Top Tens – Heroes & Villains: Top 10 Heroes of Mythology (Special Mention) (10) Robin Hood

Statue of Robin Hood in Sherwood Forest, photographed by Richard Croft and published as image in Wikipedia “Robin Hood” licensed for use under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/deed.en

 

 

(10) ROBIN HOOD

 

“The legendary outlaw archer Robin Hood is an incredibly famous character of medieval folklore, so much so that he has been adapted into countless different media” – and so incredibly famous that for English historical legend he is perhaps exceeded by only one other figure, King Arthur.

“Robin Hood is a legendary heroic outlaw from England. The character was first alluded to in William Langland’s poem Piers Plowman written in the year 1377, although the reference in this poem indicates Robin Hood existed much earlier than that in oral tradition.”

I’d say he needs little introduction, except elements of his legend originally varied from his subsequent adaptations. He is traditionally associated with Sherwood Forest in Nottinghamshire – hence the Sheriff of Nottingham as his antagonist – but an early ballad places him in Yorkshire, while later ones place him even further away in Scotland and London. “He is identified as a yeoman — a non-noble, free, small landholder — in his original incarnations. The Elizabethans would attribute a title of nobility to Robin as Earl of Huntingdon; several modern incarnations make him a knight (or at least a soldier) and treat The Crusades as some sort of medieval Vietnam.”

More religious elements, such as his devotion to the Virgin Mary, have been replaced by his iconic charity to the poor.

He is the archetypal archer hero – an archetype that has proved surprisingly enduring in the modern age of firearms or squires – combined with “association with nature” and “rebellious personality”.

“The possible inspirations for the myth are equally varied and unclear. While there is limited evidence that he may have been a historical figure, or at least named after one, the modern consensus is that he is a distillation of multiple figures — historical and mythical — from the early 2nd millennium.”

Although there are also theories identifying him as a “a remnant of pre-Christian pagan belief in some form of nature spirit” such as “Robin Wood”, the “Spirit of the Forest”. I’ve read one such version which also conflated him with the folklore figure Robin Goodfellow.

Robin Hood is accompanied by a cast of other characters in legend, perhaps most famously Maid Marian, and his Merry Men – including Little John, Will Scarlett, and Friar Tuck.

 

RATING:

A-TIER (TOP TIER)

Top Tens – Fantasy & SF: Top 10 Children’s Fantasy Books (Special Mention) (1) J.R.R. Tolkien – The Hobbit

Tolkien’s own art used on the cover of various editions, including the one I own

 

 

(1) J.R.R. TOLKIEN –

THE HOBBIT (1937)

 

While the top entry in my Top 10 Fantasy Books, Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings, was written for adult readers, it is also regularly read by children – as indeed it was by me, first reading and being enchanted by it as a child.

However, the book to which it was a sequel, The Hobbit, was very much a children’s fantasy book, evident from its opening line onwards. Hence, it has to be Tolkien’s entry among my special mentions for children’s fantasy books – and it has to be my first special mention, reflecting Tolkien’s top spot for fantasy books in general.

“The Hobbit is set in Middle-earth and follows home-loving Bilbo Baggins, the titular hobbit who joins the wizard Gandalf and the thirteen dwarves of Thorin’s Company on a quest to reclaim the dwarves’ home and treasure from the dragon Smaug…The story is told in the form of a picaresque or episodic quest, several chapters introduce a new type of monster or threat as Bilbo progresses through the landscape.”

It might be more accurate to describe The Lord of the Rings as successor to The Hobbit rather than sequel – “the story began as a sequel to Tolkien’s 1937 children’s book The Hobbit but eventually developed into a much larger work.” However, there’s still parts of The Lord of the Rings that evoke the sense of children’s fantasy, or at least the childlike sense of wonder, from The Hobbit – particularly in the opening birthday party for Bilbo through to Tom Bombadil, the latter very much a character of children’s fantasy whimsy who wandered into the main plot.

 

RATING: 5 STARS*****

S-TIER (TOP TIER)