- King Lot
Lot or Loth is king of
Lothian ,Orkney , and sometimesNorway in theArthurian legend . He isKing Arthur 's brother-in-law and early enemy. The character is possibly derived from a historical personage.Lot appears in all cyclical Arthurian literature from
Geoffrey of Monmouth 's "Historia Regum Britanniae " on, and his story is remarkably consistent. AfterUther Pendragon marriesIgraine , he weds her eldest daughterMorgause (also called Anna) to Lot. Their marriage produces a number of sons, namelyGawain ,Agravain ,Gaheris ,Gareth , and in earlier literature,Mordred as well. Early in Arthur's reign Lot and other kings oppose him, though his sons object. After initial battles Arthur defeats the rebels decisively and incorporates their lands.In the
Vulgate Cycle and Geoffrey of Monmouth, Lot and the young king are reconciled after the final battle and Lot enthusiastically joins his brother-in-law's service. Indeed, Lot appears in many romances as Arthur's staunch ally. In thePost-Vulgate andThomas Malory 's "Le Morte d'Arthur " however, Lot is killed during the last battle byKing Pellinore , sparking a blood feud between Lot's kin and Pellinore's.The Welsh know Lot by a variety of names. Sometimes he is called Lot Luwddoc (Lot of the Host), elsewhere he is Llew ap Cynfarch. In "
Culhwch and Olwen " Gwalchmai (Gawain) is son of Gwyar, who may be either his mother or his father. In Geoffrey Lot is said to be brother ofUrien Rheged and Auguselus ofScotland . His name is probably derived from his kingdom (Lothian), likeCorin ofCornwall and other characters from Geoffrey of Monmouth.Thorfinn Skull-Splitter , a Norse king ofOrkney in the 10th century, had a son named Ljot, which may have led to the connection of a Lothian king to Orkney and Norway. According to the local tradition ofCaithness , across thePentland Firth from the Orkney islands, astanding stone called theStone Lud was erected to mark the grave of Ljot, son of Thofinn Skull-Splitter, after he died from the wounds of a battle in Caithness.Lot was said to descend from
Catuvellauni chiefCaractacus of Iron Age Britain. As some suggest it is possible Lot was a late incarnation of the British god/heroLludd Llaw Eraint , though there is little remaining similarity between the characters beyond the names.In Scottish folklore the semi-legendary King Lot (Leudonus) was a ruler of the
Gododdin , based atTraprain Law . In the "Life" ofSaint Mungo (Kentigern), the legendary founder ofGlasgow , Lot is the father of Mungo's motherTheneva .ee also
*
List of Arthurian characters
*Stone Lud External links
* [http://www.earlybritishkingdoms.com/bios/lot.html Early British Kingdoms entry on Lot of Lothian]
* [http://www.earlybritishkingdoms.com/bios/lotgn.html Early British Kingdoms entry on Lot Luwddoc]References
*"Celtic Myths and Legends", Charles Squire (1912) ISBN 0-7525-2676-6
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