
Gawain about to exchange a kiss with his host, Bercilak.
Gawain, 2 of 3.



Lionel and Bohort in the Lancelot Propre (La Marche de Gaule)
Claudas, King of the Terre Deserte had conquered the land of Lionel and Bohort, as well as Lancelot when they were children. Their parents were dead or exiled. Lancelot lived with the Lady of the Lake, but Lionel and Bohort had been captured. When one of the Lady of the Lake’s servants arrive during a feast to shame Claudas concerning his treatment of the children, he claims he wants nothing but their good, that he will give them their land back when they come of age, and to prove it he summons them. The Lady gives them flower crowns and jewelry enchanted so that nobody can harm them while they wear it. As a gesture of good faith Claudas gives his cup of wine for Lionel to drink. Bohort screams to him to throw it on the ground, but insted he hits Claudas with it. Then, they proceed to seize a sword and a scepter that were lying around and start waving them around, killing Claudas’ son.
there was a spot for one brief shining moment that was known as Camelot:
SIR ECTOR
Sir Ector, sometimes Hector, Antor, or Ectorius, is the father of Sir Kay and the adoptive father of King Arthur in the Arthurian legend. Sometimes portrayed as a king instead of merely a lord, he has an estate in the country as well as properties in London. Ector appears in the works of Robert de Boron and the Lancelot-Grail Cycle, as well as later adaptations such as the Post-Vulgate Cycle and Thomas Malory’s Le Morte d’Arthur. In these versions, Merlin takes Arthur from his biological parents King Uther Pendragon and Igraine, and brings him to Ector’s estate. Merlin does not reveal the boy’s true identity, and Ector takes him on and raises him with Kay as his own son. When Kay is old enough to be knighted, Ector’s young ward serves as his squire.