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For 400 years Kent was associated with the cultivation of hops. The
harvesting of the hop was done by an itinerant workforce drawn
mainly from London's east end, and gypsies coming from as far away
as Ireland. This book evokes the bygone world of hopping through a
fascinating illustrated selection of tales, songs, anecdotes and
social records covering 400 years of local history, featuring both
the 'rose-tinted' image and the harsher reality of a distinctive
aspect of Kentish life.
First mentioned by William Langland in the late fourteenth century,
Robin Hood comes down to us through ballads and folksongs, old
chronicles and plays, medieval allusions, folklore and place names.
Today Robin Hood folk songs are found in the USA as well as in
England and Scotland, and place names and traditions are widely
located in England. The earliest stories are centred on Barnsdale
in Yorkshire, but later the emphasis shifts to Nottingham and
Sherwood Forest. Originally a yeoman, Robin was upgraded to
aristocrat in the sixteenth century, but he remains essentially a
champion of the poor and oppressed and a social nonconformer. How
far Robin Hood was based on a historical character and how far he
is an archetypal outlaw or a Greenwood myth (who must withdraw from
society and commune with nature) is the subject of the Doels'
wide-ranging study. This new edition is complete with an updated
gazetteer of Robin Hood sites and an annotated filmography. It
includes almost 50 illustrations (including performances by
present-day mummers).
In 1909, Canterbury antiquarian Percy Maylam published his research
and remarkable photographs of the fascinating Kent tradition of the
hooden horse. He caught the custom in its last traditional phase,
but his work inspired a revival after the Second World War. Percy
Maylam also published a famous essay on the Kent custom of
Gavelkind when this was abolished by Act of Parliament just before
the First World War. Percy's great-nephew Richard Maylam has
long-wished for these two works to be reprinted. For this special
edition Richard has unearthed additional, unpublished photographs
and written a biographical essay on his great-uncle. Together with
Richard, Mick Lynn and Geoff Doel have worked to make Percy
Maylam's text available to a new generation of potential hoodeners
and their audiences.
Providing readers with a seasonal anthology of the county, this
collection of Sussex carols and customs, seasonal recipes and
literary tales, re-examines the rich heritage of Christmas past
from around the county. It features Christmas disasters, such as
the Lewes avalanche, to well-known seasonal songs - such as Good
King Wenceslas.
Who exactly was King Arthur? What is the evidence for him as a
historical figure, and how does this figure relate to the hero of
medieval romances and other legends? Fran and Geoff Doel trace the
cultural development of the legendary and literary Arthur, through
medieval Welsh sources, the French Romances, and the tradition of
courtly love to Thomas Malory's "Le Morte D'Arthur" and the Tudor
myth.
The Green Man has many facets, many dimensions. He peers through
his leaf mask in hundreds of church misericords and stone carvings.
His innate link with the changing seasons and fertility is revealed
in the medieval poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and in summer
folk customs such as Jack in the Green, the Castleton Garland and
the Burry Man. Perhaps he even lurks in the legendary hero of the
Greenwood, Robin Hood. The Authors have been running summer schools
and courses on the Green Man for many years, and in this
fascinating study they discuss his significance in medival times
and explore the modern development of the concept of the Green Man.
The book also contains a detailed gazetteer of over 200 sites,
featuring almost 1000 carvings (many photographed by Felicity
Howlett).
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