Camelot
Figures of Power, Loyalty, and Betrayal
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- $2.99
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- $2.99
Publisher Description
Camelot examines the legendary kingdom of King Arthur as a cornerstone of medieval British tradition, cultural memory, and historical belief. Rather than presenting Camelot as fantasy, this volume explores how the idea of Camelot emerged from post-Roman Britain and evolved through early medieval chronicles, oral tradition, and later literary accounts.
Within these reconstructed files, readers encounter key figures such as King Arthur, Queen Guinevere, Merlin, Lancelot, Gawain, Percival, and Mordred, alongside defining institutions including the Round Table, Camelot itself, Avalon, and the ideals of chivalry, loyalty, and kingship. Each entry places these people and places within their historical and cultural context, examining how they reflected medieval values, political authority, and social order.
The book traces how Camelot came to symbolize a just kingdom, the tension between power and morality, and the fragile balance between unity and betrayal. Drawing from medieval sources and long-standing tradition, Camelot is presented as a legendary historical framework that shaped Britain’s identity rather than a single fixed narrative.
Designed as a visual, digital-first reference, this book displays beautifully on phones and tablets, with concise, easy-to-digest entries ideal for pick-up-and-go reading. Whether explored sequentially or opened at random, each section reads like a recovered historical file from a kingdom that continues to influence Western culture.
Camelot is part of The Computer Files series, a visual archive dedicated to exploring history, belief systems, and legendary traditions through structured documentation rather than fiction.