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From International Robin Hood Bibliography
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-05-04. Revised by … The following Records are found for the period : Notes
    513 bytes (61 words) - 08:31, 7 January 2021
  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-05-04. Revised by … The following Records are found for the period :
    484 bytes (60 words) - 09:46, 23 May 2022

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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-02-06. Revised by … The Proceedings of the Old Bailey includes a substantial number of case summaries that mention public houses or streets named named Robin Hood or Little John. Relevant Records The following Records are relevant: Background ⁃ Old Bailey Online ⁃ Wikipedia: Old Bailey. Notes
    1 KB (189 words) - 02:07, 1 June 2022
  • Robin Hood's Butts. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-06-04. Revised by … Photo courtesy Tim Prevett, MA, producer, consultant and lecturer on slow TV. 'Robin Hood's Butts' is the name of two adjacent Bronze Age bowl barrows in the northern area of the Long Mynd, near Duckley Nab, c. 3 km west of All Stretton. According to Dobson & Taylor, the name was applied to "[a] group of tumuli on the edge of the Long Mynd". Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, p. 303, s.n. Robin Hood's Butts [1]. However, while more than twenty mounds, referred to collectively as the Long Mynd Barrows, are scattered over the plateau, Wikipedia: Long Mynd. the name 'Robin Hood's Butts' seems to be quite consistently applied to only two of them. The name appears on a fairly early O.S. map (1833) and was already in use by the early 18th century. Gelling, Margaret 1990a, pt. I, p. 225, referring to an unspecified MS source in the collection of Shropshire documents in the Local Studies Department of Shropshire …
    5 KB (739 words) - 13:50, 7 January 2021
  • Short introduction We hope that this wiki will in due course come to live up to its somewhat grand name. It is called 'International' because in addition to the vast amount of material that exists in English, we intend to add information about materials in other languages such as translations of ballads, secondary literature, children's fiction, literature on foreign analogues of Robin Hood etc. Arguably 'Bibliography' is a misnomer as the site already includes a wealth of all sorts of information one would not nor­mally expect to find in a biblio­gra­phy, but the biblio­gra­phical aspect is in all cases taken quite seriously, and there is already a wiki named the Robin Hood Wiki, so another name had to be found for the site. Latest news NEW subsite: IRHB Editions, currently with a single edition: A Gest of Robyn Hode ⁃ 2024-03-12: All tithe awards for the following English counties have now been searched for Robin Hood-related place names: …
    36 KB (4,936 words) - 11:49, 22 March 2024