The theme for the Saturday night disco is Robin Hood and his Merry men.
To help you discover who Robin Hood and his Merry men were, there are some links below.
Fancy Dress Links
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ROBIN HOOD
Riding through the royal forest of Sherwood on a glorious May morning, you don't have a care in the world. Then you hear a bird call, the faint rustling of trees, and suddenly a man armed with a longbow appears in your path.
He wears a feathered cap, or is that a hood? You can't see the man's face clearly, but you don't have to. He is dressed in lincoln green, the colour of Robin Hood -- the most famous English outlaw of all time.
Don't worry, he won't harm you -- not yet, anyway. He'll invite you to join him and his outlaw band for a feast. The meal of choice? Venison -- freshly-killed deer. Only a king is allowed to hunt it, but then Robin never did worry about the law.
After your feast, Robin, or his faithful lieutenant Little John, will ask you a question. How much money are you carrying? If you answer truthfully, you may keep all that you have. If you need money, then Robin will give or lend you some. But if you lie to him -- if you hoard your money, well ... you won't have that money for very long. You'll be stripped of your clothes and cash, tied backwards on your horse and sent back to Nottingham in shame. And your money? It will go to help someone in need.
Most people love Robin Hood. And that's a good thing. Just as commoners are allowed to hunt harmful wolves, anyone can hunt Robin Hood. The sheriff would pay for Robin's capture just as surely as he would pay for a wolf's head. Robin and his band are often called wolfsheads by their enemies.
Robin Hood is an outlaw. That means he lives outside the protection of the law. But Robin is a law unto himself. He's the self-styled king of the greenwood -- either Sherwood Forest in Nottinghamshire or Barnsdale in Yorkshire.
Robin is no common criminal. As the famous saying goes, he robs from the rich and gives to the poor. The poor have little to fear from Robin Hood. His enemies are the rich and corrupt, especially the Sheriff of Nottingham and the bad apples in the Church like the Abbot of St. Mary's and the Bishop of Hereford.
Robin defends the underdog against oppression.
Sometimes he fights for the Saxons. The Saxons are better known as the English, and for a time they lived under the cruel domination of the Normans, the French-speaking descendants of Vikings. In many modern stories, Robin fights for an England where Norman and Saxon can live together in peace.
Although Robin is an outlaw, a thief and a rebel, he is usually a strong supporter of the rightful king, especially when that king is Richard the Lionheart. But Robin will fight Richard's corrupt brother, the usurper Prince (and later King) John.
In many stories, Robin is devoted to the Virgin Mary. But in some versions, he is the "son" of the pagan forest god Herne the Hunter. And others say he's one of the "Fair Folk" or the "Little People", the magical inhabitants of Britain.
But surely Robin's strongest allegiance is to his band of Merry Men -- Little John, Friar Tuck, Will Scarlet, Much the Miller's Son, Alan a Dale and above all Maid Marian, his true love. You can read more about them in the Merry Men section.
Robin Hood is a champion archer. Once, he snuck into a Nottingham archery tournament. The prize for winning the contest was an arrow with a silver shaft and golden head and feathers. It was a tough contest. Some people say Robin's leading opponent shot an arrow into centre of the target. It seemed impossible to beat that shot. But bold Robin Hood took aim and fired an arrow with such uncanny precision that it split his opponent's arrow in two. Thus, Robin won the tournament and the gold and silver arrow. Some tales say Robin can split a mere branch from over 300 yards away.
He's also a good swordsman and handy with the quarterstaff.
But for all this, Robin actually loses a lot of fights. There are many stories where Robin meets a stranger, often a simple tradesman like a potter, pindar, pedlar, tanner and so on. Robin picks a fight. But the stranger often fights Robin Hood to a standstill or even overpowers him. Robin then asks the stranger to join his band. This is how many of the most famous Merry Men met Robin Hood.
When Robin lost to the potter, he traded clothes with the potter and went to Nottingham to trick the sheriff into the greenwood. In a similar story, he traded clothes with a butcher. Robin Hood is a master of disguise. Dressed as an old woman he tricked an evil bishop. As a palmer (pilgrim) turned hangman, Robin rescued three of his men. And as a bold harper, he rescued Alan a Dale's bride.
But who was Robin Hood before he became an outlaw?
In the earliest tales, Robin Hood's name is Robin Hood. But many stories say he was born in AD 1160 in the village of Locksley or Loxley, which is sometimes in Yorkshire (as it is in the real world) and other times in Nottinghamshire. So, Robin is often called Robin of Locksley.
The earliest stories say he is a yeoman, a member of the rising middle class. In the medieval ballads, no explanation is given for why he is an outlaw.
But a well-known later tale has a bloody explanation for Robin's outlawry. A tall lad of 15, Robin went to Nottingham to attend a fair. He was stopped by 15 surly foresters who mocked Robin's youth and said Robin was too young to shoot a bow. Robin wagered 20 marks on his skill. Then, Robin shot and killed a hart that was over 550 yards away. The foresters refused to pay up and were going to beat up young Robin. But Robin managed to shoot and kill all fifteen of them. For this, he was outlawed.
That story might be bloodier than some you are used to. But the early Robin Hood also beheaded his enemies such as the Sheriff of Nottingham and Guy of Gisborne.
Some stories say Robin was outlawed when he rescued Much the Miller's Son from the sheriff's men. Much was hungry and had killed the king's deer. Under the harsh forest laws, the foresters were to chop off Much's hand or remove his eye. "Are there no exceptions?" Robin asked with an arrow trained on the sheriff's men-at-arms.
Other stories say that Robin is the son of a forester. Or that he is Sir Robin of Locksley, a knight who returned from the Third Crusade to find his land stolen by the sheriff.
And in some tales, he is the Earl of Huntingdon (or the earl's son), a powerful land owner who loses his lands either by going into debt or by betrayal. As the earl, Robin's real name is sometimes said to be Robin Fitzooth, or the lord of Locksley Hall.
In one version, Robin of Loxley is killed, and Robert of Huntingdon becomes the second Robin Hood.
But however he became an outlaw, Robin does not remain an outlaw forever.
Many movies end King Richard pardoning Robin Hood. But in the ballad version of this tale, Robin grows bored with service to the king (called King Edward in an early ballad) and heads back to the forest to live as an outlaw for another 22 years.
In the ballads, Robin Hood and Marian do not have children. But there are a few modern books, comic books and movies with tales of Robin's daughter or son. (In the 2001 TV movie Princess of Thieves, Robin's daughter is named Gwyn.)
In 1247, Robin was ill and sought help from his cousin, the Prioress of Kirklees. A common medical treatment in the middle ages was to bleed someone. But the Prioress betrayed Robin and drained too much of his blood away. Robin had just enough strength to blow his hunting horn and summon his men. Little John burst into the room, and threatened to kill Robin's treacherous cousin. But Robin stopped his faithful friend. Robin would never harm a woman.
Some stories say that Robin managed to fire one last arrow and the dying outlaw told Little John to bury him where it landed. And near Kirklees is a grave that was said to belong to Robin Hood. The date on the grave is "24 kalends December, 1247". It refers to the days counting back from the first (Kalends) of December. It's a forged and fake-medieval date, as it doesn't quite conform to proper Roman-style dating system. But it is apparently supposed to mean November 8. Others have set Robin's death day at November 18 (which would have been 14 Kalends December in true Roman style). And finally some have ignored the "Kalends" part and suggested that Robin died on Christmas Eve.
Perhaps Robin was killed that wintry day in 1247. But his spirit remains alive -- whenever good friends gather or the underprivileged need a champion. For centuries people have taken the name of Robin Hood.
It may be a cliché, but Robin is not truly dead as long as someone tells a tale of the bold outlaw of Barnsdale and Sherwood.
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Little John
The first thing you should know about Little John is that he is not -- little, that is. Some stories say he was over seven feet tall. Often he looks like a wild man with a thick beard and dressed in skins.
The next thing you should know about Little John is that he is Little, -- John Little is his real name. However, some say it is really John Naylor or le Nailer. It's said he comes from Hathersage in Derbyshire, the shire next to Nottinghamshire which was controlled by the same sheriff. His grave can be found in a churchyard in Hathersage. Click here to see his tombstone , and click here to see a picture of me alongside his very long grave .
Little John is Robin Hood's lieutenant, his second-in-command. In the early ballads, he is nearly as important as his master. John has his own adventures. For example, there's the time he entered a Nottingham archery contest. The sheriff liked what he saw and hired Little John. Using the alias Reynold Greenlefe, the outlaw promised to be the worst servant the sheriff ever had. By the story's end, Little John encouraged the sheriff's cook to join Robin's band and they lured the sheriff into the greenwood where he was robbed by Robin Hood. In another ballad, John dresses as a beggar and fights three miserly beggars.
He is an excellent swordsman and archer. In fact, one time Little John beat Robin in a playful archery contest. Robin refused to pay up and John quit his service. Then Robin got captured by a monk's treachery. It was Little John who organized the Merry Men to trick the sheriff and even the king in order to rescue Robin. Once free, Robin Hood apologized and offered to make Little John the leader of the band. John refused. No matter how much they fight, Robin is always the master.
Little John's best-known weapon is the quarterstaff. He was carrying a quarterstaff when he first met Robin Hood.
One day Robin Hood was bored. There hadn't been an adventure in weeks. And so he left the Merry Men behind and went in search of excitement. Robin found it when he came across a stream with a long, narrow bridge. He started to cross the bridge. On the other side was a tall stranger who was also crossing the bridge. Neither would not back down.
Robin threatened to shoot the stranger, declaring "I'll show you right Nottingham play!"
The stranger called Robin a coward. "Well arm'd with a long bow you stand,/To shoot at my breast, while I, I protest,/ Have nought but a staff in my hand."
Robin lowered his bow and went to carve himself a staff. Then, Robin and the stranger battled each other long and hard. Both were wounded. But finally, the stranger knocked Robin into the brook. The outlaw was "floating away with the tide".
Thus, Robin conceded the battle. He climbed out of the water, and blew his bugle horn. The Merry Men, led by Will Stutely, appeared. Robin's men threatened to fight the stranger. But Robin stopped them. Robin asked the stranger if he'd like to join the Merry Men and wear the Lincoln green clothing of the outlaw band.
The stranger accepted. And he was baptized into the band by Will Stutely. To quote again from the ballad,
"This infant was call'd John Little,"
quoth he.
"Which name shall be chang'd anon,
The words we'll transpose, so where-
ever he goes,
His name shall be called Little John."
Then, Little John was dressed in green and took his place in the band.
In some movies, John loses the fight on the bridge. In the Kevin Costner movie, John is the original leader of the outlaws, and it's Robin who joins them and assumes control of the Merry Men after he had won the quarterstaff duel.
Some modern stories portray Little John as nothing more than a dumb sidekick, but in the earliest tales, he was as crafty as Robin Hood himself. In fact, an old meaning of the word Little was "tricky" or "clever", not small. In some tales, Little John is a gentle man. In others, he can be downright angry and violent. He beheads a monk in one story and shoots the sheriff in the back in another. And in one modern story, he even killed a woman who spurned him. Thankfully his bad temper is usually not so monstrous.
He might grumble or argue, but when push comes to shove, Little John is always there for Bold Robin. You couldn't ask for a more loyal friend. |
Maid Marian
There's an old saying that behind every great man is a great woman. Meet Maid Marian. She is Robin Hood's true love and truly a great woman.
Local legend says Robin and Marian were married in St. Mary's church in the village of Edwinstowe. Click here to see a picture of the church.
Marian's a late-comer to the legend, and she doesn't appear in many of the traditional ballads. No matter. She has become a very important part of the legend.
True, she can be merely a damsel-in-distress. Sometimes she's a Norman noblewoman, daughter of Lord Fitzwalter or Sir Richard at the Lee, a knight who was helped by Robin Hood. She meets Robin when he ambushes a group of Norman knights. However, in other stories, she's a Saxon who's known Robin since they were children. Other times she is the ward of the sheriff or Prince John. And her unwanted suitors include the sheriff, Guy of Gisborne and even Prince John. Our hero will have to rescue her from these men. There are times when Maid Marian is merely the hero's girlfriend. In some tales the happy couple refuse to marry until the Merry Men are pardoned, hence she is called "Maid Marian".
But Marian (or Marion, as her name is often spelled) is not always a weak character in need of rescuing. Even cloistered away in Nottingham, she acts as a spy, passing information to the rogues in Sherwood. The sheriff only suspects her ties to Robin Hood. And in a time when women were forced into unwanted marriages, Marian chose to love Robin. She'll also speak her mind.
And in many stories, she's an even stronger character. Sometimes she lives as an outlaw with Robin and is as good an archer and swordsman as he is. In these stories, she's usually just called Marion or Marian. The maid part of her name is dropped, or she is called Lady Marion instead.
In one ballad, she is Robin's childhood sweetheart. Disguising herself as a male page she heads to the forest to find her outlawed partner. Unfortunately, when she comes across Robin, he is also in disguise. Not recognizing each other, they start a fight.
They drew out their swords, and to
cutting they went,
At least an hour or more,
That the blood ran apace from bold
Robins face,
And Marian was wounded sore.
"O hold thy hand, hold thy hand," said
Robin Hood.
"And thou shalt be one of my string,
To range in the wood with bold Robin
Hood.
And hear the sweet nightingall sing."
As you can see, Marian fought him to a standstill. It was Robin Hood who called the fight off. When they recognized each other, there was much rejoicing and she entered the band.
Sadly, some writers at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of 20th century weakened Marian. She gets one tiny mention in a classic children's book. In another book, her fight with Robin ends when she sees blood and faints. Yet another says Robin overcame her easily.
Rubbish! There have always been strong women in history, and some of them were warriors. I prefer a strong Marion who can beat Robin in a fight. Marian doesn't take crap from anyone, Robin included.
Recent writers have restored Marian to her rightful place in the band. Sometimes she is even the brains behind the Merry Men. In one novel, it's Marian disguised as Robin Hood who shoots in the famous archery contest for the golden arrow.
One young adult novel says Marian is the "Forestwife", a pagan priestess with magical healing powers. She is often the mythic Green Woman to Robin's Green Man.
Don't underestimate this "Lady Wolfshead"!

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Friar Tuck
Here's another Merry Man you shouldn't underestimate. Friar Tuck is very overweight and seems to love food and ale as much as his God. He can be jolly, foolish, lecherous, an alcoholic, a devout holy man and sometimes wise. He is also a dangerous opponent.
Just ask Robin Hood. The outlaw leader was foolish enough to pick a fight with him.
Tuck lived by a small ford. Robin wanted to cross the river. So, he climbed on Tuck's back and ordered the friar to carry him across the water. Tuck did so. But then he forced Robin to carry him back across the water. Now, Robin climbed onto the friar's back again. But halfway across, Tuck dumped bold Robin into the water.
Then, they had an archery contest and fought with swords. Tuck won.
Robin asked a boon. He blew three blasts of his horn and fifty Merry Men appeared. Tuck asked a favour in return and blew a whistle. Fifty dogs appeared to fight the Merry Men. (In the play version, Tuck summons some men of his own. It's hard to get fifty fighting dogs on the stage.)
But Robin Hood called the fight off and asked the friar to join his band. Tuck accepted.
It's said Tuck comes from Fountains Abbey in Yorkshire or Fountaindale in Nottinghamshire. Click here to see a picture of the river Skell and Fountains Abbey in Yorkshire, supposed site of Tuck and Robin's first meeting. Occasionally his full name is given as Michael Tuck. Sometimes Tuck is the Sheriff of Nottingham's chaplain. In some stories, his connection with Robin is unknown by the bad guys and, like Marian, he can give secret help to the outlaws.
In the novel Ivanhoe, Tuck is known as the Clerk of Companhurst and lives at a hermitage with his dogs, his wine and a storehouse of freshly killed venison. When he goes into battle with Robin of Locksley, Tuck discards the hermit's grey robes and dons a Lincoln green uniform. Tuck declares "When I am cased in my green cassock, I will drink, swear, and woo a lass with any blythe forester in the West Riding." He promises to confess his sins to his grey-clad priestly self.
Friar Tuck isn't in many ballads, but he's still an important part of the outlaw band.
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Will Scarlet
Will has a variety of last names -- Scarlet, Scarlett, Scarlock, Scadlock and Scatheloke. By one of these names, he's been a member of the Merry Men since the earliest tales. (In some versions, Scarlet and Scathelock are separate characters.)
One ballad says that Robin Hood met a stranger dressed in scarlet silk. Naturally, they got into an argument. The argument lead to a broadsword fight. The stranger won, of course.
Robin asked what the stranger's name was and where he came from. "In Maxfield was I bred and born,/ My name is Young Gamwell." Young Gamwell had killed his father's steward and was exiled to the greenwood. It turned out that the stranger is the son of Robin's own sister. That means Will is Robin's nephew. But in the same ballad, he is called Robin's cousin. Cousin used to mean any close relative beyond the immediate family and so this term is still correct. In other stories, Will is Robin's cousin in the modern sense -- son of Robin's mother's sister. Sometimes these cousins were outlawed together.
When he joined the band, Gamwell (which is often spelled Gamewell) was christened Will Scarlet.
Immediately after he joined the Merry Men one ballad says that Robin Hood, Little John and Will Scarlet saved a princess from three Turkish giants. For their good deeds, Robin and his men were pardoned. And the princess chose to marry Will Scarlet. Also, Will was reconciled with his father, the Earl of Maxfield. [Some claim Maxfield is really Mansfield, Nottinghamshire.]
Will Scarlet can be a scarlet-clad dandy, obsessed with fashion and even carrying a rose. Sometimes he is even musical.
But the early Will Scarlet was as violent and grubby as the other Merry Men. Some modern versions have returned to that tradition. Will Scathelock is his real name. Will was a mercenary, but his wife was raped and murdered by other mercenaries. Calling himself Scarlet, Will murdered his wife's killers. This Will Scarlet is hot-tempered and questions Robin's leadership. (Check out the picture of Ray Winstone as Will at top. He's the epitome of the angry Scarlet, and as far from the dandy on the side illustration as one can get.)
But whatever his name or nature, Will is a welcome member of the Merry Men -- next in importance after Robin and Little John. His advice is considered valuable.
Some legends say he was killed by the sheriff's men. Click here to see his unmarked grave in Blidworth, Nottinghamshire. |
Much the Miller's Son
Much is mentioned quite a bit in the earliest stories. Some stories call him Midge or even Nick the Miller's Son. Sometimes Much and Midge are different people.
Originally, Much was strong enough to carry Little John. And he was violent enough to behead a monk's page just to keep him quiet.
But nowadays Much is seen as a young, innocent character who is not too bright. In one book, he's only 12, the son of an Older Much the Miller who was murdered by Normans.
Many films show Much killing a deer -- a severe offence against the forest laws. The Norman overlords are about to chop off his hand or burn out his eyes. That's when Robin interferes and saves the young man. Much joins the Merry Men.
Another story makes Much (or Midge, as he was sometimes called) yet another tradesman who was stopped by Robin Hood. The young miller was carrying a great sack of flour, and Robin suspected that he might be holding gold in the sack. Much (or Midge) opened the sack and tossed flour in Robin's face. Then, like so many people before him, Much beat the stuffing out of bold Robin. Of course, Robin asked Much to join the Merry Men.
Sadly, if there's a Merry Man who is left out of the stories these days, it is Much. Even so, he still appears in some tales and is often the youthful mascot of the band. And perhaps, its soul.
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Alan a Dale
Alan's only an occasional Merry Man showing up late in the legend. Still he is popular, sometimes as the narrator of the stories. His name is spelled a variety of ways -- Alan, Allen, Allan and Allin. (My own name is Allen, and so I know just how many ways there are to spell or misspell this name.)
Robin came across a happy man in scarlet clothing. Amazingly Robin didn't start a fight. But the next day, he saw the same man depressed and unhappy. He stopped the man to ask what was wrong.
Alan was to marry his true love that very day. But instead, she was given to an old, cruel, rich knight. The young man said he'd be Robin's servant if the outlaw could save his true love. Disguising himself as a bold harper, Robin snuck into the ceremony. He blew on his horn and summoned the other Merry Men, with Alan a Dale in the lead. They stopped the wedding, crossing the knight and the bishop. Then, Little John put on the bishop's clothes and married Alan and his true love. Other versions have Tuck performing the wedding service, which would certainly make it more official.
Alan's wife has been given different names, although Ellen seems to be the most common.
There's an early reference to this tale where it's Will Scarlet's bride who is rescued. Since both Will and Alan dress in scarlet, they can be confused. And somtimes both are musicians.
Usually, Alan doesn't serve the Merry Men as a fighter. Instead he is a minstrel, providing musical entertainment for the outlaw feasts. Alan also spins tales of Robin's deeds, spreading the bold outlaw's fame throughout the land. In most tales, Alan is a master musician. But in one television show, he's hopelessly tone deaf.
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Arthur A'Bland is Little John's cousin. He's tall and strong, but not nearly as capable or bright as his famous cousin. Arthur was a King's Forester loyal to the Crown. |
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When he met Robin Hood, and then Little John (after many years apart), he switched allegiances without a thought (key phrase) and joined the Merry Men. As Robin pointed out, "Arthur might be one of the foresters who cut off David's ears."
Arthur is a doughty soldier: Robin knows he can rely on Arthur to carry any job through without question, even unto death. From years of practice, Arthur is the band's second-best shot. For some reason, Arthur and Red Tom hate each other, and sometimes resort to fisticuffs.
Arthur A'Bland was introduced in the ballad "Robin and the Forester".
Art by John Green from Life in a Medieval Castle and Village Coloring Book. |
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Ben Barrel was an uninspired merchant until he met Robin Hood along Sherwood's green roads. |
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Ben is lazy as they make 'em, and only works when prodded by his wife Clara. Ben goes along with whatever scheme is easiest. Sensing this, Robin actually had no interest in recruiting Ben - until, after one particularly excruciating meal, he learned Clara could cook. Ben's one spot of ambition is he plays the bagpipes. Robin christened him "Barrel" for his girth and fondness of beer.
Ben Barrel was created by Clayton Emery.
Artist unknown from Robin Hood: A Wishing Well Adventure Classic. |
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Tub (real name unknown) is son to Ben Barrel: a tub is a small barrel. |
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Tub is a friend and rival to Tam Gamwell. Clara apprenticed him to Black Bart. The grouchy Bart scares the stuffing out of Tub, but he is learning to be an excellent blacksmith - until he succumbs to plague in London.
Clara and Ben have two smaller children. Glenyth, a cute toddler, and a babe in arms who never does earn a name. Both die in the London plague.
The children were created by Clayton Emery.
Art from Robin Hood by Eugene Pawczuk. |
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Shonet the Sower was a prioress. Met during some adventure, she left the church to marry David of Doncaster, who built and furnished a hut for her in the Greenwood. |
Their happiness was cut short when Shonet died of a crab (cancer) in BEASTS. Shonet, and the devout Sherwooders, couldn't help but wonder if her agonizing death weren't a punishment for quitting the cloister to marry.
Shonet is a creation of Clayton Emery. She's a counterpoint to the evil prioress of the later legend who bleeds Robin to death. |
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David of Doncaster was always quiet and moody, subject to depression and plagued by bad luck. |
He poached a king's deer for his large and hungry family, but was caught by King's Foresters. They cut off his ears, so he wears his black hair long. Though gloomy, David is a handsome man, but dresses carelessly. In summer his shirt is ragged and sleeveless, and his black hat has the brim pushed up out of the way.
He was married briefly to Shonet the Sower, and views her early death as a punishment for his sins, which could only be too much happiness. David has many relatives in Doncaster. He visits them and supports them in lean times. He clings to Robin Hood like a drowning man.
David of Doncaster appears in many early ballads. Jim Lees thought his only description was he was a young boy.
Artist unknown from Robin of Sherwood Annual 1986. |
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Black Bart is the band's blacksmith. He's a wonderful smith, probably as good as the legendary Wayland, whom Bart met and trained under - and was ultimately betrayed by. |
Bart knows "smith magic" and is unphased by, say, salamanders crawling out of his forge or devils swirling in the smoke. Phelgmatic about everything, Bart pays homage to the gods of the underground, earning him the name "devil worshipper". In fact, Bart doesn't worship, or fear, anything. To judge by a story he once told while drunk, The Man Who Was Always Afraid, Bart was a coward as a youth and banished from his village. He was seized by trolls(?), dragged underground, and enslaved and apprenticed to an ancient crippled wonder-smith who was probably Wayland of legend.
Betrayed by his master, Bart walked out of the underground past horrors beyond imagining. After that, the story goes, he was never afraid again. Considered unkillable, Black Bart was blasted to atoms by a monstrous demon of black glass. Typically, he stayed to fight while everyone else ran for their lives. It bothers Robin to have a devil worshipper in his band, but then, he's associated with worst. Bart is always dirty and grimy and grumpy.
Black Bart was created by Clayton Emery.
Art by Victor G Ambrus from Robin Hood, His Life and Legend by Bernard Miles. |
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Bold Jane Downey is Sherwood's tomboy grown up. Robin named her "Bold" Jane because she was painfully shy. With Marian as her role model, and having fled an arranged marriage, her goal is to excel as a Merry MAN.
After Little John saved Jane's life - on the fly during an escape - she fell in love with the big lug. |
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In London, using her own initiative, she adopted a disguise (after Robin Hood) to infiltrate a castle where he was imprisoned.
Bold Jane handles all her weapons well, and can swing nimbly on a rope. Because she's small, she wears her longsword down her back (to gentle joshing), and has problems controlling horses.
Bold Jane Downey is a creation of Clayton Emery.
Art by Larry Elmore from Robin Hood and the Beasts of Sherwood by Clayton Emery. |
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Grace is a tall ungainly redheaded woman who fled her marriage bed and ran to Sherwood - |
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- after breaking a chamberpot over her very elderly husband's head. Fleeing was her entire plan, and though she's competent with weapons - Robin nicknamed her "Grace" as a jest - she never really embraced the outlaw life. She did serve well in BEASTS, when Robin matched her against one of King Richard's knights in a sword fight. While in London, she marries a local weaver named Anselm and settles there.
Grace was created by Clayton Emery.
Art by Piero Cattaneo from The Legend of Robin Hood. |
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Brian was a tiler met on the road. He performed well as a Merry Man, even made a secret visit to Nottingham dressed as a beggar, since no one knew him, and brought back valuable information and victuals. |
But seeing so many of Robin's men come out of battle unscathed, Brian emulated Black Bart and charged a phalanx of archers - and was swept from the saddle by arrows.
Brian was created (as cannon fodder) by
Clayton Emery.
Art by Benvenuit from The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood by Howard Pyle. |
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Red Tom is a carpenter and crofter (carves ornate chests). He was passing through Sherwood, stood up to Robin Hood, and joined the Merry Men on a whim. |
Tom should have consulted his wife, who walked out after a short while of "living in filth in the forest". Tom is quiet and reliable, with a sense of humor.
Polly is his daughter. Tom is so devoted that he risked his life to diptheria during the London plague- sucking out the contagion from Polly's throat with a straw. Both survived.
Tom is "Red" for his red hair, not his clothes. He's tall, skinny, and strong. For some reason he hates Arthur A'Bland. Robin has to keep them apart.
Red Tom was invented by Clayton Emery.
Art by Victor G Ambrus from Robin Hood, His Life and Legend by Bernard Miles. |
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Katie, often dubbed Snub-nose, is the band's tomboy. She idolizes Marian. |
Found wandering Sherwood in a daze after her family was slaughtered, Katie was taken in by the Greenwood gang.
Marian is Katie's role model, though Marian would actually like to see the girl express some feminine traits too. Katie strives to fight harder, ride better, and strike faster than any boy, especially her arch-rival Tam Gamwell.
At fourteen, Katie has conflicted thoughts about what boys are for, but so far suppresses them.
With ten notches to her bow, Katie can hold her own.
Katie was created by Clayton Emery.
Art © 1998 by Dennis Nola from Child of the May by Theresa Tomlinson. |
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The Fair Elaine is the love of Allan A' Dale, and they were wed through the generous intervention of Robin Hood's band. |
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She bore Allan three children before he was killed. Later, in London, she lost all three children to plague. Fair and fragile, Elaine was despondent for a long, long while.
Red Tom finally took her to wife, and she settled into her new life with new children, though some say her spark died with Allan.
Elaine was introduced in the ballad "Robin and the Minstrel". Elaine was a very common name in folk ballads and especially King Arthur tales: there might be multiple Elaines in a single epic.
Art by Nick Harris from
Eyewitness Classics Robin Hood by Neil Philip. |
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Will Stutley was the steward of Locksley Hall, and so became Robin's mentor and best friend as he grew up.
Besides Marian, Will is the only man who can order Robin around. |
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Will had been a sergeant when King Henry invaded Wales. There Will saw first hand how fur-clad barefoot rebels wielding six-foot bows could kill a knight and horse with one arrow and then vanish into the hills.
When's Robin home was lost, Will naturally followed Robin to the woods. Will is the only elder tied to Robin's childhood. In many ways, he's Robin's most loyal man. In other ways, he often treats Robin like a child, though he never reprimands him in public.
Wills' bravery is legend. Faced with hanging in Nottingham, he offered to fight barehanded any number of guards.
As Will grew older and stiffer, he came to spend more time near the fire, and Little John became Robin's right hand man. But Robin and Will both know he'll always be available as a mentor.
Although Will seemed eternal, he succumbed to plague in London and was buried there in a unmarked grave far from Sherwood.
Also called Will Stukely, the character appeared in the original ballads. One version made him Robin's right hand man until he grew older and Little John arrived.
Art by Piero Cattaneo from The Legend of Robin Hood. |
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Gilbert of the White Hand is a knight from Northumberland, an area constantly ravaged by Scottish and Viking raids.
Gilbert is allegedly English, but goes suspiciously berserk in battle, making one wonder if he has Viking blood himself.
Tall, blonde, knotty-armed, and damned near unkillable, Gilbert received the accolade on the battlefields around Acre. He takes Crusading seriously and lives to fight evil.
From a long spell of slavery in the Holy Land, he can speak several languages and knows some (medically correct) healing - a strange talent for such a savage fighter.
Gilbert is the lover of Cedwyn, who couldn't be more his opposite. Gilbert has a thick Northern accent that becomes incomprehensible when he's excited - not that he's anywhere near during a battle: he's always at the forefront.
Gilbert of the White Hand is listed in the original ballads. Some explain his hands were soft and white as a girl's. My version has Gilbert with one white and useless hand, stripped to three fingers and scar tissue, a relic of a Viking raid. Thus Gilbert swings his Milanese sword left-handed, confounding his enemies.
He doesn't even need a sword. Lounging in a bath in London, he was jumped by three knights with swords. Gilbert killed the first one with a poker, grabbed a sword, and killed the other two - naked.
Art by Frank Emery, colors by Liz LaValley.
Click for full-size. |
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Cedwyn the Welsh Witch was daughter to a famous witch. So famous that, when her mother died, Cedwyn carried on alone in her lonely fen.
Click for a larger image. |
When knights came to forcibly "sleep with" the witch to become immune to harm, Robin Hood tried to intervene, only to find that all three knights had died very horribly. (See BEASTS.) Rattled, Robin nonethless extended an offer to join their band, figuring Sherwood needed a sorceress on their side. Disgusted with unfriendly locals, Cedwyn went along - and fell head over heels with Gilbert of the White Hand at first sight. Cedwyn is short and plain, with lank hair, and an eyetooth missing from the brawl with the knights. But Gilbert (himself an outcast) treats her like a queen. Others stay shy, which suits the witch. Her name is variously pronounced "Ked-win" or "Seth-win".
Clayton Emery created Cedwyn and put her from Wales, famous for witches such as Rhiannon.
Art by Ivan Bilibin from Stories: Vasilisa the Beautiful. |
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Tam Gamwell is Will Scarlett's equally crazy son, and so too Robin's cousin.
Tam will do anything for a lark or a dare and a chance to boast.
Robin repeatedly chides his cousin, "What kind of a life is it for a boy, taking him whoring and housebreaking and pocket-picking?" Will soberly replies, "It's a father's responsibility to see his son learns a trade."
Tam's mother, Mary, is dead. According to "Da", she was as wild as Will. Old Bess is Tam's grandmother.
Clayton Emery created Tam to be a foil to Will's craziness.
Modified art by Gerry Embleton from Robin Hood by Michael Bishop. |
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