Glastonbury
a Historic Market Town in the county of Somerset
Carlisle
in the county of Cumbria
Gloucestershire Churches
Tyneham - Dorset's Lost Village
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in the town of London, in the county of Greater London1 picture
in the town of Dartmouth, in the county of Devon2 pictures
in the town of Budleigh Salterton, in the county of Devon1 picture
in the county of Devon6 pictures
in the county of Devon2 pictures
Sometime during the late twelfth century at Glastonbury Abbey, monks were said to have discovered the burial site and bones of King Arthur and Guinevere between two stone pyramids and buried deep within the earth in a hollow oak. The monks then brought the remains into the church and placed them in a marble tomb where they remained for a further 300 or so years until 1539 when the site was abandoned after the monastery was suppressed and looted by King Henry VIII, who also ordered Glastonbury's abbot drawn and quartered. Whether King Arthur was really buried here nobody knows, some say it was a story made up by the monks who were trying to cash in on the legend after a great fire in 1184 destroyed many of the abbeys buildings and the monks needed to find money for the reconstruction of the place. However, many believe it to be true and to this day people visit the site drawn in by the legend and stories of the famous King.
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