image: title

British Life & Culture

Unusual British Customs & Traditions
by Mandy Barrow

 
 
Contact us
Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sept | Oct | Nov | Dec
Strange, bizarre, wacky, eccentric and even mad festivals still taking place in Britain today

This page has moved

Please update your bookmarks

http://projectbritain.com/curious/calendar.htm


Calendar of unusual Customs and Traditions
in England, Scotland and Wales
image: Unusual Calendar
October

A long time ago the year was marked out with special days which marked the passing year. These were days of celebrations where people would do things, eat things or make things which they would not normally do.

See also folk, facts and sayings about October

First Sunday
Pearly King Harvest Festival

pearly king and queensChurch of St Martin-in-the-Fields.
Dating from the 19th century, the Pearly Kings & Queens are a much-loved Cockney tradition. It started when a young boy covered a suit with pearly buttons to attract attention and to raise money for the poor at charity events and fairs. Other boroughs were so impressed that they got their own Pearly King or Queen.
The tradition continues to thrive today and Pearly Kings and Queens can be seen in their full spectacle at the annual Pearly Kings and Queens Harvest Festival.

The annual Harvest Festival Service at the church of St. Martin-in-the Fields offers a spectacular display of historical London in all its glory.

Second Sunday
World Conker Championship Ashton, Northamptonshire
Information about the game of conkers

4th Thursday
Punky Night

Traditionally on this night, children in the South of England would carve their ‘Punkies’,(pumpkins) into Jack O'Lanterns. Once carved the children would go out in groups and march through the streets, singing traditional ‘punky’ songs, calling in at friendly houses and competing for best lantern with rival groups they meet. The streets would be lit with the light of the Punkies.

Today, in Hinton St George, Somerset, the children still carry candle-lanterns made from hollow out pumpkins through the streets in the evening.

Michaelmas Fair, Abingdon, Oxon

The Michaelmas Fair (also known as the Ock Fair) was originally a 'hiring mart' for those seeking employment.

October Plenty
Bankside outside Shakespeare's Globe

"October Plenty is an Autumn harvest celebration held annually in Southwark. Beginning on the Bankside, by Shakespeare's Globe, October Plenty mixes ancient seasonal customs and theatre with contemporary festivity, joining with historic Borough Market, Southwark." The LionsPart


The Berry Man

The Berry Man is the Lions Part Autumn incarnation of the original Green Man. The berry man is coverd with wild fruits and foliage.


The Corn Queene effigy

The Corn Queene effigy
A Corn Queene effigy made from wheat, barley and other grains, and apples, root vegetables and foliage from the Borough Market, is paraded

previous month
Go to ndex page
next month

Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sept | Oct | Nov | Dec

 

back to the top

Events and sprcial days in the UK
Click here to follow us on Twitter
Pooh down the River Thames
British Life

About Us | Search | Site Map | Feedback | User Information | Contact Us

© Copyright - please read
All the materials on these pages are free for educational use only. You may not redistribute, sell or place the content of this page on any other website or blog without written permission from Mandy Barrow, Woodlands Junior School. If you have any questions about the use of these materials please email us.

© Copyright 2010 Mandy Barrow - Terms & Conditions
Woodlands Junior School, Hunt Road Tonbridge Kent TN10 4BB UK