Saw this this morning on the Weather Channel; Steph and Mike are on shaky ground, guys...
(Video made by my husband. Hooray for working iphones.)
Sci-Fi! Philadelphia! Celts! The Middle Ages! Surely they must go together somehow, right?
§7. Mercator included a legend to his great wall map of 1569 that referred to Arthur in the following way:
The article discusses whether this ultimately goes back to Geoffrey's Scandinavian conquest story, or whether it perhaps goes back to an even earlier tradition of a frozen Otherworld to the north. Of course, it's no surprise that anyone would connect a mythical conquest of the North with the Norwegian settlements of North America, and concoct a story of King Arthur doing the same, but earlier. And how irresistible the idea would be to an incipient British Empire.Touching the description of the North parts, I have taken the same out of the voyage of James Cnoyen of Hartzevan Buske, which allegeth certain conquests of Arthur king of Britaine, and the most part, and chiefest things among the rest he learned of a certain priest in the king of Norway's court, in the year 1364. This priest was descended (in the fifth generation) from them which King Arthur had sent to inhabit these Islands