Robin Hood: Outlaw or Greenwood Myth

by Fran Doel and Geoff Doel

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Book cover for Robin Hood

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First mentioned by William Langland in the late fourteenth century, Robin Hood comes down to us through ballads and folksongs, old chronicles and plays, medieval allusions, folklore and place-names. Today Robin Hood folksongs are found in the USA as well as in England and Scotland, and place-names and traditions are widely located in England. The earliest stories are centred on Barnsdale in Yorkshire, but later the emphasis shifts to Nottingham and Sherwood Forest. Originally a yeoman, Robin was upgraded to aristocrat in the sixteenth century, but he remains essentially a champion of the poor and oppressed and a social nonconformer. How far Robin Hood was based on a historical character and how far he is an archetypal outlaw or a Greenwood myth (who must withdraw from society and commune with nature) is the subject of the Doels' wide-ranging study. This new edition is complete with an updated gazetteer of Robin Hood sites and an annotated filmography. It includes almost 50 illustrations (including performances by present-day mummers).
  • ISBN10 0750992719
  • ISBN13 9780750992718
  • Publish Date 22 July 2019 (first published 1 March 2000)
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country GB
  • Imprint The History Press Ltd
  • Edition 2nd Digital original
  • Format eBook
  • Pages 128
  • Language English