Lancelot (Prose cycle)
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- Robreau, Y. L'honneur et la honte, 1981:t.p. (Lancelot-Graal, (XIIe-XIIIe siècles)) p. 1, ftnt. (refers to vast collection of Arthurian prose romances, written between end of 12th and last 1/4 of 13th centuries)
- Arthurian encycl.(Vulgate Cycle, also called the Lancelot-Grail Cycle or the Pseudo-Map Cycle; ca. 1215-1235; 5 prose stories: Estoire del Saint Graal, Estoire de Merlin (or Vulgate Merlin), Lancelot propre (or Lancelot en prose), Queste delSaint Graal, Mort (le roi) Artu)
- Woledge, B. Bib. des romans et nouvelles en prose franç. antérieurs à 1500, 1954(Lancelot (Cycle de); Cycle du Lancelot-Graal, de Gautier Map; Vulgate version of the Arthurian romances)
- Dict. des lettres franç.; le moyen âge(Lancelot-Graal (le Cycle du, ou la "Vulgate arthurienne"; cyclic prose romance composed ca. 1225)
- Bossuat, R. Manuel bibliographique de la litt. franç. du Moyen âge, 1951:p. 180 (Le Lancelot en prose; Lancelot-Graal)
- Lancelot do Lac, 1980:p. v (The name Prose Lancelot is widely used to designate the whole of the great 13th-cent. prose romance otherwise known as the Lancelot-Grail cycle or the Vulgate cycle)
The Lancelot-Grail Cycle, also known as the Vulgate Cycle or the Pseudo-Map Cycle, is an influential 13th-century French Arthurian literary cycle of unknown authorship written in Old French. Consisting of a series of interconnected prose episodes, it is a lengthy faux chronicle-style chivalric romance that retells the legend of King Arthur while focusing on the character of Merlin, the love affair between Lancelot and Guinevere, and the religious quest for the Holy Grail. Expanding on Robert de Boron's "Little Grail Cycle" and the poems of Chrétien de Troyes, the work ties their previously unrelated and disparate stories together into a coherent single tale and supplements them with new material, such as additional details, original characters, and side stories. It also features an ending inspired by the Arthurian chronicle tradition by Geoffrey of Monmouth. There is no unity of time and place within the plot, but most of the episodes take place in Arthur's British kingdom of Logres. One of the main characters is Arthur, around whom gravitates many other heroes, including the Knights of the Round Table. The chief of them is Lancelot, whose chivalric tale is centered around his illicit romance with Arthur's wife, Queen Guinevere. However, the cycle also tells of adventures of a more spiritual type, featuring the Round Table's search for the Holy Grail (the vessel that contained the blood of Christ), until Lancelot's son Galahad ultimately retrieves it. Other major plot-lines include the accounts of the life of Merlin and of the rise and fall of Arthur. After its completion around 1230–1235, the Lancelot–Grail was soon followed by its major reworking known as the Post-Vulgate Cycle. Together, the two prose cycles with their abundance of characters and stories represent a major source of the legend of Arthur as they constituted the most widespread form of Arthurian literature of the late medieval period, during which they were both translated into multiple European languages and rewritten into alternative variants, including having been partially turned into verse. They also inspired various later works of Arthurian romance, eventually contributing to the compilation Le Morte d'Arthur, which formed the basis for a modern canon of Arthuriana.
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