![]() ![]() Little John returns to Nottingham and tricks the Sheriff into entering the forest. They leave for the forest taking the Sheriff’s silver. While there he persuades the Sheriff’s cook to join the Merry Men. The next episode sees Little John going to work for the Sheriff of Nottingham. Mary’s Abbey in York, by capturing the dishonest cellarer of the abbey. Using this trick twice he helps an honest knight to reclaim land from St. If they were dishonest they would be searched and robbed of their valuables. If they were truthful about their ability to pay they were treated with respect. At the end of the meal they would be asked for payment. He would invite - actually his men would kidnap - unsuspecting travellers in the forest and bring them to dinner with Robin. Robin Hood was notorious for 'testing' dinner guests. Death scene the sherriff of nottingham serial#This is a long and rambling serial which combines several stories. The tales are all written in the same kind of simple four line rhyme. At the end of the 1400s they first appear in manuscript. The Tudors loved Robin Hood, especially Henry VIII. So, Robin did exist, but not in quite the same way as the Robin Hood we all think of, the cinematic Robin of Sherwood, Prince of Thieves! His story however, remains one of the best known tales of English folklore.It was only at the end of the Middle Ages when high society, including royalty, became interested in the tales. Little John’s grave can be seen in Hathersage churchyard in Derbyshire.īut what of his lover Maid Marion? Not much of Robin’s career is known, but nowhere in the chronicles is Maid Marion mentioned, so we must assume she was ‘added’ to the stories at a later date. Robin asked Little John to bury him where the arrow landed, which he duly did.Ī mound in Kirklees Park, within bow-shot of the house, can still be seen and is said to be his last resting place. ![]() Little John placed Robin’s bow in his hand and carried him to a window from where Robin managed to loose one arrow. With the last of his strength he blew his horn and Little John came to his aid, but too late. As he grew older and became ill, he went with Little John to Kirklees Priory near Huddersfield, to be treated by his aunt, the Prioress, but a certain Sir Roger de Doncaster persuaded her to murder her nephew and the Prioress slowly bled Robin to death. ![]() Robin having fought in the Crusades alongside the Lionheart before returning to England to find his lands siezed by the Sheriff.Īll versions of the Robin Hood story give the same account of his death. Some chroniclers date his exploits as taking place during the reign of Edward II, but other versions say the king was Richard I, the Lionheart. Robin became a popular folk hero because of his generosity to the poor and down-trodden peasants, and his hatred of the Sheriff and his verderers who enforced the oppressive forest laws, made him their champion. Afterwards the fields where the arrows landed were known as Robin Hood’s Close and Little John’s Close. The arrows fell at Whitby Lathes, more than a mile away. Both men were skilled at archery and from the roof of the Monastery they both shot an arrow. One well known story about Robin that places him in Whitby, Yorkshire, is about him and Little John having a friendly archery contest. One certain fact is that he was a North Country man, with his traditional haunts as an outlaw in Sherwood Forest and a coastal refuge at Robin Hood’s Bay in Yorkshire. Another chronicler has it that he was a Wakefield man and took part in Thomas of Lancaster’s rebellion in 1322. However the first known literary reference to Robin Hood and his men was in 1377, and the Sloane manuscripts in the British Museum have an account of Robin’s life which states that he was born around 1160 in Lockersley (most likely modern day Loxley) in South Yorkshire. The Hollywood one is that of an incredibly handsome man – Errol Flynn – clothed in garments of Lincoln green, fighting for the rights of the oppressed and outwitting the evil Sheriff of Nottingham. There are several versions of the Robin Hood story. Legend has it that Robin Hood was an outlaw living in Sherwood Forest with his ‘Merry Men’ – but did he really exist? ![]()
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