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Edwinstowe is known for the presence near the village of the Major Oak in Sherwood Forest, a feature in the folk tales of Robin Hood, and Robin Hood's Larder. The Major Oak, Sherwood Forest By the turn of the 20th century Edwinstowe consisted of a cluster of houses along Town Street, East Lane, Church Street and High Street.
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Robin Hood: The Legend of Sherwood is a 2002 stealth-based real-time tactics video game developed by Spellbound Entertainment. [1] It is similar to games such as Desperados: Wanted Dead or Alive and the Commandos series. In the game, the player controls up to five characters in a setting based on the stories of the protagonist, Robin Hood. [1]
Robin Hood: Mischief in Sherwood is a CG-animated series produced by Method Animation and DQ Entertainment (seasons 1–2), [1] in co-production with Fabrique d'Images (season 1), ZDF, ZDF Enterprises, De Agostini Editore (season 1), and KidsMe S.r.l. (season 3), with the participation of TF1 and The Walt Disney Company France (seasons 1–2), and in association with COFIMAGE 24.
The game opens with Robin Hood and his friends Will Scarlet and Much the Miller's Son locked inside Nottingham Castle. Meanwhile, The Prophecies of Gildas have prophecised that a Hooded Man will come to Sherwood Forest and do the bidding of Herne the Hunter , Lord of the Trees.
Sherwood Forest is the remnants of an ancient royal forest in Nottinghamshire, England, having a historic association with the legend of Robin Hood. The area has been wooded since the end of the Last Glacial Period (as attested by pollen sampling cores ).
This is the name likewise used by Maude Radford Warren in her 1914 collection Robin Hood and His Merry Men where he also serves as a self-appointed guardian of the peace. [24] Henry Gilbert in Robin Hood (1912) calls him Sim of Wakefield. [25] The Scotchman – A Scot who Robin met while on a journey north. He offered to serve Robin who refused ...
Robin Hood's Larder (also known as the Butcher's Oak, the Slaughter Tree and the Shambles Oak) was a veteran tree in Sherwood Forest that measured 24 feet (7.3 m) in circumference. The tree had long been hollow and is reputed to have been used by the legendary outlaw Robin Hood and others as a larder for poached meat. It was badly burnt by fire ...