Val sans retour

In Arthurian legend, the Val sans retour (Vale of No Return or Valley Without Return), also known as the Val des faux amants (Vale of False Lovers) or the Val périlleux (Perilous Vale), is a magical domain of Morgan le Fay in the French medieval story recorded in the chivalric romance prose cycle Lancelot-Grail. The legend is associated with an area of that same name, located in northern French Paimpont forest.

Morgain the fairy enchanting the Val in Lancelot en prose (c. 1494)

Legend

In the Arthurian prose romance Lancelot, a part of the 13th-century Vulgate Cycle, the Val is an enchanted land in which Morgane (Morgan), the fairy sister of King Arthur, imprisons her unfaithful lover and then many more knights who have been untrue to their ladies. Her spell was eventually broken by Lancelot, who has always been loyal to Guinevere, who freed all the knights but was then himself captured by Morgane for the first time.[1] The earliest mention of the Val, and of its association with Morgan, is found in the 12th-century Erec and Enide.

Real world location

Val sans retour's "fairy lake" in 2017

The Val sans retour has been identified with an area of the same name near the village of Tréhorenteuc in Brittany, France, which tradition has long held to be the site of the enchanted forest of Brocéliande. Its local legend is the same as the tale from the Vulgate Lancelot.[2][3][4]

gollark: I started up a git server and moved potatOS to it because of the bad changes they badly made.
gollark: Maybe if ender modems were large multiblocks of some sort, or if they could only communicate with stuff at the same X/Y/Z coord across dimensions, or if they could only work with portals nearby or something, we would have CC networking which actually does routing.
gollark: Rednet has the extra thing of IDs, repeaters and its primitive DNS system.
gollark: They are NOT exactly the same.
gollark: Modem is the actual API rednet is built on.

References

  1. "L'origine littéraire du Val sans Retour - Encyclopédie de Brocéliande". broceliande.brecilien.org (in French). Retrieved 2019-05-16.
  2. "Le Val sans Retour". Brocéliande (in French). Retrieved 2018-06-02.
  3. "Le Val sans Retour". Office de Tourisme de Brocéliande (in French). Retrieved 2019-05-22.
  4. "Val sans Retour - site légendaire Brocéliande". Destination Brocéliande en Bretagne (in French). Retrieved 2019-05-22.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.