Halivar
First Post
The Arthurian legends were very much a morality fable. Every time these knights strayed from the good and noble, they were afflicted. Lancelot was forever barred from seeing the grail; Arthur himself died as a result of his sins, via Mordred; note that this connection was not lost on medieval readers.Your Paladins, if they stay to their nature, will never commit incest (King Arthur), commit adultery (Lancelot du Lac), be incompetent braggarts and troublemakers (Sir Kay), use dark magic to seduce (Sir Bedivere), or use deception to cover their illegal activities (Sir Tristan)?
Note only one of these "lost his place" (Sir Lancelot) at the Round Table (where only the best and most virtous can sit) because of the transgression and only one is ever really considered a 'villian' (Sir Bedivere) in the older accounts (the townsfolk often called for his hanging).
But in any event, the knights of the round table reveal themselves to be piss-poor candidates for paladinhood (no detect evil! See?

Nope. It isn't where they come from.Is this from where your "uncorruptable" Paladins come? And a character of mine in your game should believe in their "purity" why again? Because the game rules say they are Lawful Good or else?
But, in their defense, I'll say the idea shouldn't be thrown out completely. As an example: the founding fathers of the US were slave owners, and yet the passage of time has changed the meaning of their words "all men are created equal" to be more egalitarian than they intended. So it is with chivalry; many knights back then were total asses. Nevertheless, the essence of their (well, really Charlemagne's own paladins, not the knights of the round) ideals, distilled down to its purest, most unadulterated form, is what inspires the paladin as envisioned in 1st edition.
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