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Презентация была опубликована 8 лет назад пользователемAllison Argent
1 THE ROBIN HOOD LEGENDS
2 The story of Robin Hood is so well known that it scarcely needs to be reviewed, but don't worry, I'll do it anyway. The "facts ", at least one romantic version of them, are these. In the time of Richard the Lionheart a minor noble of Nottinghamshire, one Robin of Loxley, was outlawed for poaching deer. Now at that time the deer in a royal forest belonged to the king, and killing one of the king's deer was therefore treason, and punishable by death.
3 So Robin took to the greenwood of Sherwood Forest, making a living by stealing from rich travelers and distributing the loot among the poor of the area. In the process he gained a band of followers and a spouse, Maid Marian. Despite the best efforts of the evil Sherriff of Nottingham he avoided capture until the return of King Richard from the Crusades brought about a full pardon and the restoration of Robin's lands. In other versions he dies at the hands of a kinswoman, the abbess of Kirklees Priory. The 'Major Oak' in Sherwood Forest
4 Well, possibly. Someone, or maybe several people, named Robin Hood existed at different times. Court records of the York Assizes refer to a "Robert Hood", who was a fugitive in In the following year the assizes referred to the same man as "Robinhud". By 1300 at least 8 people were called Robin hood, and at least 5 of those were fugitives from the law. In 1266 the Sherriff of Nottingham, William de Grey, was in active conflict with outlaws in Sherwood Forest. It seems most likely that a number of different outlaws built upon the reputation of a fugitive in the forest, and over time, the legend grew.
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