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Chapter 5 - Centralization, Resistance, and the North of England in A Gest of Robyn Hode

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 December 2022

Joseph Taylor
Affiliation:
University of Alabama, Huntsville
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Summary

Chapter 5 investigates the fifteenth-century ballad A Gest of  Robyn Hode as protest literature set against the encroachment of government centralization on the political autonomy of the North of England. Robin Hood’s theft and murder of government officials ironically informs the outlaw’s own expressed love for the king, calling to mind the relationships between the crown and the northern magnates, such as the Percy earls of Northumberland, in the later Middle Ages. In one striking scene from the Gest, King Edward and Robin Hood ride out of the forest together, dressed in Robin’s livery of Lincoln green. This juxtaposition of the king of England with the king of outlaws implies the complexities with which the poem contemplates law and sovereignty, complexities attendant to the remarkable development of sovereign theory from the early-thirteenth century in western Europe. Foregrounding the exceptional powers of the sovereign that would inform the political theory resonate in the later work of Bodin and Hobbes, the Gest laments the dwindling regional autonomy of the North, with its once-great barons, and the increasing pull of law and authority to London and Westminster.

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Writing the North of England in the Middle Ages
Regionalism and Nationalism in Medieval English Literature
, pp. 113 - 136
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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