Avalon
by
Brian Edward Rise
According
to Geoffrey of Monmouth, the enchanted isle where Arthur's
sword was forged and where he is conveyed after his last
battle to be healed. Geoffrey calls it Insuls Avallonis
which he translates as "isle of apples," apples no doubt
being a paradisal symbol in contrast to the Welsh Ynys Avallach
which supposedly takes it's name from it's lord, Avallach.
Geoffrey
writes more at length on Avalon in his "Vita Merlini" than
in the Historia. He likens it to the Fortunate Isles of
classical myth but over western waters.
Presided
over by Morgen (Morgan le Fay),
a kind enchantress and healer who leads a sisterhood of
nine. This description echoes the Welsh poem "The Spoils
of Annwfn" with it's nine Otherworld maidens and real groups
of island dwelling Celtic priestesses like those noted by
Plutarch in the first century CE.
Arthur
is placed on a golden bed and can only be healed by entrusting
his care to Morgen completely for a long time.
Avalon
if often taken as a refuge of spirits but the point of Arthur's
residence there is that he is not dead, but magically alive
and awaiting the moment of his return.
In
1191, when the monks of Glastonbury uncovered the "tomb"
of Arthur, they claimed that Glastonbury Tor, which resonated
with an aura of pagan uneasiness, was the famed isle for
it was once almost encircled by water. The association passed
into Grail literature that drew on Glastonbury's ancient
Christian history (It is said that this was the monastery
founded by Joseph of Arimathea who, bearing the Holy Grail,
allegedly came to Britain after the crucifixion).
Thus
there are two meaning attached to Avalon; that of Glastonbury
and that of mystical otherworld. In both examples it is
the final resting place of the King but at Glastonbury it
is his burial site and the other is the place of his healing
and retreat from the world as well as the source of his
immortality.
from
the Encyclopedia
Mythica
(see Sources), please visit
their site for much more!