Scholarly hypotheses Scholars have long speculated on the origins of the Holy Grail before Chrétien, suggesting that it may contain elements of the trope of magical
cauldrons from
Celtic mythology and later
Welsh mythology (notably including the Arthurian tale of
Preiddeu Annwfn), combined with Christian legend surrounding the
Eucharist, the latter found in
Eastern Christian sources, conceivably in that of the
Byzantine Mass, or even Persian sources. The view that the "origin" of the Grail legend should be seen as deriving from Celtic mythology was championed by
Roger Sherman Loomis (
The Grail: From Celtic Myth to Christian Symbol),
Alfred Nutt (
Studies on the Legend of the Holy Grail, available at Wikisource), and
Jessie Weston (
From Ritual to Romance and
The Quest of the Holy Grail). Loomis et al (e.g.
John Matthews in
The Grail Tradition) traced a number of parallels between medieval Welsh literature and Irish material, and the Grail romances, including similarities between the
Mabinogions
Bran the Blessed and the Arthurian Fisher King, and between Bran's life-restoring cauldron and the Grail. The opposing view dismissed the "Celtic" connections as spurious, and interpreted the legend as essentially Christian in origin. Joseph Goering identified sources for Grail imagery in 12th-century wall paintings from churches in the Catalan
Pyrenees (now mostly moved to the
Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya), which present unique iconic images of the
Virgin Mary holding a bowl that radiates tongues of fire, images that predate the first literary account by Chrétien de Troyes. Goering argues that they were the original inspiration for the Grail legend. Psychologists
Emma Jung and
Marie-Louise von Franz used
analytical psychology to interpret the Grail as a series of symbols in their book
The Grail Legend. They directly expanded on interpretations by
Carl Jung, which were later invoked by
Joseph Campbell. A sexualised interpretation of the Grail, identified with female genitalia, appeared in 1870 in
Hargrave Jennings' book
The Rosicrucians, Their Rites and Mysteries. Daniel Scavone (1999, 2003) argued that the "Grail" originally referred to the
Image of Edessa. According to
Richard Barber (2004), the Grail legend is connected to the introduction of "more ceremony and mysticism" surrounding the sacrament of the Eucharist in the high medieval period, proposing that the first Grail stories may have been connected to the "renewal in this traditional sacrament". Goulven Peron (2016) suggested that the Holy Grail may reflect the
horn of the river-god
Achelous, as described by
Ovid in the
Metamorphoses.
Pseudohistory and conspiracy theories Since the 19th century, the Holy Grail has been linked to various conspiracy theories. In 1818, Austrian pseudohistorical writer
Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall connected the Grail to contemporary myths surrounding the
Knights Templar that cast the order as a secret society dedicated to mystical knowledge and relics. In Hammer-Purgstall's work, the Grail is not a physical relic, but a symbol of the secret knowledge that the Templars sought. There is no historical evidence linking the Templars to a search for the Grail, but subsequent writers have elaborated on the Templar theories. Starting in the early 20th century, writers, particularly in France, further connected the Templars and Grail to the Cathars. In 1906, French esoteric writer
Joséphin Péladan identified the Cathar castle of Montségur with
Munsalväsche or Montsalvat, the Grail castle in Wolfram's
Parzival. This identification has inspired a wider legend asserting that the Cathars possessed the Holy Grail. According to these stories, the Cathars guarded the Grail at Montségur, and smuggled it out when the castle fell to the Catholic crusaders in 1244. Beginning in 1933, German writer
Otto Rahn published a series of books tying the Grail, Templars, and Cathars to modern German nationalist mythology. According to Rahn, the Grail was a symbol of a pure Germanic religion repressed by Christianity. Rahn's books inspired interest in the Grail within
Nazi occultist circles, and led to the SS chief
Heinrich Himmler's abortive sponsorship of Rahn's search for the Grail, as well as many subsequent conspiracy theories and fictional works about the Nazis searching for the Grail. Himmler personally inquired about the Grail at the
Montserrat Abbey during
his visit to Spain in 1940. In the late 20th century, writers
Michael Baigent,
Richard Leigh, and
Henry Lincoln created one of the most widely known conspiracy theories about the Holy Grail. The theory first appeared on the
BBC documentary series
Chronicle in the 1970s, and was elaborated upon in the bestselling 1982 book
Holy Blood, Holy Grail. The book, its arguments, and its evidence have been widely dismissed by scholars as pseudohistorical, but it has had a vast influence on conspiracy and
alternate history books. It has also inspired fiction, most notably
Dan Brown's 2003 novel
The Da Vinci Code and its 2006
film adaptation.
Music and painting (1861)|alt= The combination of hushed reverence, chromatic harmonies and sexualized imagery in
Richard Wagner's final music drama
Parsifal, premiered in 1882, developed this theme, associating the Grail – now periodically producing blood – directly with female fertility. The high seriousness of the subject was also epitomized in
Dante Gabriel Rossetti's painting in which a woman modeled by
Alexa Wilding holds the Grail with one hand, while adopting a gesture of blessing with the other. A major mural series depicting the Quest for the Holy Grail was done by the artist
Edwin Austin Abbey during the first decade of the 20th century for the
Boston Public Library. Other artists, including
George Frederic Watts and
William Dyce, also portrayed grail subjects.
Literature The story of the Grail and of the quest to find it became increasingly popular in the 19th century, referred to in literature such as
Alfred, Lord Tennyson's Arthurian cycle
Idylls of the King. •
T. S. Eliot's poem
The Waste Land (1922) loosely follows the legend of the Holy Grail and the Fisher King combined with vignettes of contemporary British society. In his first note to the poem, Eliot attributes the title to Jessie Weston's book on the Grail legend,
From Ritual to Romance. The allusion is to the wounding of the Fisher King and the subsequent sterility of his lands. A poem of the same title, though otherwise dissimilar, written by
Madison Cawein, was published in 1913 in
Poetry. • In
John Cowper Powys's
A Glastonbury Romance (1932), the "heroine is the Grail," and its central concerns are with the various myths and legends, along with the history associated with Glastonbury. It is also possible to see most of the main characters as undertaking a Grail quest. • The Grail is central in
Charles Williams' novel
War in Heaven (1930) and his two collections of poems about
Taliessin,
Taliessin Through Logres and
Region of the Summer Stars (1938). •
The Silver Chalice (1952) is a non-Arthurian historical Grail novel by
Thomas B. Costain. • A quest for the Grail appears in
Nelson DeMille's adventure novel
The Quest (1975), set during the 1970s. •
Michael Moorcock's fantasy novel ''
The War Hound and the World's Pain'' (1981) depicts a supernatural Grail quest set in the era of the
Thirty Years' War. •
Marion Zimmer Bradley's Arthurian revisionist fantasy novel
The Mists of Avalon (1983) presented the Grail as a symbol of water, part of a set of objects representing the four
classical elements. •
Grails: Quests of the Dawn (1994), edited by
Richard Gilliam, Martin H. Greenberg, and Edward E. Kramer is a collection of 25 short stories about the grail by various science fiction and fantasy writers. • The main theme of
Rosalind Miles'
Child of the Holy Grail (2000) in her
Guenevere series is the story of the Grail quest by the 14 years old Galahad. • The Grail motif features heavily in
Umberto Eco's 2000 novel
Baudolino, set in the 12th century. • It is the subject of
Bernard Cornwell's historical fiction series of books
The Grail Quest (2000–2012), set during the
Hundred Years War. In his earlier series
The Warlord Chronicles, an adaptation of the Arthurian legend, Cornwell also reimagines the Grail quest as a quest for a cauldron that is one of the
Thirteen Treasures of Britain from Celtic mythology. • Influenced by the 1982 publication of the ostensibly non-fiction
The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail, Dan Brown's
The Da Vinci Code (2003) has the "grail" taken to refer to Mary Magdalene as the "receptacle" of Jesus' bloodline (playing on the
sang real etymology). In Brown's novel, it is hinted that this Grail was long buried beneath
Rosslyn Chapel in Scotland, but that in recent decades, its guardians had it moved to a secret chamber embedded in the floor beneath the
Inverted Pyramid in the entrance of the
Louvre museum. • The Holy Grail features prominently in
Jack Vance's 1983-1985
Lyonesse Trilogy, where it is the subject of an earlier quest, several generations before the birth of King Arthur. However, in contrast to the Arthurian canon, Vance's Grail is a common object lacking any magical or spiritual qualities, and the characters finding it derive little benefit. • German history and fantasy novel author
Rainer M. Schröder wrote the trilogy
Die Bruderschaft vom Heiligen Gral (
The Brotherhood of the Holy Grail) about a group of four Knights Templar who save the Grail from the
Fall of Acre in 1291 and go through an odyssey to bring it to the
Temple in Paris in the first two books,
Der Fall von Akkon (2006) and
Das Amulett der Wüstenkrieger (2006), while defending the holy relic from the attempts of a Satanic sect called Iscarians to steal it. In the third book,
Das Labyrinth der schwarzen Abtei (2007), the four heroes must reunite to smuggle the Holy Grail out of the Temple in Paris after the
trials of the Knights Templar in 1307, again pursued by the Iscarians. Schröder indirectly addresses the Cathar theory by letting the four heroes encounter Cathars – among them old friends from their flight from Acre – on their way to Portugal to seek refuge with the King of Portugal and travel further west. • The 15th novel in
The Dresden Files series by
Jim Butcher,
Skin Game (2014), features
Harry Dresden being recruited by Denarian and longtime enemy Nicodemus into a heist team seeking to retrieve the Holy Grail from the vault of
Hades, the lord of the Underworld. The properties of the item are not explicit, but the relic itself makes an appearance and is in the hands of Nicodemus by the end of the novel's events.
Film and television from the 1989 film
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade at the
Hollywood Museum In the cinema, the Holy Grail debuted in the 1904 silent film
Parsifal, an adaptation of Wagner's opera by
Edwin S. Porter. More recent cinematic adaptations include Costain's
The Silver Chalice made into a
1954 film by
Victor Saville and Brown's
The Da Vinci Code turned into a
2006 film by
Ron Howard. • The silent drama film
The Light in the Dark (1922) involves discovery of the Grail in modern times. •
Robert Bresson's fantasy film
Lancelot du Lac (1974) includes a more realistic version of the Grail quest from Arthurian romances. •
Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975) is a comedic take on the Arthurian Grail quest, adapted in 2004 as the stage production
Spamalot. •
John Boorman, in his fantasy film
Excalibur (1981), attempted to restore a more traditional heroic representation of an Arthurian tale, in which the Grail is revealed as a mystical means to revitalise Arthur and the barren land to which his depressive sickness is connected. •
Steven Spielberg's adventure film
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989) features
Indiana Jones and
his father in a race for the Grail against the Nazis in 1938. • In a pair of fifth-season episodes (September 1989), "Legend of the Holy Rose",
MacGyver undertakes a quest for the Grail. •
Terry Gilliam's comedy-drama film
The Fisher King (1991) features the Grail quest in the modern New York City. • In the season one episode "
Grail" (1994) of the television series
Babylon 5, a man named Aldous Gajic visits Babylon 5 in his continuing quest to find the Holy Grail. His quest is primarily a plot device, as the episode's action revolves not around the quest but rather around his presence and impact on the life of a station resident. • In
Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon, the Holy Grail (Sehai in the anime, or Rainbow Moon Chalice) is the magical object with which Sailor Moon transforms in her Super form. • A science fiction version of the Grail Quest is central theme in the
Stargate SG-1 season 10 episode "The Quest" (2006). • In the television series
Knightfall (2017), the search for the Holy Grail by the Knights Templar is a major theme of the series' first season. The Grail, which appears as a simple earthenware cup, is coveted by various factions including the Pope, who thinks that possession of it will enable him to ignite another Crusade. • In the fourth series of
The Grand Tour, the trio goes to
Nosy Boraha where they accidentally find the Holy Grail while searching for
La Buse's buried treasure. • In the 17th episode of
Little Witch Academia, "Amanda O'Neill and the Holy Grail", the Holy Grail is used as a plot device in which witches Amanda O'Neill and Akko Kagari set out to find the item itself at Appleton School. • In the 12th episode of season 9 of the American show
The Office, Jim Halpert sends Dwight Schrute on a wild goose chase to find the Holy Grail. After Dwight completing all the clues to find it, but coming up empty handed, the camera cuts to Glenn drinking out of it in his office. • In the 2022 Christmas special episode of the British TV series
Detectorists, "Special", Lance finds a crockery cup, eyes only, in a field that turns out to be where a historic battle took place and a reliquary containing the Holy Grail was lost. A montage shows how the same crockery cup went from the hands of Jesus at the Last Supper (implied) to being lost in the field. • The 2023 limited television series
Mrs. Davis revolves around Sister Simone's quest to find and destroy the Holy Grail, both as the central plot device and also as metacommentary on quests for the Holy Grail, which one character observes might be the "most overused
MacGuffin ever".
Other media •
Grail Quest, a 1980 role-playing game using
The Fantasy Trip rules. •
Grailquest, a series of 1984-1987 gamebooks written by
J. H. Brennan and illustrated by
John Higgins. • The song "
Holy Grail" by Australian band
Hunters & Collectors was released in 1993. • The video game
Gabriel Knight 3: Blood of the Sacred, Blood of the Damned (1999) features an alternate version of the Grail, interwoven with the mythology of the Knights Templar. The Holy Grail is revealed in the story to be the blood of Jesus Christ that contains his power, only accessible to those descended from him, with the vessel of the Grail being defined as his body itself which the Templars uncovered in the Holy Land. • In the
Fate franchise, the Holy Grail serves as the prize of the Holy Grail War, granting a single wish to the victor of the battle royale. However, it is hinted at throughout the series that this Grail is not the real chalice of Christ, but is actually an item of uncertain nature created by mages some generations ago. • In the ''
Assassin's Creed video game franchise the Holy Grail is mentioned. In the original game, one Templar refers to the main relic of the game as the Holy Grail, although it was later discovered to be one of many Apples of Eden. The Holy Grail was mentioned again in Templar Legends, ending up in either Scotland or Spain by different accounts. The Holy Grail appears again in Assassin's Creed: Altaïr's Chronicles'' (2008), by the name of the Chalice, however this time not as an object but as a woman named Adha, similar to the sang rael, or royal blood, interpretation. • The song "
Holy Grail" by
Jay-Z featuring
Justin Timberlake was released in 2013. • In the video game
Persona 5 (2016), the Holy Grail is the Treasure of the game's final Palace, representing the combined desires of all of humanity for a higher power to take control of their lives and make a world that has no sense of individuality. ==See also==