Christmas in Sherwood
By Michael Reuel
There’s a great deal of media debate
flying around about how eventful 2016 has been, which for many is another way
of saying how depressing it all is.
It started with David Bowie dying back
in January and the arrows haven’t stopped flying ever since. Everyone’s
favourite sheriff of Nottingham, Alan Rickman, was next, with Mohammad Ali,
Prince, Gene Wilder, Leonard Cohen, Andrew Sachs, Kenny Baker, Victoria Wood,
Terry Wogan and Zsa Zsa Gabor being just some of the names to follow who had earned
remarkable public affection during their lifetime and let's not get started with
the election results.
When faced with such a debacle, a
look at history can often provide an ideal tonic for keeping our troubles in
perspective. Indeed, even for those who insist there has been no silver lining
to the events of 2016 and just want it out of the way, a look at other times
can provide a compelling argument for shaking off the blues and getting in the
Christmas spirit.
Because of my Robin Hood studies I
confess to having spent much of the unhappy 2016 with my head stuck in
fourteenth century England. My aim has been to recast Robin as the yeoman he
always was before clumsy historians decided to give him noble blood and, in
order to achieve this, I was required to find out as much as I could about a
type of people that chroniclers too often overlook as important: the common
folk.
Dredging up reliable information
about a particular common person is an unenviable task – even if that person
happened to become the most famed and celebrated hero of his day. Nevertheless,
much can be said about the lives that these people lived; by tracing world
events, the laws of the land and the behaviour of the ruling classes. Meaning
that a sense of what they had to live through is not so obscure and only
demands the use of our imagination.
OK so there is a blatantly obvious
comparison to make here, in pointing out that medieval commoners had a tougher
life than we face. They were a subservient and downtrodden people, likely to be
poor and malnourished and with a low life expectancy.
They were different times. However,
even with medieval expectations in mind, the fourteenth century can be
described as tragic and hellish for what its people were destined to go through
– and to an extent that vastly outweighs any of the bitterness we can possibly
hold towards the days of 2016.
At first glance this appears strange
in that, initially, the century appeared to be the dawn of a new era of
optimism for the English nation in general. Edward III had kicked a usurper off
the throne, before proceeding to turn around the nation’s military fortunes. By
the time his reign was in full swing, the English people no longer needed to
worry about invasions from the Scots and an inferior position to the French on
the world stage had been completely overturned. They had perhaps England’s
greatest achievements on the medieval battlefield to celebrate, at Crecy and
Poitiers. Plus, they also had a king who embraced the cultural nourishment of
his classes from top to bottom, staging courtly events, games and tournaments
that gave the country a fresh and merry atmosphere it had not known. Though
Victorian historians would later reject Edward III as a king to celebrate
because of his excess and warmongering, there can be no doubt that his people
loved him. They drew comparisons between his reign and King Arthur’s, at the
same time as embracing a new national flag and patron saint whose colours he
championed on the battlefield. Even the famous line...
‘The Pope may be French,
but Jesus is English’
...dates to this time.
Edward III counting the dead on the battlefield of Crécy (Wikipedia) |
So what went wrong? Well, the year
that stuck in everyone’s craw back then was not one with 16 in it, but 48.
1348 was the year when all of that
changed, because not only did loved and famous people die but pretty much half
of Europe did too. The reason for this was the bubonic plague, which became
known as The Black Death.
The disease wiped out whole
communities, leaving the dead in so great a number that it became impossible to
bury them. Being a great power did not save England from its misery and, even
though the plague had left by 1350 (only to return in 1361), it appears to be
the case that sickliness lingered on in the air and continued to take its toll
regardless.
Edward III lost so many heirs to
unnamed illnesses that only two of his 13 legitimate children were alive when
he died in 1377. The country had also lost its favourite prince – Prince
Edward; the hero of Poitiers who was known as ‘The Black Prince’ – so the
succession had to go to his grandson, Richard II, who never came close to
achieving similar popularity.
Edward III |
So it was that a vibrant kingdom then
faced a desperate time in spite of its achievements… and yet even then the
Christmas spirit was not allowed to diminish.
Alan Rickman’s sheriff might have
called off Christmas in Prince of Thieves, but Edward III did quite the
opposite, embracing it with as much wealth and splendor as he was able. Even
though he was himself mourning the death of two children, none of the events that
had been organized to celebrate his victories were cancelled. Christmas saw an
extravagant games event held at Otford, with another in Merton for Epiphany.
Guests arrived dressed in elaborate costumes, including some who came as ‘wild
men of the wood’, in what is likely a nod to the popularity of Robin and his
Merry Men.
Robin Hood - Call Off Christmas
Robin Hood Prince of Thieves ~ 1991
Though it is not possible to be exact
with dates, the folklore suggests that Robin Hood died a decade or two before
the Black Death arrived. But 1348 remains an important time for the Robin Hood
stories, which were being told by the people who loved to hear them, as
storytelling offered moral support and brought communities together through
harsh times. It was this place in the people’s hearts that would eventually
lead to the oral ballads being recorded on paper, so that we still have them
today – even though historians largely choose to ignore the many revealing
aspects of their content.
Unlike with a mighty king like Edward
III, with a brave yeoman we only have the folklore to go on in order to know
his story. And yet, this winter 2016 has presented us with a curious memento
from his time and location, in the shape of a gold ring that has been found in
Sherwood Forest.
Read the article here
A nice Christmas present for its
finder (metal detector Mark Thompson, who looks to be around £70,000 better off
for the happy coincidence), most media coverage has overlooked the possibility
that this ring could indeed have belonged to one of the Merry Men.
Popular culture still directs people
all the way back to King John’s time to find Robin Hood, but he was not there.
His story began during the latter part of Edward II’s reign, but largely
belongs at the start of Edward III’s. The ring has indeed been dated to the
early thirteenth century and so it is entirely possible that a rich traveller
had to reluctantly hand it over to a villainous but charming yeoman of the
forest.
The ring is adorned with an image of
the baby Jesus as well as one of the Virgin Mary whom, as the oral ballads
consistently attest, was Robin Hood’s most venerated saint. He would certainly
have appreciated the treasure and now the forest floor has given it up as a
curiosity for us to wonder about.
It certainly wasn’t a Christmas
present for Maid Marian though. That lass is pure fiction.
***
Robin Hood Existed
Folklorist Michael Reuel delves into the legend of Robin Hood 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. Amazon
Folklorist Michael Reuel delves into the legend of Robin Hood 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. Amazon
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See you on your next coffee break!
Take Care,
Mary Anne xxx