I. INTRODUCTION
Robin Hood,
legendary hero of medieval England. In most tales about him, Robin Hood leads
an outlaw band called the Merry Men in daring forest adventures. The Merry Men
fight authority and rob the rich to give to the poor. For more than 600 years,
the adventures of Robin Hood have been celebrated in stories, poems, ballads,
and motion pictures.
II. LEGEND OF ROBIN HOOD
The key members of the Merry Men are an enormous
man jokingly known as Little John, a traveling priest named Friar Tuck, and the
outlaw Will Scarlet. In many versions of the legend, Robin falls in love with a
spirited young woman named Maid Marian. The main enemy of Robin’s band is the
Sheriff of Nottingham, a dastardly and greedy law officer. The band clashes
with dishonest local abbots as well.
Although Robin fights to overturn the power of
rich landowners, church leaders, and government representatives, he and his
band respect the authority of the ruling king, who in most stories is Richard
I. In many stories, the king disguises himself and joins the Merry Men,
intending to capture Robin. But the king then discovers Robin’s honorable ways
and pardons him.
Some people
believe that Robin Hood was an actual person, usually identified as Robert
Fitzooth, the earl of Huntington. Others think that Robin was not a real person
and that the stories about him developed for historical and cultural reasons.
In medieval England, peasant masses struggled to make a meager living while a relatively
small number of nobles and members of the church elite controlled the country’s
land and wealth. People told and retold the Robin Hood stories as a way to
express their discontent with overbearing government authorities, dishonest
church officials, laws restricting hunting and farming rights, and other social
injustices.
A number of prominent authors wrote about Robin
Hood in the 18th and 19th centuries, including Sir Walter Scott and John Keats.
In England during the Victorian Age (1837-1901), the legend became a popular
inspiration for children's tales, including a successful collection called Robin
Hood and Little John; or, The Merry Men of Sherwood Forest (1840) by Pierce
Egan. In the 20th century, several movies appeared. The two most famous were Robin
Hood (1922), a silent film starring Douglas Fairbanks, and The Adventures
of Robin Hood (1938), an action-adventure with Errol Flynn. More recently,
Kevin Costner played the leading man in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves
(1991).



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