Legend behind the second question
Dooris asked
Team 8 of Series 4, later quoted as Riddle 48 in Section 2 of the
Knightmare board game's riddle book: 'Alexander the Great solved a knotty problem with a
sword. True or False?' 'True' is the answer sought.
According to this legend, King Gordias,
the future king and founder of Gordium in Phrygia (as well as the father of
Greek mythology's King Midas), first entered the city as a farmer with an ox-cart. Following his fulfilment of an
oracle's prophecy, he secured the ox-cart with a complex tying-up of its yoke: the Gordian Knot. It was Alexander the Great who, in 333 BC, undid this knot (though not all sources agree that he used his sword), and it was later claimed by some that in doing so he fulfilled another prophecy of kingship.
William
Shakespeare and others have since used the phrase 'Gordian Knot' to refer to, as the Dooris and the riddle book have it, a knotty problem.
The legend itself might put one in mind of the story of
Excalibur, the encounter
Team 2 of Series 3 had with a cart and sword, or a hooded youth approaching a bicycle lock with a pair of pliers.
[Earlier versions: 2019-11-03 14:55:27, 2014-10-13 17:45:46, 2011-11-11 19:38:41]
Provided By:
David, 2021-03-23 18:09:55