I am so excited to have
Michael Reuel on the blog. His new book is definitely one I look forward to
reading as it is all about Robin Hood!
Robin Hood Existed
By
Michael Reuel
Historians tend to point out that there is no historical
evidence for the existence of Robin Hood, but there is an incredible amount of
folkloric evidence for his existence that has gone overlooked.
Folklorist Michael Reuel delves into the legend in order to assess how much we can learn by studying folklore, without applying the rigid terms of ‘historical’ proof. In the process he discovers that, although folklore does have obvious limitations in terms of what it can prove, the sheer amount of source material on Robin Hood is nevertheless sufficient enough to conclude that the famous outlaw and his Merry Men did in fact exist.
If you are interested to understand how Reuel has been able to arrive at this conclusion, then his research is chronicled here in the ground-breaking ‘Robin Hood Existed’; a study that promises to open a new window upon the story of Robin Hood and the life of thirteenth to fourteenth-century England.
As well as shedding new light upon the story of everyone’s favorite outlaw, Reuel provides a compelling exploration of the nature of storytelling, defining some of the key differences between how truth and myth manifest in the human psyche, and highlighting many factors that lead to certain peoples and stories becoming overlooked or dismissed by historians.
Folklorist Michael Reuel delves into the legend in order to assess how much we can learn by studying folklore, without applying the rigid terms of ‘historical’ proof. In the process he discovers that, although folklore does have obvious limitations in terms of what it can prove, the sheer amount of source material on Robin Hood is nevertheless sufficient enough to conclude that the famous outlaw and his Merry Men did in fact exist.
If you are interested to understand how Reuel has been able to arrive at this conclusion, then his research is chronicled here in the ground-breaking ‘Robin Hood Existed’; a study that promises to open a new window upon the story of Robin Hood and the life of thirteenth to fourteenth-century England.
As well as shedding new light upon the story of everyone’s favorite outlaw, Reuel provides a compelling exploration of the nature of storytelling, defining some of the key differences between how truth and myth manifest in the human psyche, and highlighting many factors that lead to certain peoples and stories becoming overlooked or dismissed by historians.
***
A few years back the opening line of
Wikipedia’s ‘Robin Hood’ page kicked off with a sentence that was something
like, ‘Robin Hood was a medieval outlaw who didn’t exist’.
I don’t have the exact wording as the page has
since been improved on, but I remember the line well because it was the
catalyst for leading me to begin the research for what I then didn’t know would
end up turning into the upcoming publication ‘Robin Hood Existed’. From the
title, I’m sure it’s pretty easy to guess that my conclusions disagree with
whomever was responsible for that Wikipedia entry. An amended page was not
enough for my liking, however. My instincts had always been to suppose there
was a real person behind the legend, but I had turned a corner and wanted
something of substance to explain why.
For someone in love with British folklore I
was conscious of the fact that the journey might be perilous, leading only to
disappointment. What if I ended up siding with the naysayers? But that was not
the case. The more I looked at all the factors involved the more complete my
picture of the legend became, so much so that I don’t even like using the word
‘legend’ anymore and have tried to purge it from the book as much as possible.
Before stumbling upon Wikipedia that day I had
always interpreted the public mood towards the Robin Hood story as being one on
which the jury is still out. Although I sided firmly with the camp that thought
he did exist, even before my own research, I was comfortable with the status
quo; there is no firm ‘historical’ evidence after all. Fearing that there might
be a growing tendency to dismiss England’s – and perhaps the world’s –
favourite hero in such a way, however, made me sensitive on the subject of
credibility. I began to notice how those who don’t believe that certain
folklore has some truth behind it are far readier to adopt a tone of being in
the right than those who remain curious. But baseless scepticism has never
equalled wisdom, any more than romanticism has. Plus, as anyone who enjoys
reading up on their favourite period of history will attest, the picture of
history that the public consciousness is presented with – even to the extent of
being taught it in school – is very rarely one from which sound judgements can
be made.
Before I started reading up on Robin Hood’s
time, the period of history I was most familiar with, from personal interest,
was that surrounding the Norman Conquest of England. Now anyone who knows
anything about British history knows that 1066 is a pretty important date to
consider. People who grew up in the UK do not have to be very historically
aware to know who the winners and losers were at the Battle of Hastings. Even
those who try to avoid history as an interest are likely to be able to say
something about King Harold being the one who possibly died with an arrow
embedded in his eye.
On the famous demise of England’s last Anglo-Saxon
king, however, I feel it apt to point out that I have yet to come across any
major historical publication, in the last 20 years at least, that has found
reason to humour the conclusion that Harold II died with an arrow in the eye or
chopped down by a horse rider, as the Bayeaux Tapestry suggests.
Yet, presumably for no other reason than
because this is a debate that has rumbled on through history and so has become
a force of habit, we are still taught that this is what happened. Certainly I
was taught so at school and, as I have worked as a proofreader of educational
material, I have also come across the same teachings in current school texts. Along
with many other statements that are simply amazing, such as ‘England as a
nation was formed in 1066’.
It was not and neither did those responsible
for the Bayeaux Tapestry know how Harold II died. Everyone who has written on
the events of 1066 knows this, as does everyone who has read up on the
up-to-date conclusions available, but everyone else still gets the other
version.
Similarly, ‘everyone else’ is still presented with
a construct of the Robin Hood stories that has the outlaw motivated by keeping
the throne of England from Prince John, during the time when Richard the
Lionheart was at war in the Crusades. Whereas those who have researched the
original stories know that the king on the throne during Robin Hood’s time was
always an Edward.
They should also know that the outlaw was a
‘yeoman’, which in aristocratic terms basically means a nobody. And yet many
who do humour the possibility that the folklore is genuine still attempt to
layer its origins with the idea that ‘Robin Hood’ became a second identity for
some nobleman or earl with a grudge. The Earl of Huntingdon becomes a regular
suspect, as does a disinherited Robin of Loxley.
Understanding why historians have constantly
attempted to tie the outlaw to an identity that can be traced within available
records became an important part of my research. A folklorist needs to
understand what smokescreens have been put up and why, before being able to
assess what the purist interpretation of the story really is and the truth that
is too often overlooked when studying Robin Hood is that the life and achievements
of yeoman from the thirteenth or fourteenth centuries are not very likely to be
historically proven at all.
So why are we so unable to appreciate the
down-to-earth side of this famous hero? Can it be that our modern sentiments
still remain more attached to the glory of royal blood and nobility than we
would like to think? For sure these desperate attempts to give a man who lived
in the woods some kind of link to the aristocracy suggest so.
A scene from the film Monty Python and the Holy Grail springs to mind. King Arthur, on
his way to a castle occupied by ‘French types’, stops to speak to couple of
peasant folk who are rolling around in the muck. Prior to this he has been identified
as a king by the commoners because ‘he hasn’t got shit all over him’. The
peasant folk he stops to speak to are not so interested in him as Mary Anne
Yarde, as one of them says ‘Dennis, there’s some lovely filth down here’, which
they then start gathering. With this image in mind, I can’t help feel that all
the historical studies available have done very little to advance our view of
what common medieval folk were like. The peasants are more than they seem
though, questioning the king’s right to rule supremely over them because some
‘watery tart threw a sword at you’ and lecturing him about how they are an
‘anarcho-syndicalist commune’.
It would be nice to think that an exchange
like this did actually happen, but I feel it is also apt to question whether we
really went through the entire medieval period without there being a single
peasant or yeoman who turned out to be a lot more than meets the eye.
My research for ‘Robin Hood Existed’ is not
solely a historical one, therefore, but also a folkloric one. The search
demanded that I discard looking for proof of the outlaw in stately homes and
official records and go deeper. Crucial to understanding the folklore is a
better appreciation of what it meant to be a ‘man of the wood’, other than just
that a woods is a convenient place for hiding from the Sheriff. The social
heritage and geography of the region are essential in this respect, as are
linguistic observations and, perhaps most importantly, the nature of
storytelling itself, in both its written and oral forms.
Tread carefully, therefore. I promise to delve
into the ‘legend’ without the need to tie up the folklore with recognised
figures from history, or tying up the goings on in Sherwood and Barnsdale as
having much to do with who sat on the throne of England at all. There will be
no further layering or smokescreening in order to arrive at a position of
comfort. So, if it does turn out that our favourite outlaw had shit all over
him, then that’s just fine with me.
Purchase Links
About the author
Michael Reuel is a writer of adventure
mysteries that are inspired by myth, as well as being a keen folklorist. He
grew up in Coventry, England and studied at the University of Wales, Bangor.
His first published work was the sinister Not
Far From Aviemore in 2014 and he is currently working on a follow-up, as
well as exploring obscure pre-1066 folklore.
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See you on your next coffee break!
Take Care,
Mary Anne xxx