Stocks Genealogy
Stocks Genealogy

First Name Terms: Robert Genealogy
Robin Hood is now an internationally celebrated superhero, thanks to American movie remakes. He’s regarded as a sort of proto-James Bond, in Medieval England. Filmed from differing (variant) interpretations of the same story, he has been played by screen idols from Errol Flynn to… Sean (007) Connery.
The name Robin is an English pet-name variant, of the Norman form: hrodberht, pronounced: RAH-bert; meaning one who shines out. The original Germanic form, similarly pronounced as RO-bert, was used in Anglo-Saxon England. But it was the variant introduced by the Normans, which became trendy. Thus its pet form, Robin; but this confusion, is as nothing compared to the controversy surrounding the green-clad outlaw of Sherwood Forest.
Today historians still argue about whether or not he ever actually existed. The evidence is inconclusive. He first appears in the early fifteenth-century, in four lines of rhyming slang, “Robyn hode in Sherewoode stod.” The poem A Gest of Robyn Hode (note spelling Robyn) about a medieval commoner who becomes an expert archer and swordsman, to redistribute wealth from rich to poor folks, was thought to refer to late twelfth-century England. When Plantagenet King Richard the Lionheart was far away on the third crusade, his conniving brother John was up to no good. John wanted to be king and there was much skullduggery afoot. With these interrelated royals throwing their weight around, there wasn’t much law and order about to protect local peasants.
However, most experts now believe this timeframe is impossible. Later folklore could place archenemy, the Sherriff of Nottingham, and the Merry Men, Little Jon, Much the Miller’s Son and Will Scarlet in that period. But references to Maid Marian and Friar Tuck – from a fifteenth-century ballad – suggest either the thirteenth or fourteenth-century is far more coherent.
Then there’s the suggestion Robin was actually a dispossessed Earl, outlawed, and struggling to regain his title. But this plot twist also – propagated in Anthony Munday’s plays – is far less cogent, than having Robin born of churlish stock.
So that’s time, now for place. Nottingham Forest was always a problematic setting. Some believe border woodlands between Barnsdale and Nottinghamshire is more likely. This would give credence to Yorkshire’s Robin Hood’s Well site, associated since 1422. Also to Robin’s grave, so claimed, in Kirklees Priory, Mirfield, West Yorkshire. But this dubious and inauthentic headstone is on very shaky ground!
What’s cold, white and wears yellow-chequered trousers?
Rupert the Fridge, of course!
Rupert is an accepted name variant common in both English and German. It’s from Old German: ‘hroberahtus’, but via Latin: ‘rupertus’. Rupert the Bear first appeared as a comic character in the Daily Express on 8 November 1920. Created and drawn by Mary Tourtel, commissioned to try to snatch readers from the Daily Mirror and Mail. Rupert and his chums & pals: Bill Badger, elephant Edward Trunk, Willie the mouse, are all anthropomorphic illustrations. The Professor, who lives in a castle, often joins them for exotic adventures in far-off lands.
Chris Barber, Mowbray Publishing
People deprived of Her 8 Year Old Man in the Forest – 2.wmv
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Stock Family Shield / Coat of Arms Mouse Pad $11.99 Stock Family Crest / Coat of Arms Mousepad. Your Family Coat of Arms printed in full color on a high quality Mouse mat…. |
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Campbell Chronicles and Family Sketches Embracing the History of Campbell County, Virginia 1782-1926 on CD Early, R. H. Campbell chronicles and family sketches : embracing the history of Campbell County, Virginia, 1782-1926 Lynchburg, Va.: J.P. Bell Co., 1927, 580 pgs. Title page |
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By Good and Necessary Consequence: A Preliminary Genealogy of Biblicist Foundationalism $17.65 Very Good – no marks on text – remainder mark on bottom edge – Next or Same-Day Shipping – Tracking number – Ships from Ohio – 1-B-48… |
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Ledbury: People and Parish Before the R $16.01 Ledbury is a small town in the lush Herefordshire countryside. How did it come to be here and who and what shaped its development? This volume explores a quiet corner of England from the earliest times until the middle of the 16th century. Hunters, herdsmen and the first farmers left but faint traces to mark their passing. Enigmatic structures like Wall Hills and British Camp stand as monuments to… |
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The Purpose of the Biblical Genealogies With Special Reference to the Setting of the Genealogies of Jesus $33.00 … |












