enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Robin Hood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Hood

    This fragment appears to tell the story of Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne. [51] There is also an early playtext appended to a 1560 printed edition of the Gest. This includes a dramatic version of the story of Robin Hood and the Curtal Friar and a version of the first part of the story of Robin Hood and the Potter. (Neither of these ballads is ...

  3. The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Merry_Adventures_of...

    In Pyle's wake, Robin Hood has become a staunch philanthropist protecting innocents against increasingly aggressive villains. [1] Along with the publication of the Child Ballads by Francis James Child, which included most of the surviving Robin Hood ballads, Pyle's novel helped increase the popularity of the Robin Hood legend in the United States.

  4. Robin Hood Rescuing Three Squires - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Hood_Rescuing_Three...

    Howard Pyle retold this story in The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood with the hero as Little John; he used trickery to get the three young men away, and his bow broke, resulting in his own capture. [3] Robin Hood, having just killed Guy of Gisbourne, disguises himself as Guy to carry out the rescue.

  5. Robin Hood and the Monk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Hood_and_the_Monk

    It is considered one of the best of the original ballads of Robin Hood. In Robin Hood and the Monk, Robin goes to Nottingham for mass, but has a dispute with Little John on the way. In Nottingham, he is spotted by a monk and captured. Little John, Much the Miller's Son, and other Merry Men intercept the monk, kill him, and launch a successful ...

  6. Robin Hood's Death - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Hood's_Death

    It is unknown whether the story of Robin firing one final arrow, a celebrated part of the Robin Hood saga, originates from the B version or came from some other lost legend. It is likely related to Robin Hood's Grave near Kirklees, either as an inspiration to create such a monument or else as a justification if the monument already existed. [2]

  7. The books set the tale of Robin Hood in the late 11th century amid the Norman invasion of Wales. Steeped in lore and the political … ‘King Raven’ Trilogy, a Robin Hood Origin Story, Acquired ...

  8. King Raven Trilogy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Raven_Trilogy

    The King Raven Trilogy is a series of historical novels by American writer Stephen R. Lawhead, based on the Robin Hood legend. Lawhead relocates Robin Hood from Sherwood Forest in Nottingham to Wales, and sets the story in the late eleventh century, after the Battle of Hastings and to coincide with the Norman invasion of Wales and the struggles the Cymry (Welsh) people against the Normans, and ...

  9. Friar Tuck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friar_Tuck

    The figure of the jovial friar was common in the May Games festivals of England and Scotland during the 15th to 17th centuries. [citation needed] He appears as a character in the fragment of a Robin Hood play from 1475, sometimes called Robin Hood and the Knight or Robin Hood and the Sheriff, and a play for the May games published in 1560 which tells a story similar to "Robin Hood and the ...