The legendary King Arthur, who is the standard of Western European chivalry, was a Russian prince who arrived in England with his retinue in agreement with the Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius.
This sensational statement was made by the famous British historian Howard Read. In the course of long-term research and Great Britain, France and Russia, Reed came to the conclusion that King Arthur was one of the representatives of the tribes that lived in the Sarmatian steppes of southern Russia. Famous for their tall and blond horsemen, these tribes went to the Danube at the beginning of the second century and met the Roman legionaries. During lengthy negotiations, Rome managed to find a common language with them and the core of the "barbarian" army was taken into the imperial service. In 175 from N. H. L. about six thousand Russian soldiers arrived at Albion.
Working in the archives of the St. Petersburg Hermitage, Howard Reed discovered numerous symbols from burials on the territory of Russia, coinciding with the samples on the banners under which the soldiers of the legendary King Arthur fought.