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From International Robin Hood Bibliography
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  • Clawson, William Hall; Langton, H. H., gen. ed. The Gest of Robin Hood ( University of Toronto … sources ⁃ Gable, John Harris 1939a, No. 136. Citation ⁃ Clawson, William Hall; Langton, H. H., gen. ed. The Gest of Robin Hood (University of Toronto Studies, Philological [& Literature] Series, [extra volume]) ([Toronto], 1909) .
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  • Andrae, A., review. '[Review of:] The Gest of Robin Hood by William Hall Clawson, Ph. D., Lecturer in English, University College, Toronto', Beiblatt zur … 22 (1911), pp. 211-12 . Downloads ⁃ PDF. Works reviewed ⁃ Clawson, William Hall 1909a.
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  • Jones, H.S.V., review. '[Review of:] The Gest of Robin Hood by W. H. Clawson, Lecturer in English, University of Toronto. University of Toronto Studies, … Germanic Philology, vol. IX (1910), pp. 430-32 . Downloads ⁃ PDF. Clawson 1909
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  • Fehr, Bernhard, review. '[Review of:] William Hal Clawson, The Gest of Robin Hood. (University of Toronto Studies. Philological Series.) University of Toronto Library II, 129 ss. Pr. $ 1,–', Englische Studien, vol. 45 (1912), pp. 302-306 . Downloads ⁃ PDF.
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  • Clawson, William Hall; Langton, H. H., gen. ed. The Gest of Robin Hood ( University of Toronto … sources ⁃ Gable, John Harris 1939a, No. 136. Citation ⁃ Clawson, William Hall; Langton, H. H., gen. ed. The Gest of Robin Hood (University of Toronto Studies, Philological [& Literature] Series, [extra volume]) ([Toronto], 1909) .
    3 KB (388 words) - 12:10, 14 April 2021
  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-07-22. Revised by … A Gest of Robyn Hode, fytte seven and part of fytte eight (sts. 354-432), details the meeting Robin Hood and "Edwarde, our comly kynge" Gest, st. 353:4.. The latter digsuises himself as an abbot and goes to the greenwood in order to meet with the outlaw. Reverberations of this scene can be found in many later accounts, including Walter Scott's Ivanhoe and many films. The author of the Gest – dare we suggest the poet John Skelton? This is suggested by, inter alia, a satirical allusion to John Skelton and jests of Robin Hood in Alexander Barclay's English rendering of the Ship of Fools. – followed an old and tried recipe when he let the king don disguise for the occasion, for there are many earlier tales, from Britain and elsewhere, about the meeting of a incognito king and one of his subjects. Sometimes the king is in disguise, sometimes he is not, but the subject (initially) fails to recognize him. Tales …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-09-20. Revised by … Robin Hood's accepting the Virgin Mary as surety or "borrow" for a loan in the first fytte of A Gest of Robyn Hode See sts. 65-66. is inspired by a miracle tale that was quite well known during the later Middle Ages. Most often in such tales – called "miracles" – the divine surety is the Virgin Mary, but tales are also found in which God, Jesus, a saint or even a cross acts as guarantor. In these tales, the divine surety pays the debt when the human debtor is unable to. There is a related type of tale, a humorous variant, in which the creditor recovers his outlay from a monk or priest in his capacity as human representative of the divine surety. Such analogues are discussed briefly by Child Child, Francis James 1882a, vol. III, pp. 51-52, 53-54. and at length by Clawson. Clawson, William Hall 1909a, pp. 25-42. Miracles with the Virgin as guarantor are known in Latin (several MSS of the 13th century), French, …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-07. Revised by … Editions Scholarly and literary collections ⁃ Allingham, William 1865a, pp. 160-236. Title: A Lytell Geste of Robyn Hode ⁃⁃ Allingham, William 1886a, pp. 160-236. Title: A Lytell Geste of Robyn Hode ⁃⁃ Allingham, William 1898a, pp. 160-236. Title: A Lytell Geste of Robyn Hode ⁃ Arber, … Arber, Edward 1880a, vol. VI, pp. 423-68 ⁃ Campbell, William W 1853a, pp. 23-93: 'The Lytell Geste of Robin Hood'. Heavily modernized text ⁃ Child, Francis James 1882a, vol. III, pp. 39-89. Additions and corrections: vol. III, p. 519; vol. IV, pp. 496-97; vol. V, pp. 240, 297 ⁃ Eliot, Charles W 1910a, pp. 128-86 ⁃ Flügel, Ewald 1895a, pp. 171-86, notes pp. 449-56 ⁃ Gummere, Francis Barton 1894a, pp. 1-67; notes, pp. 313-20 ⁃⁃ Gummere, Francis Barton 1914a, pp. 1-67; notes, pp. 313-20 ⁃ …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-12. Revised by … Significant ⁃ Bessinger, Jr, Jess Balsor 1952a ⁃ Butler, Michelle M 2011a. ⁃ Chandler, John H. 'Robin Hood: Development of a Popular Hero' (2006), at: The Robin Hood Project: a Robbins Library Digital Project (University of Rochester) ⁃ Clawson, William Hall 1909a ⁃ Cotten-Spreckelmeyer, Antha 2011a. ⁃ Evans, Ruth 2006a ⁃ Flügel, Ewald 1899a. Virtually exhaustive chronological annotated listing of printings of Child ballads, preceded by a discussion of missing glosses and other minor shortcomings of the ESPB from a philological point of view. ⁃ Fox, Adam 1999a. ⁃ Fricke, Richard 1883a. ⁃⁃ Fricke, Richard 1883b ⁃ Friedman, John Block 2011a ⁃ Green, Richard Firth 2004a. ⁃ Griffin, Carrie 2011a. ⁃ Harlan-Haughey, Sarah 2016a. See especially ch. 4, "The Menace in the Greenwood: Gamelyn, Gisborne, and …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-15. Revised by … This page lists works in literary criticism and cultural studies dealing with the Robin Hood tradition. Essential ⁃ Clawson, William Hall 1909a ⁃ Fowler, David C 1968a ⁃⁃ Fowler, David C 1999a ⁃ Ohlgren, Thomas H 2007a ⁃ Nelson, Malcolm A 1973a ⁃ Singman, Jeffrey L 1998a. Significant ⁃ Barnard, John 1989a ⁃⁃ Barnard, John 1999a ⁃ Basdeo, Stephen 2016a ⁃ Benyon, John 2008a ⁃ Bessinger Jr, Jess Balsor 1952a ⁃ Bessinger Jr, Jess Balsor 1966a ⁃ Bessinger Jr, Jess Balsor 1974a ⁃⁃ Bessinger Jr, Jess Balsor 1999a ⁃ Blamires, David 2008a ⁃ Blunk, Laura 2008a ⁃ Brockman, Bennett A 1982a ⁃ Butler, Marilyn Speers 1979a ⁃⁃ Butler, Marilyn Speers 1999a ⁃ Butler, Michelle M 2011a ⁃ Carroll, Michael P 2014a ⁃ …
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  • Viborg where 'thing' was to be held; Finderup where the king was killed; the outlaws' island stronghold of Hjelm; the manor of Gjorslev, enfeoffed to Rane Jonsen. / HTN collection.]] By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-08-13. Revised by … No less than 14 versions exist of a Danish ballad on the murder of King Erik the Fifth 'Klipping' in 1286 and its aftermath. It is possible this king's nickname 'Klipping' refers to his devaluing, clipping the coins. See Wikipedia: Eric V of Denmark. They all feature Marsk Stig Andersen Hvide (d. 1293) and his relatives or associates as central characters. A "marsk" Ordbog over det danske Sprog: Marsk, sb. 2 (in Danish). or "marskalk" was a commander of an army (cf. English "marsHall"), a royal servant of very high rank that can be compared to a minister of war or minister of defence in more recent times. Following the regicide, Marsk Stig and seven others were outlawed and fled to Norway where they gained the support of the …
    47 KB (7,830 words) - 05:30, 27 May 2022