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Judika Illes adds that the Charmed Book of Shadows describes the show's witches much in the same way as the real world Italian Benandanti traditions. She claims the show draws deeply on wiccan terminology and ritual (such as the witches' adding information to their Book of Shadows), but asserts that it is still a fantasy show. [19]
Charmed novels and short stories The Charmed logo was first used for the television series and later for the novel and comic series. Author Reference individual listings Country United States Language English Genre Fantasy, young adult fiction Publisher Simon & Schuster (1999–2008); HarperCollins (2015–2016) Published November 1, 1999 – January 1, 2008; May 26, 2015 – February 2, 2016 ...
Charmed: The Book of Shadows (also known as Charmed: The Book of Shadows: Music From and Inspired By) is the second soundtrack album of the television series Charmed, which aired on The WB in the United States. It features music from the show's first seven seasons and was released on April 19, 2005, by Image Entertainment.
The light-novel series Fate/Apocrypha (2012) - a parallel world spinoff based on a cancelled MMO concept - features Mordred as a Saber-class for one of the two factions, who, like King Arthur/Saber, is gender-swapped, detailed in the story as being a homunculus half-clone of King Arthur that was created from mixing the King's genes with those ...
Dracula vs. King Arthur by Adam Beranek, Christian Beranek and Chris Moreno (2007) Orion and King Arthur by Ben Bova (2011) Song of the Sparrow by Lisa Ann Sandell (2007) Camelot Lost by Jessica Bonito (Jessica McHugh) (2008) Avalon High by Meg Cabot; The Sangreal Trilogy by Amanda Hemingway; Sword of Darkness by Kinley MacGregor; Knight of ...
Galehaut, a half-blood giant lord of the Distant Isles (le sire des Isles Lointaines), [1] appears for the first time in the Matter of Britain in the "Book of Galehaut" section of the early 13th-century Prose Lancelot Proper, the central work in the series of anonymous Old French prose romances collectively known as Lancelot-Grail (the Vulgate Cycle).
He reused the name in his Life of Merlin (c. 1150) for a different character, the wife of the titular magician "Merlinus", a counsellor to King Arthur; [Notes 1] the metre shows that Geoffrey pronounced it as a pentasyllable, Guĕndŏlŏēnă, with the "gu" pronounced /ɡw/. Dr.
Pridwen was the name of King Arthur's shield. The name was taken from Welsh tradition, Arthur's ship in Preiddeu Annwfn and Culhwch and Olwen being called Prydwen ; it was perhaps borrowed by Geoffrey because of its appropriateness to a picture of the Virgin Mary as "white face", "fair face", "blessed form" or "precious and white".