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From International Robin Hood Bibliography
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-09-03. Revised by … Editions Scholarly collections ⁃ Child, Francis James 1882a, vol. III, pp. 155-58. Translations German ⁃ Grün, Anastasius 1864a, pp. 180-85: "Robin Hood und der Bettler 1"; notes, p. 222. ⁃⁃ Grün, Anastasius 1877a, pp. 320-25: "Robin Hood und der Bettler 1". Also see ⁃ Robin Hood and the Beggar 2 Notes
    2 KB (224 words) - 05:21, 27 May 2022

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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-09-03. Revised by … Editions Scholarly collections ⁃ Child, Francis James 1882a, vol. III, pp. 158-65. Translations German ⁃ Grün, Anastasius 1864a, pp. 186-94: "Robin Hood und der Bettler 2". ⁃⁃ Grün, Anastasius 1877a, pp. 326-31: "Robin Hood und der Bettler 2". Also see ⁃ Robin Hood and the Beggar 1
    1 KB (138 words) - 05:21, 27 May 2022
  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-02-16. Revised by … Allusion Source notes the note is undated. I have dated it c. 1661–c. 1667 because 1) Wood's Survey of the Antiquities of the City of Oxford was written 1661-66 and 2) another note pasted on to the same folio of the MS is dated: June 11 [16]67. the attribution of this note to wood is uncertain. the editor is "not certain that any part of this slip is in Wood's handwriting". Wood, Anthony 1889a, vol. II, p. 111 n. 3. IRHB comments All the ballads on the list are found in Wood's collection. Was the note a list of recent acquisitions or the Robin Hood ballads he had at the time? "R. H. and the Beggar" is Robin Hood and the Beggar 1; no 17th century copy of Robin Hood and the Beggar 2 is known. Child, Francis James 1882a, vol. III, pp. 156, 158. "Renowned Robin Hood" is an alternative title for Robin Hood and Queen Katherine. See Gable, John Harris 1939a, p. 147. Child does not mention this list. It is of some …
    4 KB (542 words) - 18:38, 7 January 2021
  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-09-03. Revised by … Editions Scholarly collections ⁃ Child, Francis James 1882a, vol. III, pp. 155-58. Translations German ⁃ Grün, Anastasius 1864a, pp. 180-85: "Robin Hood und der Bettler 1"; notes, p. 222. ⁃⁃ Grün, Anastasius 1877a, pp. 320-25: "Robin Hood und der Bettler 1". Also see ⁃ Robin Hood and the Beggar 2 Notes
    2 KB (224 words) - 05:21, 27 May 2022
  • Robin Hood's Stride. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-01-01. Revised by … Allusion Source notes Peak Scenery was first published 1818 to 1823, in four parts. Part III, which includes the above passage, was published in 1822. the passage recurs unchanged in the 1824 edition (see section Sources below). IRHB comments While Rhodes's explanation of the name "MockBeggar's Hall" sounds very reasonable, I doubt if he is right that the name "Robin Hood's Stride " was applied to the two pinnacles collectively. Was it not rather the distance between them and hence, by an almost inevitable association, the entire formation that was (and still is) called Robin Hood's Stride? This may well be the earliest literary allusion to Robin Hood's Stride. Lists ⁃ Not included in Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 293-11. ⁃ Outside scope of Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources ⁃ Rhodes, Ebenezer 1818a, pt. III, p. 88. ⁃⁃ Rhodes, Ebenezer 1824a, p. 240. …
    3 KB (376 words) - 18:38, 7 January 2021
  • 10 KB (1,217 words) - 13:57, 10 June 2022
  • Robin Hood's Stride By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-10-14. Revised by … Robin Hood's Stride is the name of a formation of broken gritstone rocks on Hartle Moor close to the village of Elton. there is a pinnacle at either end of the formation, that to the west being known as the Weasel pinnacle and that to the east as the Inaccessible pinnacle. Wikipedia: Robin Hood's Stride. the formation is said to owe its name to the belief that the distance between the two pinnacles was equal to the length of Robin Hood's step or stride. Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, p. 297. the alternative name of Mock Beggar's Hall is probably due to the general resemblance of the entire formation to a hall (manor house) with each pinnacle as a 'chimney' at either end of the 'building'. One of two fairly early drawings of Robin Hood's Stride, dated respectively 1794 and 1804, is accompanied by a note about a tradition relating to Robin Hood (see Allusions below). However, the note does not actually …
    9 KB (1,247 words) - 23:59, 10 June 2022