The legend of Glastonbury

Glastonbury is a famous Joseph arima, and the Holy Grail is related to Arthurian myths and legends. The legendary Joseph arima's retrieval of some sacred objects is a version of Robert Boron's Holy Grail story in13rd century, which is considered as a trilogy, although only fragments of later books have survived to this day. Work became the inspiration for the Latin cycle in the later period of King Arthur's story.

Deborah's account relates to how Joseph got the blood of Jesus (the "Holy Grail") in a cup and then brought it to England. The original story of boron recovery in Wugang. Yue Se of western arima is no longer the main figure in the origin of the Holy Grail. Joseph's son Joseph participated in the earliest romantic version of the Holy Grail as the goalkeeper of the Holy Grail, but he didn't call it the "Holy Grail" and didn't mention anything about blood, Joseph or Glastonbury.

1 19 1 year, monks in the monastery claimed to have discovered the ancestral graves of Arthur and Guinevere, the cathedral of Notre Dame in the monastery, which was composed of the number of contemporary historians, including a visit to Cumberland, South Girard. The body was later moved and lost in the reform. Many scholars suspect that this discovery is a pious forged document to prove the foundation of ancient Glastonbury and increase its reputation.

Some Arthurian documents were found in Glastonbury and the legendary Avalon Island. Early Welsh poetry associated Arthur's Tor 1 with Arthur and Melvas, and Melvas kidnapped the confrontation account between Queen Guinevere. According to some versions of Arthurian legend, Lancelot retreated to Glastonbury and confessed Arthur's death in a monastery.

Joseph said that he took a boat in Glastonbury and reached the flooded Somerset water level. When getting on and off the bus, he insisted that his employees go underground and miraculously bloom into Glastonbury Thorne (or Saint Thorne). It is said that this explains the mixed, hawthorn monogyna tree, which grows only a few miles in Glastonbury and spends it twice a year, once in spring and around Christmas (depending on the weather). Every year, the local Anglican priest and the eldest daughter of St. John's Middle School will cut off the spiny twigs and give them to the Queen.

The original St. Thorne was a pilgrimage center in the Middle Ages, but it was cut down in the English Civil War. Wearyall Mountain was planted by replacing thorns (originally 195 1 to commemorate the 20th century British Festival, but the thorns were replanted the next year, so it was not the first attempt). Many other examples, the whole thorn Glastonbury grew up, including Glastonbury Abbey, St. John's Church and those holy grails.

Today, Glastonbury Abbey is "traditionally the oldest ground Christian church in the world". According to legend, it was established at the request of Joseph about 65 years after the death of Jesus to present its own Holy Grail. "Legend also says that when Jesus was a child, he and Joseph visited Glastonbury together. Legend has it that in the Middle Ages it may be encouraged to make money from religious sites and pilgrimage monasteries. The legend mentioned by william blake in a poem has become a well-known hymn "Jerusalem" (see ancient times are not enough).