
The Making of King Arthur
Simon Armitage traces the evolution of the Arthurian legend through the literature of the medieval age and reveals that King Arthur is not the great national hero we think he is.
Poet Simon Armitage traces the evolution of the Arthurian legend through the literature of the medieval age and reveals that King Arthur is not the great national hero he is usually considered to be. He's a fickle and transitory character who was appropriated by the Normans to justify their conquest, he was cuckolded when French writers began adapting the story, and it took Thomas Malory's masterpiece of English literature, Le Mort d'Arthur, to restore his dignity and reclaim him as the national hero we know today.
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Max Richter
Shadow Journal
Credits
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Presenter | Simon Armitage |
| Writer | Simon Armitage |
| Executive Producer | Jonty Claypole |
| Producer | Matt Hill |
| Director | Matt Hill |
Broadcasts
- Tue 17 Aug 201021:00
- Wed 18 Aug 201003:00
- Wed 18 Aug 201023:30
- Sun 22 Aug 201002:50
- Thu 10 Jan 201300:00
- Thu 10 Jan 201303:00
- Sun 11 Aug 201315:55
- Wed 20 Jan 201602:00
- Wed 19 Oct 201600:30
- Sun 10 Sep 201719:00
- Tue 17 Mar 202000:00
- Wed 23 Jun 202123:00
- Tue 4 Nov 202523:30
- Fri 7 Nov 202502:10
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The Story of the British Isles
The history of the British Isles, from the Romans to the twentieth century.

