'Camboglanna'. When this theory was first put forward, this was identified as
Birdoswald, but has since been accepted as nearby
Castlesteads. Other identifications have been offered, the
River Camel along the border of
Cornwall,
Camelon (now part of Falkirk) in
Scotland and the River Camlan in
Eifionydd in
Wales.
Often Camlann is confused with Camalot itself, especially in newer retellings of the Arthurian saga, such as
Elizabeth Wein's
The Winter Prince.
References
★ Hunt, A. (2005).
From Glein to Camlann: The life and death of King Arthur. ''Vortigern Studies''.