Robin Hood's Bow (Renishaw Hall): Difference between revisions

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According to a booklet that can be purchased at Renishaw Hall, the bow was sold to Sir Reresby at an auction in Worksop in November 1949 as he was willing to pay more for the relic than another bidder who was acting on behalf of Nottingham Corporation. An accompanying document, written in a mid-17th century hand, includes the well-known story of Robin Hood's being bled to death by the prioress of [[Kirklees Priory|Kirklees]], who – and this certainly is not well-known – 'took possession of the bow'.<ref>Mail of 21 June 2020 from Linda Hardy to Henrik Thiil Nielsen.</ref> A [[Robin Hood's Bow (Robin Hood's Well, Nottingham)|Robin Hood's Bow]] was also on display at the woodkeeper's house at [[Robin Hood's Well (Nottingham)|Robin Hood's (or St Ann's) Well in Nottingham]] until 1827. Relics tend to multiply, and there is absolutely no reason to think that Reresby Sitwell, a collector of eccentric memorabilia, took the account of the provenance of the bow at face value. In BBC One's Antiques Roadshow. Series 25 (aired on 22 Jul. 2013, 5:15pm), 'Sir Reresby Sitwell takes a look at what is purported to be Robin Hood's Bow'<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007c26l BBC - Programmes: Antiques Roadshow, Series 25.]</ref>
According to a booklet that can be purchased at Renishaw Hall, the bow was sold to Sir Reresby at an auction in Worksop in November 1949 as he was willing to pay more for the relic than another bidder, who was acting on behalf of Nottingham Corporation. An accompanying document, written in a mid-17th century hand, includes the well-known story of Robin Hood's being bled to death by the prioress of [[Kirklees Priory|Kirklees]], who – and this certainly is not well-known – 'took possession of the bow'.<ref>Mail of 21 June 2020 from Linda Hardy to Henrik Thiil Nielsen.</ref> A [[Robin Hood's Bow (Robin Hood's Well, Nottingham)|Robin Hood's Bow]] was also on display at the woodkeeper's house at [[Robin Hood's Well (Nottingham)|Robin Hood's (or St Ann's) Well in Nottingham]] until 1827. Relics tend to multiply, and there is absolutely no reason to think that Reresby Sitwell, a collector of eccentric memorabilia, took the account of the provenance of the bow at face value. In BBC One's Antiques Roadshow. Series 25 (aired on 22 Jul. 2013, 5:15pm), 'Sir Reresby Sitwell takes a look at what is purported to be Robin Hood's Bow'<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007c26l BBC - Programmes: Antiques Roadshow, Series 25.]</ref>
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== Gazetteers ==
== Gazetteers ==

Revision as of 13:03, 18 September 2020

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Renishaw Hall where Robin Hood's Bow is kept.

[[File:|thumb|right|500px|Renishaw Hall / Dennis Thorley, 15 July 2005; Creative Commons, via Geograph.]]

By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2020-09-14. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2020-09-18. Based on information kindly provided by Linda Hardy, Marketing & Events Officer at The Sherwood Forest Trust.

A bow which reputedly belonged to Robin Hood hangs over a fireplace at Renishaw Hall. It was bought at auction in 1949 by the estate's then owner, the author Sir Sacheverell Reresby Sitwell, complete with a mid-17th century hand-written attestation of provenance.


According to a booklet that can be purchased at Renishaw Hall, the bow was sold to Sir Reresby at an auction in Worksop in November 1949 as he was willing to pay more for the relic than another bidder, who was acting on behalf of Nottingham Corporation. An accompanying document, written in a mid-17th century hand, includes the well-known story of Robin Hood's being bled to death by the prioress of Kirklees, who – and this certainly is not well-known – 'took possession of the bow'.[1] A Robin Hood's Bow was also on display at the woodkeeper's house at Robin Hood's (or St Ann's) Well in Nottingham until 1827. Relics tend to multiply, and there is absolutely no reason to think that Reresby Sitwell, a collector of eccentric memorabilia, took the account of the provenance of the bow at face value. In BBC One's Antiques Roadshow. Series 25 (aired on 22 Jul. 2013, 5:15pm), 'Sir Reresby Sitwell takes a look at what is purported to be Robin Hood's Bow'[2] Template:PnItemQry

Gazetteers

Sources

Discussion

Background

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Notes

  1. Mail of 21 June 2020 from Linda Hardy to Henrik Thiil Nielsen.
  2. BBC - Programmes: Antiques Roadshow, Series 25.



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