Agravain

Sir Agravain[lower-alpha 1] (/æɡrævn/) is a Knight of the Round Table in Arthurian legend, whose first known appearance is in the works of Chrétien de Troyes. He is the second eldest son of King Lot of Orkney with one of Arthur's sisters known as Anna or Morgause, thus nephew of King Arthur, and brother to Sir Gawain, Gaheris, and Gareth, as well as half-brother to Mordred.[lower-alpha 2] Agravain secretly makes attempts on the life of his hated brother Gaheris since the Vulgate Cycle, participates in the slayings of Lamorak and Palamedes in the Post-Vulgate Cycle, and murders Dinadan in the Prose Tristan. In the French prose cycle tradition included in Thomas Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur, together with Mordred, he then plays a leading role by exposing his aunt Guinevere's affair with Lancelot, which leads to his death at the hands of Lancelot.

Agravain
Matter of Britain character
In-universe information
TitlePrince, Sir
OccupationKnight of the Round Table
FamilyLot, Morgause, Gawain, Gaheris, Gareth, Mordred
SpouseFlorée or Laurel

Arthurian legend

Agravain's attributed arms

The earliest known appearance of Agravain, as Engrevain the Proud (Old French: li Orgueilleus, modern French: l'Orgueilleux), is found in Chrétien de Troyes' 12th-century romance poem Perceval, the Story of the Grail in which he is one of Gawain's brothers and is also known as the one "with the hard hands" (aus dures mains).[3] The poem's anonymous First Continuation describes him as very quarrelsome. In Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, where he is called "Agravain of the Hard Hand", he is named in a list of respectable knights; this, combined with his unobjectionable depiction in Chrétien's original Perceval, suggests his reputation might not have been very negative prior to his later characterisation.[4]

In the Lancelot-Grail (also known as the Vulgate Cycle) prose works, Agravain is generally portrayed as a handsome man, taller than Gawain, and a skilled warrior. However, unlike his heroic brothers Gawain and Gareth, Agravain is known for malice and villainy, yet sometimes capable of heroic deeds. In the Prose Lancelot part of the Vulgate Cycle, he is described as taller than Gawain, with a "somewhat misshapen" body, "a fine knight" but "arrogant and full of evil words [and] jealous of all other men," "without pity or love and had no good qualities, save for his beauty, his chivalry, and his quick tongue."[5] In the traditional, albeit contested, division of the massive medieval prose Lancelot Proper portion of the Vulgate Cycle into three or four parts,[lower-alpha 3] Agravain has given his name to the last section—roughly the last third of the Lancelot Proper, up to the Quest of the Holy Grail—which begins with "Here the story says that after Agravain had left his companions..." and proceeds to relate an adventure by Agravain.[lower-alpha 4] The division at this point is arbitrary and does not correspond to thematic or narrative logic; and despite giving his name to the section, Agravain plays only a minor part in most of its stories.[8]

In Jean Froissart's Méliador, Agravain courts and marries Florée, a cousin of Princess Hermondine of Scotland, after winning her tournament at Camelot.[9] In Thomas Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur, Arthur marries him with Laurel, a niece of Lynette and Lyonesse.

Narratives

"They fought with him on foot more than three hours." N. C. Wyeth's The Slaying of Sir Lamorak in The Boy's King Arthur (1922)

A major motif regarding Agravain's character in the prose romances is his one-sided conflict with his younger brother, Gaheris. According to the Vulgate Merlin, Gawain and his two full brothers came to court together as squires and were knighted together. In a section following, Agravain brags to his brothers that he would make love to an unwilling damsel if he wanted. When Gaheris responds with a mockery, Agravain attacks him, only to be knocked down by Gawain who rages at Agravain for his proud ways and bullying nature. In the later version from the Post-Vulgate Cycle, Gaheris, by word brought from Merlin, needs to seek for Gawain and free him from captivity. Agravain is very jealous, feeling that Merlin had always unfairly favoured Gaheris, and declares that he could rescue Gawain as well or better. A prophecy says that Gaheris must be knighted first and then should knight his brothers, yet Agravain still insists that he must be knighted only by King Arthur, relying on his age. He then follows secretly his younger brother who sets out on a quest, determined to prove that he is the better knight than Gaheris and to cut his head off. Gaheris defeats and beats up the incognito Agravain twice, including when he was attacked when weary from another fight and unprepared, both times not learning his opponent's true identity but making Agravain stop trying. Years later, upon learning that Gaheris has murdered their mother Morgause, Gawain swears to avenge her. Agravain, for though he had loved his mother, hated Gaheris more and so was glad to see that his brother had done such a deed for which he hoped to see him put to death. However, when Agravain and Mordred are at the point of beheading Gaheris, Gawain decides that they should not take on the shame of killing one who was their brother, forcing them to stop. Together, the Orkney brothers (Agravain, Gawain, Mordred and Gaheris) ambush and murder Morgause's lover Lamorak.

The so-called "Agravain" section of the Vulgate Cycle's Prose Lancelot begins with some minor adventures of Agravain. In one of them, he slays the evil lord Druas the Cruel.[10] The Prose Lancelot ascribes an important adventure of Lancelot which is here retold in the order in which it is supposed to have occurred, rather than the textual order which includes explanations told by Agravain at the end. It tells of Agravain being cursed by two damsels on separate occasions, one for wounding a knight in his in arm and then joking about it and another for trying to force himself on her and then commenting on seeing her infected leg. Later he learns that his love, the daughter of King Tradelmant of North Wales, is seeking for him to rescue her, for her father has bestowed her on a knight whom she does not want. Agravain then manages to win her for himself and joins the Duke of Cambenic, who gives him a castle. He then lives there with lady and with his young half-brother Mordred, who is still a squire. But a curse affects Agravain's left arm and the other his left leg, leaving him to greatly suffer until these limbs are anointed with the blood of the best and the second-best knights alive, respectively. His lady tells him that Gawain must be one of the knights whose blood is needed, but Agravain says there are many knights worthier than Gawain. They nevertheless send for Gawain, and to seek for the knight who carried the day in Galehaut's war with Arthur (that is Lancelot). A messenger brings Gawain who agrees to give blood that heals Agravain's leg, showing that Gawain is the second-best knight alive. Gawain later finds persuades Lancelot, Galehaut, and Lancelot's brother Hector to give their blood. The blood taken from Lancelot does its job, proving that he is indeed the best knight alive.

In the Post-Vulgate Grail Quest, Agravain and Gawain come upon wounded Palamedes. Palamedes protests that he is now a Knight of the Round Table like them and so they should not fight him, but Gawain cares nothing of this Round Table oath and they attack him together. When their opponent is beaten down to near death, Agravain asks Gawain to hold back, which is the only time in the prose cyclic romances when he shows compassion. When Gawain refuses to listen and beheads Palamedes anyway, Agravain says he is grieved because Palamedes was such a good knight and, more practically, because this deed will be hard to conceal. In the Prose Tristan, after the end of the Grail Quest, Agravain and Mordred, who both hate Dinadan, see him coming wounded outside of Camelot and decide it as a good time to take vengeance as Arthur's court believes that Dinadan is still in Cornwall. Dinadan manages to fight them off, but then begins to feel poorly and needs to rest within sight of Camelot. When they reappear, Dinadan is now to weak to stand up to both of them. Mordred knocks him from his horse and Agravain finishes him off. They then say the dying Dinadan was mistaken in blaming them for the attack and it must have been some other knights who murdered him.

Death

"He killed Sir Agrawaine with his first blow, and in a few minutes twelve dead bodies lay around him." Andrew Lang's Tales of the Round Table (1908)

In the Vulgate Cycle and in works based on it, Agravain is one of the knights who realises that Lancelot and Queen Guinevere are secret lovers (in the Vulgate, he and his brothers are told of that by their aunt, Morgan). His envy and hatred of Lancelot lead him to believe that they should tell King Arthur about this. When Arthur happens to wander into the argument, he demands to know what it is that he should not be told about. Agravain tells Arthur about Lancelot and Guenevere, and a plot is hatched according to which Arthur will go hunting all night without taking Lancelot, while Agravain with Mordred and a group of knights will keep watch on the king's wife in order to entrap Lancelot when he comes to her and so prove the accusation. In the Middle English Stanzaic Morte Arthur and in Le Morte d'Arthur, the trapped Lancelot attacks the knights who have lain in wait and kills almost all of them, including Agravain.

In the Vulgate Mort Artu, however, Lancelot only kills one knight (Tanaguins) and the rest, in fear, refuse to attack Lancelot. Agravain is then among the nobles who sentence Guinevere to be burned at the stake, and Arthur tells Agravain to pick knights to serve as a guard during the burning. Agravain agrees, but insists that Arthur order Gaheris to accompany him as one of the party. When Lancelot and his party attack, Lancelot, riding ahead of the others, charges deliberately at Agravain, whom he recognises, and strikes him though his body with his lance. When King Arthur finds Agravain dead, he falls to the ground in a faint, and says (in Norris J. Lacy's modern English version of the Lancelot-Grail): "Oh, fair nephew, how he hated you who stuck you so! Everyone must know that he who deprived my kinsmen of such a knight as you are has inflicted terrible grief on me."[11] Agravain's body is then buried in a very rich tomb in the church at Camelot.

Modern adaptations

By and large, modern works based on Arthurian legend continue to villainize Agravain.

  • Agravaine, not Gaheris, as in Malory, is the Orkney brother responsible for the murder of his mother in what may be the most widely read 20th-century adaptation of the Arthurian legend: T. H. White's The Once and Future King series of books, first released in 1938. White portrays Agravaine as a drunken, bloodthirsty coward, the "bully" of his family (even guilty of killing a unicorn as a child), but also intelligent and not altogether unsympathetic.
  • The pre-Raphaelite poem "The Defence of Guenevere" (1858) by William Morris also identifies Agravaine as his mother's murderer.
  • In the short-story "Sir Agravaine", from P.G. Wodehouse's "The Man Upstairs and Other Stories" (1914), the character Sir Agravaine the Dolorous is presented as an unattractive man of little distinction as a knight, characterised by self-doubt and a defeatist attitude, but intelligent and finally successful.
  • He appears in the British TV series Merlin (2008–2012) in Series 4 as Arthur's contemptuous uncle Agravaine de Bois; while purporting to help guide the prince after his father is incapacitated, Agravaine secretly works with Morgana to overthrow the Pendragons and return her to the throne, presumably acting out of revenge for the deaths of his siblings ("Tristan" and "Ygraine") at hands of King Uther.[12] He is finally killed by Merlin in the Season 4 Finale after he helps Morgana attack Camelot.
  • Conversely, the 1995 movie First Knight presents Agravaine (portrayed by Liam Cunningham) as heroic, an atypical treatment which can be traced to a curious anomaly in Malory; though consistently depicted as an outspoken enemy of the queen, Agravaine is nonetheless chosen as one of Guinevere's knights when she rides out on May Day (a journey that begins the episode dealt with in the film). He is loyal to Arthur and Guinevere and survives at the final battle against Malagant and his army.
  • In the video game Fate/Grand Order he is portrayed as a spy for Morgan who grew to be truly loyal to King Arthur. He is a misogynist due to how Morgan treated him, unaware that his king is also a woman. This hateful disposition towards women is made worst after his discovery of Guinevere's affair with Lancelot. It is stated that he kept the Round Table united in their dislike of him, and that his death marked the beginning of Camelot's fall.
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See also

The Royal Navy's military transport Sir Agravaine during World War II
  • 9503 Agrawain, an asteroid named after Agravain.

Notes

  1. Also spelled Agravaine, Agravains, Agravayn[e], Agrawain[e], Agrawayn[e], Agrevain[s], Agravein[e], Agrauain[s], Agrauayn[e], Aggravains, Aggravayne, Engrevain, etc.
  2. An enumeration of the four brothers (excluding Mordred) can be found in Chrétien's Perceval, the Story of the Grail when Gawain tells the "white-haired queen" (his grandmother Igraine) the names of the four brothers ("Gawain is the oldest, the second Agravain the Proud [...], Gaheriet and Guerehet are the names of the following two."[1] A brief portrait of the five brothers (including Mordred) can be found in the Prose Lancelot.[2]
  3. These divisions are found in some medieval manuscripts and were maintained by some medievalists, such as the 19th-century scholar Alexis Paulin Paris,[6] but others, such as Ferdinand Lot, have criticized them.[7]
  4. In the Norris J. Lacy edition, this corresponds to Lancelot parts V and VI, which begins at chapter 141; in the Micha edition, this corresponds to IV:LXX; in Sommer V:3–9.

References

  1. Verses 8139–8142 in the Dufournet edition; verses 8056–8060 in the Méla edition.
  2. Norris J. Lacy, ed., Lancelot-Grail: Lancelot Parts III and IV, Volume 4 of Lancelot-Grail: The Old French Arthurian Vulgate and Post-Vulgate in Translation, Boydell & Brewer Ltd, 2010, pp. 392–4. ISBN 9781843842354.
  3. Paris, Gaston (1883). "Sir Gawayne and the Green Knight, a comparison with the French Perceval, preceded by an investigation of the author's other works and followed by a characterization of Gawain in english poems. Inaugural dissertation for obtaining the degree of doctor of philosophy, presented before the philosophical Faculty of the University of Zürich by Martha Carey Thomas. 1883". Romania. 12 (46): 376–380.
  4. Paris, Gaston (1883). "Sir Gawayne and the Green Knight, a comparison with the French Perceval, preceded by an investigation of the author's other works and followed by a characterization of Gawain in english poems. Inaugural dissertation for obtaining the degree of doctor of philosophy, presented before the philosophical Faculty of the University of Zürich by Martha Carey Thomas. 1883". Romania. 12 (46): 376–380.
  5. Norris J. Lacy, ed., Lancelot-Grail: Lancelot Parts III and IV p.393.
  6. Marie Luce-Chênerie, Lancelot du Lac: II, Livre de Poche: 1993, p. 6. ISBN 9782253063025.
  7. Ferdinand Lot, Etude sur le Lancelot en prose (1918), p.11.
  8. Ferdinand Lot, ibid.
  9. Lacy, Norris J.; Ashe, Geoffrey; Ihle, Sandra Ness; Kalinke, Marianne E.; Thompson, Raymond H. (2013). The New Arthurian Encyclopedia: New edition. Routledge. ISBN 9781136606328.
  10. Lacy, Norris J. (2010). Lancelot-Grail: Chapter summaries. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. ISBN 9781843842521.
  11. Lacy, Norris (2010). Lancelot-Grail: The Old French Arthurian Vulgate and Post-Vulgate in Translation. Boydell & Brewer, Limited. ISBN 9780859917704.
  12. Storr, Will (30 September 2011). "Merlin, BBC One: behind the scenes". The Telegraph.
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