Friar Tuck's Hut (Blidworth): Difference between revisions

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Friar Tuck's Hut hardly merits a detour. It must be the most unimpressive sight on the [[Robin Hood Way (Nottinghamshire)|Robin Hood Way]] or any other walking route in England. While it looks much too recent to have been around in the jovial friar's day – if there ever was such a day – Robin's rotund recruit could hardly be squeezed into it. A British Heritage Travel article published first published in May 1998 briefly notes this
Friar Tuck's Hut hardly merits a detour. It must be the most unimpressive sight on the [[Robin Hood Way (Nottinghamshire)|Robin Hood Way]] or any other walking route in England. While it looks much too recent to have been around in the jovial friar's day – if there ever was such a day – Robin's rotund recruit could hardly be squeezed into it. A British Heritage Travel article published first published in May 1998 briefly notes this
<div class="plainquote">relic associated with one of the most memorable tales in the Robin Hood legend. At approximately the halfway point of the walk stands a crudely built wooden shelter known as Friar Tuck's Hut. Its age and significance are not known, but Friar Tuck is said to have lived just a short distance up the path, and the hut stands on the spot where Robin supposedly first met the jolly friar, and where they had their famous altercation when Robin tried to cross the river.<ref>[https://britishheritage.com/travel/robin-hoods-nottinghamshire-derbyshire-leicestershire British Heritage Travel: Robin Hood's merry England], by Dirk Arneson, May 1998.</ref></div>
<div class="plainquote">relic associated with one of the most memorable tales in the Robin Hood legend. At approximately the halfway point of the walk stands a crudely built wooden shelter known as Friar Tuck's Hut. Its age and significance are not known, but Friar Tuck is said to have lived just a short distance up the path, and the hut stands on the spot where Robin supposedly first met the jolly friar, and where they had their famous altercation when Robin tried to cross the river.<ref>[https://britishheritage.com/travel/robin-hoods-nottinghamshire-derbyshire-leicestershire British Heritage Travel: Robin Hood's merry England], by Dirk Arneson, May 1998.</ref></div>
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== Gazetteers ==
== Gazetteers ==
* Not included in {{:Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a}}, pp. 293-311.
* Not included in {{:Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a}}, pp. 293-311.
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== Notes ==
== Notes ==
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Latest revision as of 13:51, 7 January 2021

Locality
Coordinate 53.104092, -1.162023
Adm. div. Nottinghamshire
Vicinity In Fountain Dale, SE corner of Harlow Wood, c. 1.3 km N of Ravenshead
Type Building
Interest Robin Hood name
Status Extant
First Record 1994
A.k.a. Friar Tuck's Shelter
Loading map...
Friar Tuck's Hut.
Friar Tuck's Hut or Shelter. It seems a little on the small side for the rotund friar / Graham Hogg, 22 Feb. 2016, Creative Commons.

By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2020-10-09. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2021-01-07.

Friar Tuck's Hut, also known a Friar Tuck's Shelter, is a small wooden structure in Fountain Dale, at the south-east corner of Harlow Wood, not quite 1.5 km north of Ravenshead.

Friar Tuck's Hut hardly merits a detour. It must be the most unimpressive sight on the Robin Hood Way or any other walking route in England. While it looks much too recent to have been around in the jovial friar's day – if there ever was such a day – Robin's rotund recruit could hardly be squeezed into it. A British Heritage Travel article published first published in May 1998 briefly notes this

relic associated with one of the most memorable tales in the Robin Hood legend. At approximately the halfway point of the walk stands a crudely built wooden shelter known as Friar Tuck's Hut. Its age and significance are not known, but Friar Tuck is said to have lived just a short distance up the path, and the hut stands on the spot where Robin supposedly first met the jolly friar, and where they had their famous altercation when Robin tried to cross the river.[1]

Gazetteers

Sources

Maps

Also see


Notes