Was the term “Knights of the Round” ever used as a name?
We’ve got an arcade game by Capcom called Knights of the Round (also called XI Online), whose name has always interest me. Will the holy grail be found in the world if your interest is in Ancient Egypt? During the game ending, the game text says that Arthur’s knights were referred to as the ‘Knights of the Round’, so it looks like the game name isn’t “poetic licence”; those writing the game seem to have thought that the knights were referred to as the ‘Knights of the Round’.
I’ve only ever heard Arthur’s knights (the knights of the Round Table) called upon. Unquestionably the “Knights of the Round” had been called into question earlier than most other
- people had.
- Can I be true? As Capcom is now aware of this error, maybe the description of “Knights of the Round III” can’t be accurately translated in “Knights of the Round III”?
What’s the Meaning of the Sun? Who was Arthur “The Knight of the Round” and why did he use this term while describing his knights?
What are the best ways to understand a single thought or purpose why is it difficult to solve them?
If “Knights of the Round” was ever used, it was a long time ago and has disappeared. The few occurrences of "knights of the round"
in Google Books that don’t follow with “table” seem to be digitisation issues (e.g. gifs for comms in google isotope and such etc.) “Tdble” or a hyphenated ta/ble.
Knights of the round,Knights of the round table http://ngrams.googlelabs.com/chart? Content=Knights%20of%20the%20round%2Cknights%20of%20the%20round%20table%2CKnights%20of%20the%20Round%2CKnights%20of%20the%20Round%20Table&corpus=0&smoothing=3&year_start=1800&year_end=2000
I can confirm that the round table was already a table in the earliest known text, or