May Day
May
Day is a time of many
traditional and colourful customs.Click here to read about our customs and traditions surrounding this day. May is a traditional time for Maypole dancing Sweeps Festival, Rochester, Kent. (First weekend in May) This occurs in the first weekend in May. It is a throwback to pagan traditions and coincides with the tradition of Chimney Sweeps welcoming the summer so that they could clean the dirty chimneys. Dancers and Musicians converge on the street to provide a wonderfully colourful spectacle. See the photographs May is a traditional time for Morris Dancing This is not an unusual event but it is a pretty one!. Thousands of tulips adorn floats in this annual event. A float made from tulips www.flowerparade.org Well-Dressing Derbyshire Well dressing is one of Derbyshire's and the Peak District's best known, most popular and colourful customs. It dates back hundreds of years, and though there have been religious associations, the true origins remain unknown. Click here to find out more
Beating the Bounds
A custom dating from
the 5th century when parishioners asked for God's blessing to protect
their crops. During the Reformation walking the parish boundary became
a more important part of the ceremony as it provided the community
with a mental map which could be drawn on in disputes over boundaries.
It is celebrated with Ganging Beer and Rammalation biscuits.
Early May
Bank Holiday Monday
Stilton Cheese Rolling, Stilton, Peterborough 10am-3pmA cheese-rolling championship and May Day celebrations. Participants compete in rolling large rounded blocks of wood along the high street for a prize of stilton cheese and bottles of port. www.stilton.org/about_rolling.html Near 8 May Furry Dance, Helston, Cornwall The Floral Dance always takes place on the 8th of May, except when that falls on a Sunday or Monday, when the Dance is held on the previous Saturday. The Helston Floral Dance is one of the oldest surviving customs in the Country, and is a festival to celebrate the coming of spring and the Click Click here to find out more The Minehead Hobby Horse Click here to find out more
The Padstow Obby Oss
The oldest May Day celebration still taking
place to day, is the Padstow 'Obby 'Oss celebration in Cornwall. Its
roots date back to the 14th century. Every May Day thousands of people
come to see the two famous Hobby Horses, the Old Oss and the Blue
Ribbon Oss.
Celebrations in Padstow officially start the
night before at midnight, when a groups of 'mayers' meet outside the
Golden Lion Inn to serenade the owner with their Night Song:
The whole town is ablaze with bluebells,
forget-me-nots, cowslips, and sycamore twigs. Dancing and other
celebrations take place all day.
Find out more
Blessing the Sea, Hastings,
Sussex
The local fishing season begins at the end of May and the custom
of blessing the sea goes back to medieval times.
29 May
Oak Apple Day
Many people used to wear oak-apple leaves in their lapels
or hats and decorate their front doors on Oak Apple Day. At one time,
if you didn't, you would risk being stung with nettles or kicked and
pinched for being a Roundhead. This is still celebrated by some children
in Sussex as 'Pinch-Bum-Day'.Read more about this special day
Whit Sunday Evening
Bread and Cheese Throwing, St Briavels, GloucestershireFollowing evensong on Whit Monday, basketfuls of bread and cheese are thrown from a wall near the old castle, to be scrambled for in a lane below. Find out more
Spring Bank Holiday Monday
Cheese Rolling, Cooper's Hill, Brookworth in Goucestershire.Forty thousand spectators congregate at Coopers Hill in the Gloucester village of Brockworth to watch the traditional 7lb Double Gloucester cheese hurtle down a steep slope, pursued by dozens of running, rolling competitors, the fastest of whom wins the cheese. The video below shows competitors chasing the cheese down the hill Wool Sack Race, Tetbury Regulars of the Crown and Royal Oak pubs compete in the annual Wool Sack race. They run up Gumstool Hill with a 60lb sack of wool on their backs. Jack in the Green Festival, Hastings East Sussex The Jack is the symbol of the summer.
First Friday after the last Monday in May
Cotswold Olimpick Games, Dover’s Hill, above Chipping Campden, Gloucestershire
An annual highlight of The Cotswold Olimpick Games is the Shin Kicking Championship.As the sun began to set on Dover’s Hill, a band of white-coat-clad competitors began stuffing straw down their trousers ready for the British Shin Kicking Championship. Competitors grasp each other by the shoulders and attempt to land well-timed blows to their opponent's shins (between the knee and ankle). Only then - in mid-kick - can a player attempt to bring his opposite number to the ground. The sport has been practised on Dover's Hill, near Chipping Campden, since the early 17th Century. |
Thursday, 1 May 2014
Calendar of unusual Customs and Traditions in England, Scotland and Wales MAY
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment