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Robin of Locksley, Robin Fitzhood or Robin Hood are just some of the names attributed historically to popular goalkeeper Sherwood, whose history is rooted in a series of ballads and English medieval legends who initially present us a simple highwayman to turn to time a vigilante outlaw and finally a nobleman unjustly stripped of their land.
He had been as an outlaw after killing a deer king and a man who dared to question his virtuosity as a goalkeeper. They offered for him two hundred pounds. In the forest, his restless spirit and his ability to hero will lead you to seek adventure, of which the most disadvantaged will always benefit.
literary sources
The first handwritten mention of Robin Hood is in Pedro Labrador (Piers Plowman) of William Langland in 1377, where the Sloth priest declares: "I know the rhymes of Robin Hood". Years later, the Scottish chronicler John Fordun writes that the characters of ballads, Robin Hood "is the one I like."
At the beginning of the sixteenth century, when numerous ballads are printed, Robin appears in them like a gentleman (gentleman), the name given at this time to independent traders or farmers. It is only towards the end of the century acquired a peerage and took the name of "Robin of Locksley," or "Robert Fitz Ooth, Earl of Huntington," and begins to be a set character around 1190, when King Richard Coeur Leon part towards Jerusalem in the Third Crusade. The romantic association with Marian (or Marion, sometimes also called Matilde) dates from this period. The Romantic poet John Keats mentions it as the central character in the poem he dedicated to Robin Hood in the early nineteenth century.
It is in this century that Robin Hood becomes a rebel Saxon fighting the Norman lords and appears in Ivanhoe (1819), Walter Scott. The novelist recreates this era in his novel, which tells the conflict between the Normans and the Saxons old. Robin of Locksley appears there with his gang of archers, allied to the hero of the story, a Saxon nobleman who returns from a crusade in which he fought with Richard the Lionheart, brother of John.
In the work of Howard Pyle, The Adventures of Robin Hood 1883 except Marian, they are all the characters then appear in the countless adaptations of the legend.
The different recreations include more or less the same episodes: Robin encounter with Little John in the forest and fighting with sticks on a trunk that crosses a stream; the appearance of rogue Friar Tuck in the woods and catch them; Robin mockery of the sheriff in the archery contest, in which Robin participates disguised as one-eyed beggar; Will the rescue of Stutely; a large number of battles with the sheriff's men; the return of just king, Richard the Lionheart and marriage to Marian.
From the Middle Ages to today, songs and ballads, plays and musicals, films and television series have been built a myth according to their times. Then we see Marian play both the role of a guerrilla like a submissive girl, or, the same Robin, presented either as a bandit or a tough fighting for a just cause.Summary 2Robin of Locksley, Robin Fitzhood or Robin Hood are just some of the names attributed historically to popular goalkeeper Sherwood, whose history is rooted in a series of ballads and English medieval legends who initially present us a simple highwayman to turn to time a vigilante outlaw and finally a nobleman unjustly stripped of their land.In 1820, Walter Scott recovered the medieval hero as a secondary luxury in his novel Ivanhoe. Since then they have proliferated modern versions of the adventures of Robin Hood. The most prominent are the adaptations of Howard Pyle (The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood of Great Renown in Nottinghamshire, 1883), Roger Lancelyn Green (The Adventures of Robin Hood, 1956) and Paul Creswick (Robin Hood, and his adventures, 1903) version that includes this edition.I hope luck will help.
He had been as an outlaw after killing a deer king and a man who dared to question his virtuosity as a goalkeeper. They offered for him two hundred pounds. In the forest, his restless spirit and his ability to hero will lead you to seek adventure, of which the most disadvantaged will always benefit.
literary sources
The first handwritten mention of Robin Hood is in Pedro Labrador (Piers Plowman) of William Langland in 1377, where the Sloth priest declares: "I know the rhymes of Robin Hood". Years later, the Scottish chronicler John Fordun writes that the characters of ballads, Robin Hood "is the one I like."
At the beginning of the sixteenth century, when numerous ballads are printed, Robin appears in them like a gentleman (gentleman), the name given at this time to independent traders or farmers. It is only towards the end of the century acquired a peerage and took the name of "Robin of Locksley," or "Robert Fitz Ooth, Earl of Huntington," and begins to be a set character around 1190, when King Richard Coeur Leon part towards Jerusalem in the Third Crusade. The romantic association with Marian (or Marion, sometimes also called Matilde) dates from this period. The Romantic poet John Keats mentions it as the central character in the poem he dedicated to Robin Hood in the early nineteenth century.
It is in this century that Robin Hood becomes a rebel Saxon fighting the Norman lords and appears in Ivanhoe (1819), Walter Scott. The novelist recreates this era in his novel, which tells the conflict between the Normans and the Saxons old. Robin of Locksley appears there with his gang of archers, allied to the hero of the story, a Saxon nobleman who returns from a crusade in which he fought with Richard the Lionheart, brother of John.
In the work of Howard Pyle, The Adventures of Robin Hood 1883 except Marian, they are all the characters then appear in the countless adaptations of the legend.
The different recreations include more or less the same episodes: Robin encounter with Little John in the forest and fighting with sticks on a trunk that crosses a stream; the appearance of rogue Friar Tuck in the woods and catch them; Robin mockery of the sheriff in the archery contest, in which Robin participates disguised as one-eyed beggar; Will the rescue of Stutely; a large number of battles with the sheriff's men; the return of just king, Richard the Lionheart and marriage to Marian.
From the Middle Ages to today, songs and ballads, plays and musicals, films and television series have been built a myth according to their times. Then we see Marian play both the role of a guerrilla like a submissive girl, or, the same Robin, presented either as a bandit or a tough fighting for a just cause.Summary 2Robin of Locksley, Robin Fitzhood or Robin Hood are just some of the names attributed historically to popular goalkeeper Sherwood, whose history is rooted in a series of ballads and English medieval legends who initially present us a simple highwayman to turn to time a vigilante outlaw and finally a nobleman unjustly stripped of their land.In 1820, Walter Scott recovered the medieval hero as a secondary luxury in his novel Ivanhoe. Since then they have proliferated modern versions of the adventures of Robin Hood. The most prominent are the adaptations of Howard Pyle (The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood of Great Renown in Nottinghamshire, 1883), Roger Lancelyn Green (The Adventures of Robin Hood, 1956) and Paul Creswick (Robin Hood, and his adventures, 1903) version that includes this edition.I hope luck will help.
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