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Robin Hood Trivia Questions

How much do you really know about Robin Hood? Below are 8 true or false statements. Click each one to reveal the answer and explanation.

1.

Sherwood Forest was already a royal hunting preserve when Robin Hood allegedly roamed there.

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Easy
✓ TRUE

Sherwood was a royal forest from the 12th century, making poaching a serious crime—perfect context for an outlaw.

2.

Some historians argue Robin Hood may have been based on a real 13th-century Yorkshire outlaw.

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Medium
✓ TRUE

Records show a 'Robert Hod' or 'Hobbehod' as a fugitive in Yorkshire around 1225, possibly inspiring the legend.

3.

Robin Hood is consistently portrayed as robbing the rich to give to the poor in all medieval stories.

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Medium
✗ FALSE

Early ballads rarely mention giving to the poor; that philanthropic twist became popular in the 19th century.

4.

Friar Tuck was always a member of Robin Hood's Merry Men from the earliest tales.

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Medium
✗ FALSE

Friar Tuck appears in later 15th-century ballads; he wasn't in the earliest Robin Hood stories.

5.

Robin Hood is explicitly described as a nobleman in the earliest ballads.

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Hard
✗ FALSE

In early ballads, he is a yeoman, not a noble; the 'disinherited lord' trope emerged later in Victorian retellings.

6.

The first known literary mention of Robin Hood appears in William Langland's 'Piers Plowman'.

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Hard
✓ TRUE

Around 1377, Langland's character Sloth says he knows 'rimes of Robin Hood'—the earliest written reference.

7.

Robin Hood's outlaw band included a woman named Maud before Maid Marian was introduced.

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Hard
✓ TRUE

In some early versions, a female outlaw named Maud appears; Maid Marian was added in 16th-century May Day plays.

8.

The phrase 'taking from the rich and giving to the poor' was first used to describe Robin Hood in a 16th-century play.

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Hard
✓ TRUE

In Anthony Munday's 1598 play 'The Downfall of Robert, Earl of Huntington', this exact phrasing appears.

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