| Legends surrounding Arthur have been retold  in countless books and movies. The British king is famous for leading his  Knights of the Round Table in battle against Saxon invaders. Despite his popularity,  his historical identity is still uncertain. Was there actually a King Arthur  who ruled Britain during the Dark Ages?Writings don’t provide many reliable clues.  The only existing early account is from a monk named Gildas, who described the  Saxon defeat by British forces in the real-life battle at Badon Hill. However,  Gildas mentions nothing about a commander named Arthur. Instead, he credited  British victory to a British-Roman leader. Some say this leader’s name could  have been Artorius─an uncommon Roman family name and a  precursor to “Arthur.”
 In the 9th century, Arthur appears for the  first time in The History of the Britons, written by the Welsh monk Nennius, who  listed 12 battles that Arthur fought in. But it would’ve been impossible for  one person to have fought in all of those battles. Still, later writers drew  from Nennius’s work, and Arthur’s fame spread across England and into France  after the Norman Conquest in 1066.
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