-
related medieval work The
Greene Knight. His true name is
revealed to be
Bertilak de
Hautdesert (spelled in some
translations as "Bercilak" or "Bernlak")...
- Lady
Bertilak (or Lady Hautdesert) are
names given by some
modern critics to a
character in the
medieval poem Sir
Gawain and the
Green Knight (14th century)...
-
cornered before a ravine. He
turns to face
Bertilak with his back to the ravine,
prepared to fight.
Bertilak dismounts and in the
ensuing fight kills the...
-
daily gains,
Gawain must give the
kisses he
receives from Lady
Bertilak to Sir
Bertilak. This
allusion serves to
reinforce chivalric ideals of religious...
-
castle of Sir
Bertilak. Sir
Bertilak allows Gawain to rest and
recover in his castle.
Linet is alive,
having been
accepted by
Bertilak as a
tribute from...
-
between mankind and nature.
Lowery stated that
monologue by Vikander's Lady
Bertilak reflects both the
symbolism of
Arthurian Christian civilization being in...
- chapel,
Gawain encounters the
Bertilaks, who
propose an
exchange of winnings:
Gawain may
explore their castle while Lord
Bertilak hunts, and at the end of...
-
Nigel Green as
Green Knight Anthony Sharp as King
Robert Hardy as Sir
Bertilak David Leland as
Humphrey Murray Melvin as
Seneschal Tony
Steedman as Fortinbras...
- the
Green Knight.
Gawain meets a big
rugged Beorn-like shape-changer,
Bertilak (the
Green Knight), who
lives in a
castle in an oak forest, and speaks...
-
Green Knight, the
interplay of Gawain, his host
Bertilak (who is
actually The
Green Knight), and
Bertilak's wife are very
similar to the
events of Pwyll...