The Three Days' Tournament: A Study in Romance and Folk-Lore

audiobook

The Three Days' Tournament: A Study in Romance and Folk-Lore

by Jessie L. (Jessie Laidlay) Weston

EN·~1 hours·10 chapters

Chapters

10 total
1

THE Three Days’ Tournament

0:19
2

PREFACE

10:19
3

THE THREE DAYS’ TOURNAMENT - I

20:52
4

CLIGÉS

10:51
5

THE FOLK-TALE

21:04
6

THE ROMANCE

14:34
7

THE BEARING ON THE LANCELOT STORY

11:56
8

EVIDENCE FOR AN INSULAR VERSION OF THE ROMANCE

14:07
9

Footnotes

8:50
10

Transcriber’s Notes

0:38

Description

A scholarly journey into one of the most celebrated episodes of the Arthurian cycle, this study examines the Three Days’ Tournament as both a romance and a piece of ancient folk‑lore. Framed as an appendix to earlier work on Sir Lancelot, it invites listeners to trace the tale’s evolution from oral tradition to medieval manuscript, revealing the layers of myth that have shaped its enduring appeal.

The author challenges conventional criticism by arguing that the core of these legends rests on deeply Celtic foundations rather than later French embellishments. Through careful comparison of surviving texts, the work suggests that many of the stories already existed in a coherent, romantic form long before they were formally written down. Listeners will gain a nuanced perspective on the methodological hurdles of Arthurian scholarship and the rich cultural currents that continue to inform the legend’s timeless resonance.

Details

Full title

The Three Days' Tournament: A Study in Romance and Folk-Lore Being an Appendix to the Author's 'Legend of Sir Lancelot'

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (109K characters)

Series

Grimm library, no. 15

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chris Curnow, Stephen Hutcheson, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2014-08-20

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

JL

Jessie L. (Jessie Laidlay) Weston

1850–1928

A pioneering guide to the legends of King Arthur, the Holy Grail, and the strange mix of myth and ritual behind them. Her work helped shape how modern readers imagine medieval romance and even influenced T. S. Eliot's reading of myth.

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