The Villainess
The Shadow Queen Morgan le Fay
- Role: The Sorceress and Trickster
- Morgan le Fay is the archetype of the dark sorceress, often portrayed as Arthur’s half-sister and an antagonist to Camelot. A recurring antagonist who often seeks to undermine Arthur and Camelot.
- Symbolism: She represents both feminine power and the shadow side of magic, embodying ambition, vengeance, and the complexities of human motives. Powerful, seductive, and vengeful, but also wise and capable of great healing in some versions.
- Ambiguity: In some versions, Morgan aids Arthur, bringing him to Avalon for healing.Highlighting her dual nature as both adversary and ally.
“Morgain le Fay, for all her magic, and for all her great beauty, could not keep her lovers from straying. Thus she built a chapel in a valley and set about it a magic so strong that no faithless lover who set foot there could escape again, whence it came to be called the Valley of No Return. Many came that way and fell victim to its enchantments. This state of affairs might well have lasted forever, but that Sir Lancelot came there by chance, and by the power of his arm was able, because of his truly faithful love for Guinevere, to overcome the phantoms set to guard it, and to set free all the hapless knights who had been imprisoned there.”
— Caitlin and John Matthews, “The Arthurian Book of Days”