Robin Hood's Stride (Harthill): Difference between revisions

From International Robin Hood Bibliography
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File:geograph-089407-by-Darius-Khan.jpg|Robin Hood's Stride / [https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/89407 Darius Khan, 10 Jun. 2003, Creative Commons, via Geograph.]
File:geograph-089407-by-Darius-Khan.jpg|Robin Hood's Stride / [https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/89407 Darius Khan, 10 Jun. 2003, Creative Commons, via Geograph.]
File:geograph-109809-by-Andrew-Huggett.jpg|Robin Hood’s Stride at Sunset / [https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/109809 Andrew Huggett, 21 Jan. 2006, Creative Commons, via Geograph.]
File:geograph-109809-by-Andrew-Huggett.jpg|Robin Hood’s Stride at Sunset / [https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/109809 Andrew Huggett, 21 Jan. 2006, Creative Commons, via Geograph.]
File:Anonymous 1917a-r.jpg|{{:Anonymous 1917a}} / Private collection.
File:Marshall, A 19xxa-r.jpg|{{:Marshall, A 19xxa}} / Private collection.
File:Marshall, A 19xxa-r.jpg|{{:Marshall, A 19xxa}} / Private collection.
File:Frith, Francis 19xxf-r.jpg|{{:Frith, Francis 19xxf}} / Private collection.
File:Frith, Francis 19xxf-r.jpg|{{:Frith, Francis 19xxf}} / Private collection.

Revision as of 18:15, 29 December 2017

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Approximate location of Robin Hood's Stride

By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-10-14. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-12-29.

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.[1] 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.[2] 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". The name Robin Hood's Stride is first recorded in an 1819 enclosure award.[3] As Kenneth Cameron notes in one of the English Place-Name Society volumes on Derbyshire, this and all other Robin Hood-related place-names in Derbyshire are first recorded at a late date.[4]

Robin Hood's Stride is a popular tourist attraction.

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Brief mention

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