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From International Robin Hood Bibliography
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-14. Revised by … This page on websites includes a short list of lists of websites and a slightly longer list of websites as well as a long list of potentially useful web resources. Lists and webographies ⁃ Robin Hood Project at the University of Rochester: Other Ressources. Lists a handful of dedicated sites. Robin Hood Websites The items included here deal exclusively with or include substantial amounts of material on the Robin Hood tradition. ⁃ Experience Nottinghamshire: Robin Hood (official tourism website of Nottinghamshire) ⁃ Here Begynneth A Lytell Geste of Robin Hood… ⁃ The Legend of Robin Hood ⁃ Our Nottinghamshire: Robin Hood ⁃ The Outlaw Robin Hood - His Yorkshire Legend (Barbara Green) ⁃ Robin Hood: Bold Outlaw of Barnsdale and Sherwood. Site with information on various aspects of the tradition, history etc. ⁃ Robin Hood Loxley Yorkshire ⁃ The Robin Hood …
    8 KB (1,064 words) - 02:00, 1 June 2022

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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-14. Revised by … This page on websites includes a short list of lists of websites and a slightly longer list of websites as well as a long list of potentially useful web resources. Lists and webographies ⁃ Robin Hood Project at the University of Rochester: Other Ressources. Lists a handful of dedicated sites. Robin Hood Websites The items included here deal exclusively with or include substantial amounts of material on the Robin Hood tradition. ⁃ Experience Nottinghamshire: Robin Hood (official tourism website of Nottinghamshire) ⁃ Here Begynneth A Lytell Geste of Robin Hood… ⁃ The Legend of Robin Hood ⁃ Our Nottinghamshire: Robin Hood ⁃ The Outlaw Robin Hood - His Yorkshire Legend (Barbara Green) ⁃ Robin Hood: Bold Outlaw of Barnsdale and Sherwood. Site with information on various aspects of the tradition, history etc. ⁃ Robin Hood Loxley Yorkshire ⁃ The Robin Hood …
    8 KB (1,064 words) - 02:00, 1 June 2022
  • 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
  • The site of the. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2020-10-13. Revised by … A public house named the Robin Hood was situated immediately north-east of the intersection of Thorney Lanes, Marchinton Cliff, and Forest Road in Marchington Woodlands. As per October 2020, a Google search shows that real estate information websites still refer to this property as 'Robin Hood', so the name of the pub lives on to some extent. As the house now at the site is clearly of fairly recent date, it is possible that its immediate predecessor was the Robin Hood. The earliest sources for this pub name known to IRHB are a 25" O.S. map of the area published 1901, based on a survey carried out in 1900, and an allusion in a book on fox hunting published the same year as the map. Gazetteers ⁃ Not included in Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 293-311. Maps ⁃ 25" O.S. map Staffordshire XXXII.16 (1883; surveyed 1882) ⁃ 25" O.S. map Staffordshire XXXII.16 (1901; rev. 1900) …
    3 KB (440 words) - 13:53, 7 January 2021
  • The former Robin Hood. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2020-05-25. Revised by … At least for thirty years or so inhabitants of Upper Green, Langley, Essex, could quench their thirst at the Robin Hood on Bull Lane. The Pub Wiki lists records for the years 1933-37 only. Pub Wiki: Robin Hood, Langley; also see there: The Essex 1937 Pub Directory - Ro. However, we can extend the documented life of this pub a bit, for it is included on a 25" O.S. map of the area published in 1921 (surveyed 1919) and on 6" O.S. maps published in 1924 (rev. 1919), 1950 (rev. 1946–49) and 1951 (rev. 1946). It is labelled 'B.H. (for 'beer house') on the maps (see Maps below). Websites listing real estate sales know the building as the 'Old Robin Hood'. See for instance Zoopla: The Old Robin Hood, Langley Upper Green, Saffron Walden CB11 4RU. Gazetteers ⁃ Not included in Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 293-311. Sources ⁃ Pub Wiki: Robin Hood, Langley. Also see there: The Essex …
    5 KB (599 words) - 16:43, 8 May 2022
  • Approximate indication of the site of the Robin Hood. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2020-05-20. Revised by … According to two major web sites on London Pubs there was a Robin Hood pub at 1 North Blomfield Street during the 1850s. However, it has not yet been possible to confirm this. Pub Wiki and London Pubology both list the 'Robin Hood', at 1 Blomfield Street North, Hackney, referring to an 1856 Post Office Directory and the censuses of 1851 and 1861. However, IRHB has found no records for Blomfield Street, Hackney, in the 1851 census, and in that for 1861, names, ages and occupations of residents do not match the data cited by the websites. London Pubology: Robin Hood; Pub Wiki: Robin Hood, 1 Blomfield Street North, Hackney E8; census records at the Genealogist (£). Unless the data we have seen is incomplete, there must be some misunderstanding, but until the 1856 Post Office Directory has been consulted, we must as it were, give this dead pub the benefit of doubt. At first …
    5 KB (635 words) - 03:46, 12 February 2021
  • Robin Hood's Park. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-21. Revised by … Dobson & Taylor thought 'Robin Hood's Park' was a "name apparently applied to part of an estate near Fountains Abbey", Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, p. 309. four miles SW of Ripon. In this they have been followed by at least one of the better Robin Hood websites. For instance Midgley Webpages. However, the place-name is listed by A. H. Smith under the township of Fountains Earth Smith, Albert Hugh 1961a, pt. V, p. 205. which is not adjacent to Fountains Abbey. Located in Nidderdale, it owes its name to the fact that it (or most of the land within it) was owned by Fountains Abbey. Robin Hood's Park is an area c. 1 km east of (and above) the southern end of Gouthwaite Reservoir, close to a listed building called Sigsworth Grange, which in pre-Reformation times was a cattle lodge belonging to Fountains Abbey. For the Nidderdale cattle lodges of Fountains Abbey see Platt, Colin 1969a, pp. 74, 102 n. 1, 109. …
    7 KB (1,116 words) - 19:11, 22 April 2022
  • Spur Bridge, Aunby, near which Robin Hood's Cross was probably located. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-17. Revised by … At least until the mid-16th century, a 'Robin Hood's Cross' stod on or near the Rutland–Lincolnshire county boundary, somewhere north of Stamford. It is recorded twice in the years 1524–35. The editor of State Papers Henry VIII Anonymous 1836a, p. 90. believed the "Robyn Hoddes Crosse" mentioned in a 1524 letter from Thomas Wolsey to Thomas Howard (1473-1554), 3rd Duke of Norfolk and Earl Marshall (see Allusion below), was situated somewhere in Northumberland, Ibid., p. 478. but this must be a mistake. First, for what it is worth, I have never seen any mention of such a place in Northumberland. Secondly, I believe the editor was led to conclude that the Duke was already in Northumberland by Wolsey's instructing the Duke to write to the King and Queen of Scotland that he "be commyn unto the Borders" to assist them. He may also have been …
    8 KB (1,170 words) - 07:52, 3 December 2022
  • Top left to bottom right: Newcastle-upon-Tyne (see section 'Little John – master of the king's ship'), Whitby and Robin Hoods' Bay (pointers overlapping), Bury St Edmunds, and Nieuw­poort, Belgium. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-03-07. Revised by … Reference brought to light by Robert Lynley, who has also generously provided back­ground information and materials. Transcription and translation courtesy of Ian Short, Emeritus Professor of French, Birkbeck, University of London, and President of the Anglo-Norman Text Society. Information from Dr David Hepworth and Dr David Crook via members of 'robinhoodforum4'. Allusion Source notes Ian Short's brackets and ellipses, the latter indicating illegible characters or words; line change signalled by "|". Uncertain readings indicated by "[?]". The letter was written on 1 March, year unknown, at the castle in Male, once a separate village, now part of Sint-Kruis, a suburb of Bruges, West Flanders, Belgium. MS Word …
    35 KB (5,626 words) - 03:46, 12 February 2021