Lincolnshire - unlocalized festivals: Difference between revisions

From International Robin Hood Bibliography
m (Text replacement - "=== Record ===" to "== Record ==")
m (Text replacement - "=== Lists and gazetteers ===" to "== Lists and gazetteers ==")
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This entry occurs in a list of provincialisms. The use of the present tense suggests a then extant tradition.
This entry occurs in a list of provincialisms. The use of the present tense suggests a then extant tradition.


=== Lists and gazetteers ===
== Lists and gazetteers ==
* Outside scope of {{:Lancashire, Ian 1984a}}.
* Outside scope of {{:Lancashire, Ian 1984a}}.
* Outside scope of {{:Wiles, David 1981a}}, Appendix I.
* Outside scope of {{:Wiles, David 1981a}}, Appendix I.

Revision as of 15:32, 18 October 2018

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By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-06-25. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-10-18.

Record

[1856 or earlier:]
Plough-boys.—Countrymen, who go about dressed in ribbon, &c., as Morris (Moorish) dancers on Plough Monday, perform the sword-dance, &c. One is dressed as "Maid Marion," and is called the witch, another in rags, and is called the fool, &c. &c.[1]

IRHB comments

This entry occurs in a list of provincialisms. The use of the present tense suggests a then extant tradition.

Lists and gazetteers

Sources

Notes


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