Friday, July 21, 2023

Beating The Bounds

 This post is more appropriate for Ascension and the Rogation Days in spring. But it is an example of another ancient custom that Oliver Cromwell tried to banish for being pagan. From Rural Historia:

Church parish borders were not marked on maps as they were rare, but members of the community, and of course the ecclesiastics, knew their location and this knowledge needed to be passed down through the generations. It was only by knowing where the boundaries of the parish were, that there could be certainty about who lived within them. This determined who had a right to be buried in the churchyard and who would be asked to put their hand into their pocket for a contribution when the church building needed repairs. Where a parish began and ended also determined issues such as where parishioners could graze animals and the limits between various jurisdictions. 

Beating the Bounds evolved into a Christian ceremony and the festival of Rogantide was incorporated into the calendar, to coincide with the time of year when God’s blessing was sought for seeds being sown. Also coinciding with Ascension Day, five weeks after Easter it became a major event. A party of local people, usually comprised of clergymen, one of whom would head the procession, church wardens, local dignitaries, villagers and a group of boys, would walk the borders and learn the whereabouts of the boundaries by their relationship to local landmarks, such as stones, gate posts, walls and trees. Having the boys in the party was a way to insure that the knowledge would be then passed down through subsequent generations. They were also given the job of carrying planks which would be laid down over streams, so that the more important members of the group could cross without getting their feet wet. (Read more.)

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