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Venturing Into The Symbolic Landscape Of Robin Hood’s Sherwood Forest

Venturing Into The Symbolic Landscape Of Robin Hood’s Sherwood Forest

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The site of Sherwood Forest, legendary home of ‘Robin Hood and his Merry Men’ lies a bit more than 240 kilometers (150 miles) west of London. In the 1200s, which is usually considered by many to be the time Robin trod these woods, Sherwood covered more than 100,000 acres, roughly a fifth of the county known as Nottinghamshire. Evidence of flint tools used by pre-historic hunter-gatherers have been dug up, indicating the area has been popular for thousands of years. It had been a wooded forest ever since the end of the last glacial epoch and was considered a private royal hunting ground. Any wild game was considered the property of the king, so when a commoner killed game for his family’s table, he was considered a poacher. Eating ‘the king’s deer’ was a capital offence, punishable by severe methods, including death.

Medieval forest scene, from the Livre de chasse (1387) (Public Domain)

Medieval forest scene, from the Livre de chasse (1387) (Public Domain)

Running right through the middle of the forest lay the Great North Way, a highway of sorts connecting London and York. Any travelers usually went heavily armed in order to protect themselves from robbers who lived outside the law. Ever since those times, such thieves have been called ‘outlaws’.

Sciryuda: Woodland Belonging To The Shire

The place was first recorded as a geographical area unto itself in 958 AD. It was called Sciryuda, which means “ the woodland belonging to the shire.” It became a royal hunting preserve in 1066, following the Norman invasion of England, and was a favorite hunting spot of Kings John and Edward the First. The ruins of King John’s hunting lodge still stand near the village of Kings Clipstone.  

In those days, ‘forest’ did not simply refer to a stand of trees. It was a legal term signifying an area subject to royal laws put in place to protect timber and wild game. A ‘forester’ did not just keep track of the health of trees. Sometimes called agisters, wardens (verderers) and rangers, these were all men hired by the Crown to patrol the area. They were well-armed, and were expected to employ even lethal force when necessary.

Altercation between Outlaws and Agisters. Woodcut from ‘Robin Hood A Collection of Ancient Poems, Songs Ballads’ by Joseph Ritson (1885) (Guttenberg Project)

Altercation between Outlaws and Agisters. Woodcut from ‘Robin Hood A Collection of Ancient Poems, Songs Ballads’ by Joseph Ritson (1885) (Guttenberg Project)

During the time of the Roman occupation, and extending back all the way to the Iron Age, farming communities, some of which exist to this day, cleared large areas of land, so it was not all covered with trees and woods in various stages of development. Farmsteads were quite common.

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This article is excerpted from Jim Willis’s upcoming book, “ Ego and the Hero ( Robin Hood: Victory Through Defiance.)” To be published in 2022.

Jim Willis is author of eleven books on religion and spirituality, he has been an ordained minister for over forty years while working part-time as a carpenter, the host of his own drive-time radio show, an arts council director and adjunct college professor in the fields of World Religions and Instrumental Music. He is author of The Wizard in the Wood

Top Image: Medieval scene. Robin Hood story. (Matrioshka / Adobe Stock)

By: Jim Willis

 
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Jim

After graduating from the Eastman School of Music, Jim Willis became a high school band and orchestra teacher during the week, a symphony trombonist on the weekends, a jazz musician at night and a choral conductor on Sunday mornings. ... Read More

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