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From International Robin Hood Bibliography
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an>Reflections an>an>of an> a Bygone age; O'Brien, Michael, illus. Historic Nottingham (Nottingham Heritage, No. 2). Keyworth, Nottingham:an>Reflections an>an>of an> a Bygone age, [s.d.]. Illus. postcard (col.). Designed by Michael O'Brien. 150 x 101 mm. Citation ⁃an>Reflections an>an>of an> a Bygone age; O'Brien, Michael, illus. Historic Nottingham (Nottingham Heritage, No. 2) (Keyworth, Nottingham, [s.d.])1,017 bytes (121 words) - 01:48, 9 January 2021
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an>Reflections an>an>of an> a Bygone age; O'Brien, Michael, illus. Historic Nottingham (Nottingham Heritage, No. 2). Keyworth, Nottingham:an>Reflections an>an>of an> a Bygone age, [s.d.]. Illus. postcard (col.). Designed by Michael O'Brien. 150 x 101 mm. Citation ⁃an>Reflections an>an>of an> a Bygone age; O'Brien, Michael, illus. Historic Nottingham (Nottingham Heritage, No. 2) (Keyworth, Nottingham, [s.d.])1,017 bytes (121 words) - 01:48, 9 January 2021- Nottingham. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-07. Revised by … Nottingham, the hometown
an>of an> the sheriff, is the (or a) locale in the vast majorityan>of an> Robin Hood ballads, beginning with Robin Hood and the Monk (c. 1450). First recorded as "Snotengaham" in a.D. 895, the accepted etymologyan>of an> "Nottingham" is "[t]he ham [homestead]an>of an> the peoplean>of an> Snot ", Gover, John Eric Bruce 1940a, p. 13. IRHB's brackets. Italics and bold type as in source the latter being a man's name. Nottingham in the ballads Gazetteers ⁃ Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 300-301. Sources ⁃ Gover, John Eric Bruce 1940a, p. 13. Maps ⁃ 6" O.S. map Nottinghamshire XLII.NW (1885; surveyed 1880-81) ⁃ 6" O.S. map Nottinghamshire XLII.NW (1899; rev. 1901) ⁃ 6" O.S. map Nottinghamshire XLII.NW (1920; rev. 1919) ⁃ 6" O.S. map Nottinghamshire XLII.NW (c. 1947; rev. 1938). Notes geograph-4958979-by-John-Sutton.jpg|Nottingham skyline from Sneinton / …3 KB (419 words) - 13:51, 7 January 2021