Norma Lorre Goodrich


Norma Therese Falbypen name Norma Lorre Goodrich — was an American professor of French, comparative literature and writing who taught in the University of Southern California and Claremont Colleges for 45 years and published several popular books on Arthuriana.
Goodrich was noted for her thesis, first presented in a 1986 book titled King Arthur, that the legendary monarch was not a myth, but a real person, who lived not in England or Wales, as conventionally understood, but in Scotland. In her interpretation, Queen Guinevere was a Pictish queen, and Sir Lancelot a Scottish king. Her methodology involved back-translating Latin place names found in Geoffrey of Monmouth’s Historia Regum Britanniae to what she believed to be their Celtic originals. Her findings have not been accepted by Galfridian scholars.

Discussion of her work

In 1986, she held the post professor emerita at the Claremont Colleges and told a Los Angeles Times reporter that she had discovered a void in Arthurian scholarship: “All the books on Arthur have been on the mythology, the legend,” but not the history. Goodrich traveled extensively in Britain and France and laid claim to having mastered several ancient and modern languages. She claimed that the 12th century pseudo-historian, Geoffrey of Monmouth thought that Arthur had been in Scotland, not England, hiding this by naming Arthur's battles in Latin rather than Scots Gaelic. “When I finally figured out what he was doing, I translated the Latin back into Gaelic,” Goodrich told the Riverside Press-Enterprise in 1994. She then found that the names coincided with places in Scotland. She claimed that Guinevere was a Pictish queen and Lancelot a Scottish king.
Rosemary Morris's review of King Arthur in the journal Albion found Goodrich's work to be
Reviewing "Heroines", noting that the book is mainly useful for anyone interested in her views, A. J. Sobczak wrote:

Final years

Her husband John died in February 1995 at the age of 77. Goodrich died on September 19, 2006, of natural causes at her home in Claremont, California. Her obituary in the Los Angeles Times stated that "the fact that her King Arthur findings contradicted those of other scholars did not trouble Goodrich".

Works