https://www.dailymail.com/news/article-15909993/Ancient-oak-tree-Robin-Hood-legend-dies-1-200-heatwaves-huge-tourists.html
Ancient oak tree linked to Robin Hood passes away after 1,200 years
An ancient oak tree linked to Robin Hood has died after 1,200 years.
The Major Oak is located in Sherwood Forest in Nottinghamshire.
The hollowed-out trunk of the huge oak was used as a hideout by Robin Hood, shooting the tree to worldwide recognition.
The tree was named 'Major' after it was mentioned in a 1790 book by Major Hayman Rooke - an ex-British Army soldier who lived in Mansfield Woodhouse, a few miles from Sherwood Forest.
Tributes have been made to the oak tree from famous faces including Dame Judi Dench, who is known for her love of ancient trees.

The Major Oak, an ancient tree linked to Robin Hood

The hollowed-out trunk of the huge oak - said to be approximately 1,200 years old - was used as a hideout by Robin Hood.

Dame Judi, an ambassador for the Woodland Trust, told the BBC: 'The Major Oak has provided inspiration for countless stories, poems, paintings and people for more than 1,000 years - all the while itself teeming with life and providing a home to an enormous range of wildlife.
'I hope everyone who has been inspired by the Major Oak or another ancient tree reaches out to their MP and asks them to improve legal protections for these iconic and vital elements of our national landscape.'
Simon Parfey, managing director at SoilBioLab - specialists in soil microbiology testing and part of the team caring for the ancient oak since 2021 - said surveys uncovered the root system had been 'quietly struggling for a long time' because of naturally poor soil and heavy ground compaction.


Tourism in Victorian times
The tree - which has been alive since the Norman conquest - will remain standing in the forest as a monument for people and wildlife.

Kevin Costner in the 1991 film Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves

The tree will remain standing in the forest as a monument for people and wildlife
https://www.dailymail.com/news/article-15909993/Ancient-oak-tree-Robin-Hood-legend-dies-1-200-heatwaves-huge-tourists.html

Sherwood Forest

Map showing the location of the Major Oak in Sherwood Forest, Nottinghamshire

The Major Oak's earliest recorded name was the Cockpen Tree in the mid 1800s, as the sport of cock fighting once took place there

Completely hollow inside, it has a hole in the trunk which visitors used to climb inside.



















