According to the
Welsh Triads, Brân's head was buried in London where the
White Tower now stands. As long as it remained there, Britain would be safe from invasion. However,
King Arthur dug up the head, declaring the country would be protected only by his great strength. There have been attempts in modern times to link the still-current practice of keeping ravens at the Tower of London under the care of
Yeomen Warder Ravenmaster with this story of Brân. The connection can still be seen in several Celtic languages, in Welsh brân means crow, and bran means raven in both Cornish and Irish. Several scholars have noted similarities between Brân the Blessed and the Arthurian character the
Fisher King, the keeper of the
Holy Grail. The Fisher King first appears in
Chrétien de Troyes's 12th century French romance
Perceval, the Story of the Grail; he has been dealt a mortal wound in the leg (Brân's wound was in his foot) but stays alive in his
mystical castle due to the effects of the Grail, waiting to be healed by
Percival. A later author who took up the story,
Robert de Boron, describes the history of the Grail in ancient times, and says the first Fisher King was a man called "Bron". Additionally, the Welsh story
Peredur son of Efrawg, a version of the Percival story with several striking deviations, features the hero visiting a mysterious castle, although he does not find the Grail there, but rather a severed human head. Additionally, some works attribute to the Grail the power to restore the fallen, making it somewhat similar to Brân's cauldron. Others have identified Bendigeidfran with the
Irish hero
Bran mac Febal.
John T. Koch proposes a number of parallels between the mythological Bendigeidfran and the historical Celtic chieftain
Brennus, who
invaded the Balkans in the 3rd century BC. He goes on to suggest an association between Brân and
Brancaster, a fort on the Norfolk coast, while Rachel Bromwich suggests that
Castell Dinas Brân in Denbighshire is similarly related. Brân is praised in the poetry of 12th century bard
Cynddelw Brydydd Mawr, in which he is described as "a good commander of the host; in battle, in hostile territory, in the contest, in stress", while, in his elegy for
Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, Prince of Wales,
Bleddyn Fardd compares the overthrow of the prince to the deaths of
Llywelyn Fawr,
King Arthur and Brân. A poem found in the
Black Book of Carmarthen refers to Bendigeidfran's death in Ireland, claiming that
Gwyn ap Nudd was present at the battle, either as a warrior or in his traditional role as a
psychopomp. The novel series
The Chronicles of Prydain by
Lloyd Alexander, whose second installment is named The Black Cauldron, is based on
Welsh mythology. The Disney film
The Black Cauldron, based loosely on the novel series, features a cauldron that can bring the dead back to life. The novel series
A Song of Ice and Fire by
George R. R. Martin includes several characters named Brandon (Bran) Stark. Many of them have epithets commonly associated with their names, such as Brandon the Builder, Brandon the Breaker, Brandon the Shipwright, Brandon the Burner, Brandon the Bad, and Brandon the Daughterless. The television series
Game of Thrones is based on the Martin novels. One of the Brandon Starks is associated with crows in the novels, and with ravens in the TV series. ==Name==