Subject: Hey, folks; good to see you again.
Author:
Posted on: 2018-06-26 15:48:00 UTC
Things aren't going so well here in the animal kingdom. Ever since King Richard - God bless him - passed on, bad ol' Prince John's been trying to hold onto the throne. He's already done for Prince Arthur, and had Princess Eleanor - that's Maid Marian to you, of course - locked up, and now he's on the hunt for our Robin Hood.
See, if there's one man that all the poor folks of England can get behind, it's Robin Hood. When they heard his wife had been jailed by the Prince, why, they just rushed to Sherwood Forest to help him out. And, you know what they say: when you've got that many people gathered together, they'll always have need of a minstrel...
Robin Hood and Little John
Gathering an army
Rallying the villagers and
Leading them away.
Off on a Crusade the way
King Richard did in olden times
Oo-de-lally, oo-de-lally
Golly, what a day.
Not for them the battles
in Jerusalem or Germany,
They're heading to a city nearby.
Where John and all his cronies,
With the Sheriff and their soldier boys
Are keeping Lady Marian inside...
Robin Hood and Little John
Marching with their army
Off to rescue Marian
Off to save the day
Concentratin' everythin' on
Plannin' for their victory
Oo-de-lally, oo-de-lally
Golly, what a day.
Oo-de-lally, oo-de-lally
Golly, what a day...
In writing this, I realised that King Robin's War also fits perfectly into the history of the period: it's the events surrounding the signing of Magna Carta, and the First Barons' War that followed (when John refused to keep to it). That was an uprising of the nobility, fighting to protect their rights against John, and ultimately the war ended in John's death and the accession of his 9-year-old son to the throne. As a bonus, Magna Carta was also signed by the bishops, so Friar Tuck clearly has a part to play.
This theory would put Robin Hood in the place of Robert Fitzwalter, leader of the Barons' armies (bearing at one point the delightful title "Marshal of the Army of God"). The name works very nicely ('Fitzwalter' is just 'son of [his father] Walter', and Robert->Robin is an easy shift), and the biography... well.
Robert was associated with various lands, mostly a long way south of Nottingham, but Wikipedia makes mention of unidentified northern lands. That's enough to let us speculate on the Sherwood connection (after all, he wouldn't exactly rebel out of his own bedroom!). It's interesting to note that, in 1201 (three years after John claimed the throne), Robert was engaging in legal battles over a stretch of forest near one of his castles...
Robert was married, possibly around 1194, to a woman named Gunnora de Valognes. Interestingly, the de Valognes' castle was demolished by King Henry back in 1177, so it looks like the family may have been relatively insignificant. Did King Richard encourage his niece to take a false name, to hide the fact that the second in line to the throne had married a minor noble?
Robert actually fought in King John's armies in France; would our Robin do that? Well... why not? Marian was only second in line, and her younger brother wasn't pressing his claim. To all intents and purposes, John was the rightful king. He made sure to curry favour with Robert - making him warden of Hertford Castle in 1202 - so while I doubt Robin was happy with it, it seems plausible he would have gone along.
1203 was the turning point. Robin was in France when he heard the news: Gunnora/Marian/Eleanor had been imprisoned by John in December, and her brother (captured the previous summer) had vanished in John's custody, presumed dead. Robin must have been desperate to return to England and rescue his wife - but disastrously, he was taken prisoner by the French and held to ransom. Given John's previous involvement in trying to keep King Richard imprisoned, could this all have been an evil scheme of the Phony King?
Robert was released sometime between 1204 and 1206, but his rebellions didn't start until 1212 (when, according to him, King John tried to seduce his daughter Matilda o.O). Would Robin have been willing to wait six years to even start his plans to rescue Marian? Given how much John moved her around, and how on-guard he would have been against Robin, it's certainly possible.
The idea that Eleanor/Marian was rescued during the rebellion actually, surprisingly, holds up. When Robin/Robert forced John to sign Magna Carta, he insisted the king release all his hostages - but Eleanor wasn't mentioned. Clearly, she had already been released.
History tells us that Gunnor, wife of Robert Fitzwalter, died sometime between 1211 and 1222, and that he married a second woman named Rohese. Given that 'and then Marian died' is a miserable ending, I think we have to assume this is another false name; Rohese ended up outliving Robert, which makes sense when we consider how much younger Marian was than Robin. And in a final helpful coincidence: Eleanor the Fair and Rohese died within 5 years of each other, both in the 1240s.
It's not perfect, I know... but once again, it actually hangs together much better than I would have expected.
hS