The Round Table

The Round Table Hanging In Winchester
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082 Maladorn
Who was this little known character of Camelot?  Find out in "Read More" but plan on falling in love with this traditional template design!  Maladorn works very well in all color combinations and settings!
 
 

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691 Gaheris
One of the stalwart knights of the Round Table and one of the "Orkney Brothers".  A wonderful design in any color combination and setting.

 


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692 Accolon
Accolon de Gaul, the lover of Morgan le Fay and the challenger to Arthur with the stolen Excalibur!  A lovely design in any color combination and very dimensional.


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259 Mordred
A simple and beautiful design for framing or any project a quilter can dream up.

 

 

 

 

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695 Tristan
The love affair that preceded Camelot!  Tristan and Isolt!  This block  is a charmer with easy to do seams so that quilters may concentrate on color combinations and settings. 


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260 Lancelot
This is a great design for quilters of all skill levels!  Fast and easy, the block does have secondary designs should quilters not want to emphasize the small hearts.

 

 

 

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261 Gawaine
A lovely block with dimensional stars, lattice and other secondary designs.  It works in any color combination and setting.

 

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548 Sir Cei
Named for the stalwart and true Knight of Camelot -- this block performs!

 

 

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100 Camelot Roads
Fast and fun and oh! the settings you can come up with this one!  Great over all designs and secondary effects too!

 

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564 Castle Chambers
A wonderful design that even novice quilters will enjoy!  Great in any setting or color combination.

 

 

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The Round Table
Winchester, Hampshire England


A rather obscure Arthurian legend relates that the Round Table was made by an expert wood worker named Maladorn.  Maladorn had 'sinned grievously' against Leogredance, Guenivere's father and after prayer and other penance failed to redeem him, Maladorn was told by God to build the Round Table. The instructions for the table's construction included hundreds of 'exotic' woods as well as stones that were to be inlaid into specific designs that, at that time, had no meaning to either Maladorn or Leogredance.  The Round Table took many years to complete and was completed just as Lancelot arrived to take Guenivere to Camelot and Arthur so it was sent as a wedding gift to Arthur.  It was then noted that the inlaid designs corresponded with the emblems of the various knights - all but the one in front of the so called Siege Perilous that would later be occupied by Lancelot's son.


Accounts differ about the origin of the Round Table, at which Arthur's knights met to tell of their deeds and from which they invariably set forth in search of further adventures. The Norman chronicler Wace was the first to mention it, in his Roman de Brut of 1155. There, he simply says that Arthur devised the idea of using a round table to prevent quarrels between his barons over the question of precedence. Another writer, Layamon,  adapted Wace's account and added to it, describing a quarrel between Arthur's lords which was settled by a Cornish carpenter who, on hearing of the problem, created a portable table which could seat 1600 men. Both Wace and Layamon refer to Breton story-tellers as their source for this and there is little reason to doubt them. This being the case, the origins of the table may well date back to Celtic times, and even be traceable to the age of Arthur himself. In the later medieval stories, however, it is Merlin who is responsible for the creation of the table. Malory, taking up the theme and developing it, made it the center-piece of his epic re-telling.



The large wooden table in the Great Hall at Winchester dates from no earlier than the thirteenth century, when it may have been made at the command of King Edward III, who was considering a revival of the Round Table as an order of chivalry. In the end, he dropped the idea and created the Order of Garter instead, but the table remains. Made of oak, it is 18 feet across and nearly 3 inches thick. It weighs nearly 1.25 tons.  

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