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Robin Hood’s ancient oak dies after centuries of survival

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Historical postcard showing visitors standing around and in the Major Oak (Provided by Reg Harris/PA)

The legendary Major Oak of Sherwood Forest, a tree that stood through wars, kings and industrial revolutions, has died after failing to produce leaves this spring.

Experts say the iconic oak, believed to be up to 1,200 years old and closely tied to the legend of Robin Hood, finally succumbed to a combination of age, climate pressures and damage caused by generations of human visitors.

A Giant Finally Reaches Its Limit

For years, conservationists watched the Major Oak’s health deteriorate. Surveys revealed a tree under mounting stress, with declining vitality and a root system struggling to sustain one of Britain’s most famous natural landmarks.

This spring brought the clearest sign yet. The oak produced no leaves, leading experts to conclude that the ancient tree has died.

The loss marks the end of one of the UK’s oldest living connections to its medieval past.

Tourism’s Hidden Cost Comes Due

Scientists say decades of heavy footfall played a major role in the tree’s decline.

Millions of visitors flocked to the oak over the centuries, compacting the soil around its roots. Tests found some areas had become as hard as concrete, preventing water and nutrients from reaching the root system.

Even earlier efforts to preserve the tree may have had unintended consequences. Structural supports and other interventions, installed over more than a century, are now believed to have added further strain.

Climate Change Delivers the Final Blow

While the oak had endured countless challenges across the centuries, experts say recent extreme weather may have accelerated its decline.

A succession of hot, dry summers and record-breaking temperatures placed increasing pressure on an already weakened tree. Researchers believe years of drought left the root system unable to recover.

The result was a natural wonder pushed beyond its limits.

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Experts say they believe five hot and ‘droughty’ years have added to the tree’s decline (Chloe Ryder/Sherwood Forest/PA)

A Legacy That Will Outlive the Tree

Although dead, the Major Oak will remain standing in Sherwood Forest as both a monument and a wildlife habitat.

Its legacy is already spreading beyond Nottinghamshire. Acorns and cuttings from the tree have produced saplings planted across the world, ensuring future generations will inherit descendants of the ancient giant.

For conservationists, the oak’s death is more than the loss of a landmark. It is a stark warning about the pressures facing Britain’s ancient trees — and a reminder that even the strongest living symbols are not immortal.

Robin Hood’s 1,200-year-old oak tree killed by too many visitors

1200 years that's a good innings.

We need a modern day Robin Hood to inspire an ousting of Starmer and his globalist cabal.

I blame Starmer' and wretched government for sucking the life out of our heritage and the oxygen out all things indigenous.

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