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Other editions of book The Legends of King Arthur and His Knights

  • The Legends of King Arthur and His Knights: Comfortable Classics

    Sir James Knowles

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Oct. 26, 2017)
    Designed specifically for students of literature and bibliophiles. We are pleased to bring you the complete and unabridged text of this classic book. Because this is the original work by the author, you may find slight differences in spellings and punctuation than those you’re used to seeing in more contemporary books. However, we felt it important to keep the text as it was originally written. Our hope is that you will take full advantage of this special edition. These books were designed specifically for students. So feel free to let your highlighter flow over our nice, white pages to mark the passages you find interesting or remarkable. Go ahead and fill our generous margins with your thoughts and insights. Years later, when you pluck this book off the shelf to read it again, not only will you revisit this world, but you’ll be reintroduced to your younger self. And for those of you who despise sticky notes or dog-eared pages in your books, we’ve added a special place for you to record your own notes along with their corresponding page numbers in your very own Personalized Index on the last two pages of this book. We also think you’ll love the way these books will look on your bookshelves. We’ve done all of this because we’d love for you to build your own literary legacy library by collecting more great works published by Comfortable Classics Yours truly, The Comfortable Classics Team
  • The Legends of King Arthur and His Knights by Sir James Knowles Sir

    Sir James Knowles Sir

    Hardcover (Palala Press, Aug. 16, 1897)
    None
  • The legends of King Arthur and his knights

    James Knowles

    Hardcover (F. Warne, Aug. 16, 1921)
    None
  • The Legends of King Arthur and His Knights

    James Knowles, Lancelot Speed

    eBook (Green Booker Publishing, Dec. 30, 2015)
    King Arthur is a legendary British leader who, according to medieval histories and romances, led the defence of Britain against Saxon invaders in the late 5th and early 6th centuries AD. The details of Arthur's story are mainly composed of folklore and literary invention, and his historical existence is debated and disputed by modern historians. The sparse historical background of Arthur is gleaned from various sources, including the Annales Cambriae, the Historia Brittonum, and the writings of Gildas. Arthur's name also occurs in early poetic sources such as Y Gododdin.
  • The Legends of King Arthur and His Knights

    James Knowles

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, May 9, 2018)
    The Legends of King Arthur and His Knights, written in 1860 by James Knowles, is one of the most famous stories written on the legendary King Arthur. The book is based off Thomas Malory's classic Le Morte d'Arthur and is considered a must read for those who love a good Arthurian adventure.
  • The Legends of King Arthur and His Knights

    Knowles, Malory

    Paperback (Independently published, Feb. 9, 2020)
    Readers of all ages will thrill to these timeless tales of chivalry and romance at the court of Camelot. Based on Thomas Malory's classic Le Morte d'Arthur and influenced by the poetry of Tennyson's Idylls of the King, Sir James Knowles's renditions of the ancient legends offer an enchanting account of how a boy who drew a sword from a stone came to rule over a kingdom defended by a brotherhood of knights.
  • The legends of King Arthur and his knights;

    James Knowles

    Hardcover (Warne and co, Aug. 16, 1895)
    None
  • The Legends of King Arthur and His Knights

    Sir James Knowles

    eBook (@AnnieRoseBooks, Jan. 20, 2018)
    The Publishers have asked me to authorise a new edition, in my own name, of this little book—now long out of print—which was written by me thirty-five years ago under the initials J.T.K.In acceding to their request I wish to say that the book as now published is merely a word-for-word reprint of my early effort to help to popularise the Arthur legends.It is little else than an abridgment of Sir Thomas Malory’s version of them as printed by Caxton—with a few additions from Geoffrey of Monmouth and other sources—and an endeavour to arrange the many tales into a more or less consecutive story.The chief pleasure which came to me from it was, and is, that it began for me a long and intimate acquaintance with Lord Tennyson, to whom, by his permission, I Dedicated it before I was personally known to him.