Caradoc stars in his own minor romance, the
Life of Caradoc included in the First Continuation of
Chrétien de Troyes's
Perceval, the Story of the Grail. The story, probably based on
Celtic Briton tradition, seems created to explain how Caradoc got his nickname of 'Short Arm'. Caradoc the Elder marries the beautiful Ysave, but she is soon seduced by an enchanter named Eliavres. Eliavres casts a spell over Caradoc to make him mistake various farm animals for his wife, while the wizard is busy fathering a son. Caradoc the Elder names the son after himself, and the boy grows up to be a worthy young squire. Caradoc the Younger goes off to King Arthur's court and is made a Knight of the Round Table like his father. Before long, Eliavres enters the hall and asks for a beheading test (a Celtic motif first appearing in the
Old Irish text
Fled Bricrenn ("
Bricriu's Feast") and subsequently in a number of Arthurian texts, of which the best-known is the
Middle English Sir Gawain and the Green Knight). Eliavres asks for a knight to lop off his head, the only catch being that if he survives, he may take the knight's head in return. Caradoc takes up the challenge, and dutifully offers his own neck when the sorcerer magically replaces his head. Eliavres declines to kill young Caradoc, but reveals that he is his natural father. Caradoc the Younger is understandably chagrined at the news. He embarks on a number of knightly adventures, whereupon he meets his best friend Sir
Cador, travelling with his sister Guinier. Back in his kingdom, he reveals his father's cuckoldry, and Caradoc the Elder and Younger exact humiliating vengeance upon Eliavres, forcing him to mate with a female hound dog, a sow, and a mare, producing as offspring the
mastiff Guinalot, the boar Tortain and the horse Lorigal. Eliavres is locked away from his mistress Ysave. All goes well until the wizard attempts to escape. When Caradoc the Younger tries to stop him, Eliavres summons a serpent that entwines itself around Caradoc's arm, crippling it and draining his life energy away. Cador and Guinier travel throughout the country trying to find how to remove the snake, and finally return with the solution. Caradoc will sit in a tub of vinegar while Guinier sits in a vat of milk with her supple breasts exposed. The serpent loathes the vinegar and leaps towards Guinier, but Cador kills it with his sword. Unfortunately he slices off Guinier's nipple in the process (it is later replaced with a magical gold one). Though Caradoc is freed from the snake, his arm is permanently damaged, leaving him with his nickname, "Caradoc Short Arm". Guinier and Caradoc are married, and after a fidelity test involving a
drinking horn, they live happily ever after. The tale exists in all three redactions of the First Continuation and is embedded, in abridged form, in one of the
Reynard romances. Though it does not appear before the last decade of the 13th century, it is most likely based on a Welsh version, allusions to which can be found in the Welsh Triads. The Triads note Caradoc's wife,
Tegau, for her love and fidelity, and her sobriquet "Eurfron" ("Gold-Breast") would suit Guiner from the
Life of Caradoc. Additionally, there is mention of Tegau's fidelity-testing
mantle, which is a common substitute for the drinking horn in chastity test stories. Several versions of the Mantle of Chastity test involving Caradoc's wife were translated into Norse during the reign of King
Hakon Hakonarson, and a version of the chastity test from
The Book of Caradoc in the
First Continuation of the Old French Perceval is found in the Norse
Möttuls saga. The story survives in the traditional English folk ballad
The Boy and the Mantle, collected by
Bishop Thomas Percy in ''
Percy's Reliques''. The chastity test involving the drinking horn was narrated in the (1160) by the jongleur Robert Biket, who claimed
Cirencester was awarded to Caradoc for winning the drinking horn through the fidelity of his wife, and that the horn was on display there. In 1698,
Charlotte-Rose de Caumont de La Force rewrote the tale under the title ''L'Enchanteur'' ("The Enchanter"). The story was essentially the same, despite a few changes, including the renaming of several characters: Caradoc the Younger, Cador, Guinier and Ysave became Carados, Candor, Adelis and Isène. ==See also==