Robin Hood's Adventures: Analysis of Setting
"Robin Hood's Adventures: Analysis of Setting" explores the significant locations that shape the narrative of Robin Hood and his band of Merry Men. Central to the story is Sherwood Forest, a vast and resource-rich area in England that serves as both a refuge and a battleground for outlaws. The forest's natural resources, such as wood, game, and medicinal plants, highlight the rural life of medieval peasants and underscore issues of land rights and social justice. It becomes a strategic base for Robin Hood, allowing him to effectively challenge authority through guerrilla tactics and ambushes, particularly against the Sheriff of Nottingham.
Nottingham, a midsize market town nearby, represents the antithesis of Sherwood Forest. It is a place of governance and oppression where public proclamations and legal actions occur, including the mustering of forces to hunt down outlaws. For Robin Hood and his allies, Nottingham serves as a high-stakes arena for their social resistance, where they can confront corrupt officials and rally support for their cause. The interplay between these two settings creates a rich backdrop for the themes of rebellion, justice, and the struggle for survival within the medieval social landscape.
Robin Hood's Adventures: Analysis of Setting
First published: c. 1490
Type of work: Fiction
Type of plot: Adventure
Time of work: Thirteenth century
Asterisk denotes entries on real places.
Places Discussed
*Sherwood Forest
*Sherwood Forest. Large forested park stretching across the center of England that offers plentiful opportunities for social and dramatic conflict. As a land preserve, the forest represents a rich source of resources for medieval peasants, who lived much closer to the land than people do today. Wood for fuel, building, and weapons; plentiful game; and various plants and herbs for healing were free for the taking. Also, for the experienced, the forest provided safe hiding places from enemies. When the Earl of Huntingdon finds himself without land or title, Sherwood Forest becomes a fine choice for his base of operations; other outlaws already live there. The natural features make it a prime locale for the sort of guerrilla campaign in which he enlists outlaws. Within the forest, the bow and arrow and the element of surprise can overcome the sheriff’s superior armaments.
The way in which Robin and his band of Merry Men use the forest, a royal preserve, enrages the sheriff. If every peasant in England felt entitled to kill the preserve’s deer for food, their numbers would surely dwindle. The road cutting through the center of the forest is used by business travelers, government messengers, religious pilgrims, and ordinary people. Sometimes these travelers are robbed by outlaws, who represent a threat to civil order and commerce, much as train robbers did in the Old West. Land rights and issues of social justice emerge in Sherwood Forest in complex form.
Because so many changes have taken place over the centuries, it is hard to tell how much the Sherwood Forest of the ballads and folktales departs from historical reality.
*Nottingham
*Nottingham. Midsize market town and seat of local government in northern England, with Nottingham Castle close by. Public proclamations were read in the town square; archery and other contests were held either there or in the castle’s courtyard or tower. Executions and the mustering of men to track down the outlaws also took place at Nottingham. To Robin Hood and his band, the town meant danger and oppression, yet it provided a marvelous public stage for tricking the sheriff. It was their best locale for embarrassing and taunting corrupt officials and building support for their own efforts and for the absent King Richard.
Bibliography
The Ballad of Robin Hood. Sung by Anthony Quayle. Lyre by Desmond Dupré. Caedmon TC 1177, 1963. The Robin Hood ballads were intended to be sung, not read. Many of them seem banal until they are heard in Quayle’s and Dupré’s excellent renditions.
Dobson, R. B., and John Taylor, comps. Rymes of Robyn Hood: An Introduction to the English Outlaw. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1976. Invaluable in studying Robin Hood. Collects the very best of the medieval and early modern versions of the Robin Hood story into one volume. Contains an excellent introduction describing the history and development of the legend.
Holt, J. C. Robin Hood. Rev. and enlarged ed. London: Thames and Hudson, 1989. This highly readable book discusses at length the various claims for the existence of an actual historical Robin Hood.
Keen, Maurice. The Outlaws of Medieval Legend. Rev. ed. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1977. Gives the historical context for the medieval legend of Robin Hood by relating it to the stories of other outlaws. Examines the social causes of the rise of such legends.
Peacock, Thomas Love. Maid Marian. Edited by Richard Garnett. London: J. M. Dent, 1891. This is a humorous and largely neglected version of the Robin Hood legend.