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Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, just EVERYONE Arthurian being black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black-mulatto Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on, and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (at least 2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguously Saracen and pagan (probably Arabic and Muslim, maybe Jewish). They just always ignore them because their names aren't the few household ones. Such as,

Sir Palamedes (var. Palomedes, Palomides, Palamede, and Palomydes) is a minor figure within the literary Arthurian tradition. He is a Saracen knight of the Round Table; unbaptised and thus technically a pagan, but a true Christian at heart; a courtly lover who never achieves his desires; a figure of eternal chivalry in his pursuit of the Questing Beast. (...) Perhaps a portion of the fascination the Palamedes of the Prose Tristan has held for critics and writers is due to his narrative positioning as both outsider and insider who is nevertheless effectual. (...) Since he is aware of the near-impossibility of ever winning his beloved and yet continues to adore her despite her rejection of his love, Palamedes is arguably one of the few true courtly lovers in the Arthurian stories. In this sense, his love for her is the pure embodiment of the courtly ideal. (...) The history of the literary Palomedes is long and varied, stretching from the 13th century to the present day. With the resurgence of academic and popular interest in the troubled hero, Palomedes' own popularity has begun to increase. There are many new novels, plays, and poems featuring the character; each presents a different aspect of the tradition, permitting Palomedes to change and adapt to the needs and demands of different audiences in different times.

Not movies and no television lol

Btw Chretien de Troyes might have been a converted Jew who created the Holy Grail motif as a symbol for the need to convert the other Jews to Christianity (https://www.jstor.org/stable/460649).

1 year ago
6 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, just EVERYONE Arthurian being black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black-mulatto Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on, and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (at least 2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguously Saracen and pagan (probably Arabic and Muslim, maybe Jewish). They just always ignore them because their names aren't the few household ones. Such as,

Sir Palamedes (var. Palomedes, Palomides, Palamede, and Palomydes) is a minor figure within the literary Arthurian tradition. He is a Saracen knight of the Round Table; unbaptised and thus technically a pagan, but a true Christian at heart; a courtly lover who never achieves his desires; a figure of eternal chivalry in his pursuit of the Questing Beast. (...) Perhaps a portion of the fascination the Palamedes of the Prose Tristan has held for critics and writers is due to his narrative positioning as both outsider and insider who is nevertheless effectual. (...) Since he is aware of the near-impossibility of ever winning his beloved and yet continues to adore her despite her rejection of his love, Palamedes is arguably one of the few true courtly lovers in the Arthurian stories. In this sense, his love for her is the pure embodiment of the courtly ideal. (...) The history of the literary Palomedes is long and varied, stretching from the 13th century to the present day. With the resurgence of academic and popular interest in the troubled hero, Palomedes' own popularity has begun to increase. There are many new novels, plays, and poems featuring the character; each presents a different aspect of the tradition, permitting Palomedes to change and adapt to the needs and demands of different audiences in different times.

Not movies and no television lol

1 year ago
6 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, just EVERYONE Arthurian being black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black-mulatto Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on, and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (at least 2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguously Saracen and pagan (probably Arabic and Muslim, maybe Jewish). They just always ignore them because their names aren't the few household ones. Such as,

Sir Palamedes (var. Palomedes, Palomides, Palamede, and Palomydes) is a minor figure within the literary Arthurian tradition. Palomedes first appears in the 13th century. He is a Saracen knight of the Round Table; unbaptised and thus technically a pagan, but a true Christian at heart; a courtly lover who never achieves his desires; a figure of eternal chivalry in his pursuit of the Questing Beast. (...) Perhaps a portion of the fascination the Palamedes of the Prose Tristan has held for critics and writers is due to his narrative positioning as both outsider and insider who is nevertheless effectual. (...) Since he is aware of the near-impossibility of ever winning his beloved and yet continues to adore her despite her rejection of his love, Palamedes is arguably one of the few true courtly lovers in the Arthurian stories. In this sense, his love for her is the pure embodiment of the courtly ideal. (...) The history of the literary Palomedes is long and varied, stretching from the 13th century to the present day. With the resurgence of academic and popular interest in the troubled hero, Palomedes' own popularity has begun to increase. There are many new novels, plays, and poems featuring the character; each presents a different aspect of the tradition, permitting Palomedes to change and adapt to the needs and demands of different audiences in different times.

Not movies and no television lol

1 year ago
4 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black-mulatto Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on, and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (at least 2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguously Saracen and pagan (probably Arabic and Muslim, maybe Jewish). They just always ignore them because their names aren't the few household ones. Such as,

Sir Palamedes (var. Palomedes, Palomides, Palamede, and Palomydes) is a minor figure within the literary Arthurian tradition. Palomedes first appears in the 13th century. He is a Saracen knight of the Round Table; unbaptised and thus technically a pagan, but a true Christian at heart; a courtly lover who never achieves his desires; a figure of eternal chivalry in his pursuit of the Questing Beast. (...) Perhaps a portion of the fascination the Palamedes of the Prose Tristan has held for critics and writers is due to his narrative positioning as both outsider and insider who is nevertheless effectual. (...) Since he is aware of the near-impossibility of ever winning his beloved and yet continues to adore her despite her rejection of his love, Palamedes is arguably one of the few true courtly lovers in the Arthurian stories. In this sense, his love for her is the pure embodiment of the courtly ideal. (...) The history of the literary Palomedes is long and varied, stretching from the 13th century to the present day. With the resurgence of academic and popular interest in the troubled hero, Palomedes' own popularity has begun to increase. There are many new novels, plays, and poems featuring the character; each presents a different aspect of the tradition, permitting Palomedes to change and adapt to the needs and demands of different audiences in different times.

Not movies and no television lol

1 year ago
3 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black-mulatto Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on, and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (at least 2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguously Saracen and pagan (probably Arabic and Muslim, maybe Jewish). They just always ignore them because their names aren't the few household ones. Such as,

Sir Palamedes (var. Palomedes, Palomides, Palamede, and Palomydes) is a minor figure within the literary Arthurian tradition. Palomedes first appears in the 13th century. He is a Saracen knight of the Round Table; unbaptised and thus technically a pagan, but a true Christian at heart; a courtly lover who never achieves his desires; a figure of eternal chivalry in his pursuit of the Questing Beast. (...) Perhaps a portion of the fascination the Palamedes of the Prose Tristan has held for critics and writers is due to his narrative positioning as both outsider and insider who is nevertheless effectual. (...) Since he is aware of the near-impossibility of ever winning his beloved and yet continues to adore her despite her rejection of his love, Palamedes is arguably one of the few true courtly lovers in the Arthurian stories. In this sense, his love for her is the pure embodiment of the courtly ideal. (...) The history of the literary Palomedes is long and varied, stretching from the 13th century to the present day. With the resurgence of academic and popular interest in the troubled hero, Palomedes' own popularity has begun to increase. There are many new novels, plays, and poems featuring the character; each presents a different aspect of the tradition, permitting Palomedes to change and adapt to the needs and demands of different audiences in different times.

Not movies and no television lol

1 year ago
3 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black-mulatto Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on, and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (at least 2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguously Saracen and pagan (probably Arabic and Muslim, maybe Jewish). They just always ignore them because their names aren't the few household ones.

Sir Palamedes (var. Palomedes, Palomides, Palamede, and Palomydes) is a minor figure within the literary Arthurian tradition. Palomedes first appears in the 13th century. He is a Saracen knight of the Round Table; unbaptised and thus technically a pagan, but a true Christian at heart; a courtly lover who never achieves his desires; a figure of eternal chivalry in his pursuit of the Questing Beast. (...) Perhaps a portion of the fascination the Palamedes of the Prose Tristan has held for critics and writers is due to his narrative positioning as both outsider and insider who is nevertheless effectual. (...) Since he is aware of the near-impossibility of ever winning his beloved and yet continues to adore her despite her rejection of his love, Palamedes is arguably one of the few true courtly lovers in the Arthurian stories. In this sense, his love for her is the pure embodiment of the courtly ideal. (...) The history of the literary Palomedes is long and varied, stretching from the 13th century to the present day. With the resurgence of academic and popular interest in the troubled hero, Palomedes' own popularity has begun to increase. There are many new novels, plays, and poems featuring the character; each presents a different aspect of the tradition, permitting Palomedes to change and adapt to the needs and demands of different audiences in different times.

Not movies and no television lol

1 year ago
3 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black-mulatto Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on, and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (at least 2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguously Saracen and pagan (probably Arabic and Muslim, maybe Jewish). They just always ignore them because their names aren't the few household ones.

Sir Palamedes (var. Palomedes, Palomides, Palamede, and Palomydes) is a minor figure within the literary Arthurian tradition. Palomedes first appears in the 13th century. He is a Saracen knight of the Round Table; unbaptised and thus technically a pagan, but a true Christian at heart; a courtly lover who never achieves his desires; a figure of eternal chivalry in his pursuit of the Questing Beast. (...) The history of the literary Palomedes is long and varied, stretching from the 13th century to the present day. With the resurgence of academic and popular interest in the troubled hero, Palomedes' own popularity has begun to increase. There are many new novels, plays, and poems featuring the character; each presents a different aspect of the tradition, permitting Palomedes to change and adapt to the needs and demands of different audiences in different times.

Not movies and no television lol

1 year ago
3 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black-mulatto Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on, and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (at least 2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguously Saracen (probably Arabic and Muslim, maybe Jewish, generally converting to Christianity except one). They just always ignore them because their names aren't the few household ones.

The history of the literary Palomedes is long and varied, stretching from the 13th century to the present day. With the resurgence of academic and popular interest in the troubled hero, Palomedes' own popularity has begun to increase. There are many new novels, plays, and poems featuring the character; each presents a different aspect of the tradition, permitting Palomedes to change and adapt to the needs and demands of different audiences in different times.

Not movies and no television lol

1 year ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black-mulatto Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on, and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (at least 2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguously Saracen (probably Arabic and Muslim, maybe Jewish, generally converting to Christianity except one). They just always ignore them because their names aren't the few household ones.

1 year ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black-mulatto Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (at least 2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguously Saracen (probably Arabic and Muslim, maybe Jewish, generally converting to Christianity except one). They just always ignore them because their names aren't the few household ones.

1 year ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black-mulatto Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (at least 2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguously Saracen (probably Arabic and Muslim, maybe Jewish, generally converting to Christianity except one). They just always ignore then because their names aren't the household ones.

1 year ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black-mulatto Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (at least 2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguously Saracen (probably Arabic and Muslim, maybe Jewish, generally converting to Christianity except one). They just always ignore then because their names aren't the household ones.

1 year ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (at least 2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguously Saracen (probably Arabic and Muslim, maybe Jewish, generally converting to Christianity except one). They just always ignore then because their names aren't the household ones.

1 year ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (at least 2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguously Saracen (probably Arabic and Muslim, maybe Jewish, generally converting to Christianity except one).

1 year ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguously Saracen (probably Arabic and Muslim, maybe Jewish, generally converting to Christianity except one).

1 year ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguously Saracen (probably Arabic and Muslim maybe Jewish, generally converting to Christianity).

1 year ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (2) of whom are canonically half-black while several others are ambiguous (Saracen, probably Arabic and Muslim maybe Jewish).

1 year ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (2) of whom are canonically half-black while others are ambiguous (Saracen, probably Arabic and Muslim maybe Jewish).

1 year ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (2) of whom are canonically half-black while others are ambiguous (Saracen, probably Arabic maybe Jewish).

1 year ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights of Arthur, some (2) of whom are canonically half-black while others are ambiguous (probably Arabic or Jewish).

1 year ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on and so forth.

While they never even use any of the actual exotic knights, of Arthur, some of whom are canonically half-black.

1 year ago
2 score
Reason: Original

Let's not forget the mulatto Guinevere and the black Elian the White (lolz) in the BBC Merlin, LITERALLY EVERYONE Arthurian black in Once Upon a Time, blacks everywhere in Guy Ritchie's stupid King Arthur movie (that I also stupidly went to see in a theater without watching any trailer not reading anything beforehand), the black Arthur himself (and his half-sister born to another black woman, their father being white) in Netflix's Cursed, and so on and so forth.

1 year ago
1 score