Showing posts with label Thieves Wood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thieves Wood. Show all posts

Friday, August 30, 2024

The King's Great Way.

 

The King's Great Way was a very important highway in medieval times, linking London, Nottingham, and York. Yet, for all its historic importance, very little of it remains today. There are no signposts to tell you where it is, and seemingly no maps. And, it has to be admitted, there is much speculation as to the path it took in different centuries.

But one thing is certain: The King's Great Way was the route taken by aristocracy, merchants, and tax collectors, when they had business in distant cities. It would also have been rather congested at times by Nottinghamshire's local pedestrian traders, travelling shorter distances between the villages and towns. One can imagine how its soil and stones surface would have been difficult for carts and coaches to negotiate in the wet months.

That part of the King's Great Way which linked Nottingham to Papplewick was known as Walton Gate, and is mentioned in the earliest ballads about Robin Hood. On this site, Little John, Much and Will Scarlet, are said to have stood and "looked South towards Brimsdale" (a.k.a. Byrunsdale, now Old Basford). This places the outlaws unequivocally in Sherwood Forest, and in the region where Robin Hood recruited his key men. (Little John, from near Blidworth; Friar Tuck from Lynhurst; Alan a Dale from Papplewick, all places within a short walk from here).


 Below: That part of the King's Great Way as it passes through Thieves Wood.




 Above Top: "The New Adventures of Robin Hood", TV series 1997 / 98. Middle: "The Bandit of Sherwood Forest", 1946. Bottom: "Robin Hood" BBC TV series 2006 / 2009.

Thursday, August 29, 2024

Thieves Wood, Nottinghamshire.

 

Thieves Wood today has a much more cultivated appearance than it did in Robin Hood's day. This is because the storms of 1976 destroyed much of the original forest. But the track seen here, nicknamed Robin Hood's Way, still more or less conforms to the route it's timbers once took in order to build Nottingham Castle.

 This Woodland once straddled each side of the route known as the King's Great Way, linking London with Nottingham, Mansfield, and on to York. It became known as Thieves Wood due to the Outlaws who hid here, awaiting unsuspecting travelers to pass by.




 Above: "The Adventures of Robin Hood" TV series, 1955/59. "Robin Hood" BBC TV, 1953. "The Bandit of Sherwood Forest", 1946.