
Last modified: 2005-03-12 by marc pasquin
Keywords: bedivere (sir) | galahad (sir) | lancelot (sir) | robin (sir) |
arthur (king) | monty python and the quest for the holy grail | movie |
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Yesterday I watched "Monty Python and the quest for The Holy Grail" (again)
but this time I noticed the flags King Arthur and the knights of the round table
were carrying with them on their quest. To any members who have seen the movie:
Are they 'real' flags or did Monty Python create them ?
Martin
Hawkins, 27 july 1998
The "flags" are presumably supposed to be armorial banners. As a scholar of
"attributed" arms, I can say they appear to be invented off the top-of-the-head
(ESPECIALLY Sir Robin's) I also note sloppiness, where, e.g., Sir Robin's
shield, banner, and caparison have three different versions of what is supposed
to be his arms.
Will Linden, 27 july 1998
On the site «The Knights of the
round table», the attributed arms mentioned by Will are shown (as banners,
or as square shields), and none of them coincides with those used in the movie.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 27 december 2004
The white flag with grinning Sun is King Arthur's.
António
Martins-Tuválkin, 27 december 2004
The white and blue per bend with counterchanged tree flag is Sir Bedivere's.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 27 december 2004
Argent a Cross latin gules (as shown in the banner — in the shield it is a
cross fichy issuant). The banner is vertical, hanging from a crossbar.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 27 december 2004
The livery (worn upon his mailcoat) is party, argent and sable, a gryphon
combattant counterchanged; the banner is identical, but rotated to be a black
over white horizontal bicolor; on the banner the design is apparently reversed
(gryphon's head black on white, while the livery has it white on black).
António Martins-Tuválkin, 27 december 2004
The livery (worn upon his mailcoat) is party, Argent, a Chicken sable, and
chequy vert and argent; on his shield it is quartely chequy, of vert and argent,
and argent; the banner (or is it a pennon?) is very long, not tappering, divided
verically in three parts: chequy, chicken, chequy. Being this «Sir Robin the
Not-Quite-So-Brave-as-Sir Launcelot», these attributed arms are somewhat
canting.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 27 december 2004