Britain has a long and varied past – it has been conquered repeatedly, it has conquered others, and it has colonized half the planet. Through its history, many strange traditions and festivals have arisen. This list looks at ten of the most unusual.
The Egremont Crab Fair – one of England’s weirder events – gets its name from crab apples rather than the marine variety. It started back in the 13th century when the Lord of the Manor gave away crab apples to the populace. In fact, to this day, the Parade of the Apple Cart, where apples are thrown into the crowds on the Main Street, is part of the fair. There are a host of other non-mechanized, traditional events – greasy pole climbing, a pipe smoking contests, a talent show, Cumberland wrestling, a hounds trail. But lets face it, the reason Egremont makes the news every year is the gurning competition. Home of the Gurning World Championships.
Gurning, involves a rubber-faced skill that is totally bizarre and unique to this part of England. Contestants put their heads through horse collar or braffin while they create the ugliest, most grotesque faces they can manage. A certain amount of skill is involved but a lot of beer and a certain amount of toothlessness probably has an impact as well. Celebrities occasionally have a go and the national news usually features the winning gurners. If you are in Cumbria visiting the Lake District, nearby, in September, stop in at the Egremont Crab Fair. You won’t see anything like this anywhere else and you won’t soon forget it.
The Cooper’s Hill Cheese-Rolling and Wake is an annual event held on the Spring Bank Holiday at Cooper’s Hill near Gloucester in the Cotswolds region of England It is traditionally by and for the people of Brockworth – the local village, but now people from all over the world take part. The event takes its name from the hill on which it occurs. The 2010 event has been cancelled due to safety concerns over the number of people visiting the event but it is hoped that it will be held on the late May Bank Holiday in 2011. Due to the steepness and uneven surface of the hill there are usually a number of injuries, ranging from sprained ankles to broken bones and concussion. Cooper’s Hill Cheese Rolling has been summarized as “twenty young men chase a cheese off a cliff and tumble 200 yards to the bottom, where they are scraped up by paramedics and packed off to hospital”.
Maypole dancing is a form of folk dance from western Europe, especially England, Sweden, Galicia, Portugal and Germany, with two distinctive traditions. In the most widespread, dancers perform circle dances around a tall pole which is decorated with garlands, painted stripes, flowers, flags and other emblems. In the second most common form, dancers dance in a circle each holding a colored ribbon attached to a much smaller pole; the ribbons are intertwined and plaited either on to the pole itself or into a web around the pole. The dancers may then retrace their steps exactly in order to unravel the ribbons.
Pearly Kings and Queens, known as pearlies, are an organized charitable tradition of working class culture in London, England. The practice of wearing clothes decorated with pearl buttons originated in the 19th century. It is first associated with Henry Croft, an orphan street sweeper who collected money for charity. In 1911 an organized pearly society was formed in Finchley, north London.
Guy Fawkes Night (or “bonfire night”), held on 5 November in the United Kingdom and some parts of the Commonwealth, is a commemoration of the plot, during which an effigy of Fawkes is burned, often accompanied by a fireworks display. The word “guy”, meaning “man” or “person”, is derived from his name. Guy Fawkes (13 April 1570 – 31 January 1606), also known as Guido Fawkes, the name he adopted while fighting for the Spanish in the Low Countries, belonged to a group of Catholic Restorationists from England who planned the Gunpowder Plot of 1605. Their aim was to displace Protestant rule by blowing up the Houses of Parliament while King James I and the entire Protestant, and even most of the Catholic, aristocracy and nobility were inside. The conspirators saw this as a necessary reaction to the systematic discrimination against English Catholics.
The Gunpowder Plot was led by Robert Catesby, but Fawkes was put in charge of its execution. He was arrested a few hours before the planned explosion, during a search of the cellars underneath Parliament in the early hours of 5 November prompted by the receipt of an anonymous warning letter. Basically it’s a celebration of the failed attempt to blow up the Houses of Parliament in Westminster.
Ascot Racecourse is a famous English racecourse, located in the small town of Ascot, Berkshire, used for thoroughbred horse racing. It is one of the leading racecourses in the United Kingdom, hosting 9 of the UK’s 32 annual Group 1 races, the same number as Newmarket. The course is closely associated with the British Royal Family, being approximately six miles from Windsor Castle, and owned by the Crown Estate. Ascot today stages twenty-five days of racing over the course of the year, comprising sixteen Flat meetings held in the months of May and October. The Royal Meeting, held in June, remains a major draw, the highlight being the Ascot Gold Cup. The most prestigious race is the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes run over the course in July. What makes this so special is that every year the fashion, specifically the hats get bigger, bolder and damn right weirder as the photo illustrates.
Yes indeed, you read correctly, bog snorkeling. If any of you ever doubted that us Brits are mad, this should make up your minds for you. Basically participants dive into a bog, wearing goggles, a pair of flippers and a snorkel, they then proceed to race each other along a 120ft trench filled with mud. Held every year the participants come from all over the world and raise lots of money for charity.
Straw Bear (Strawboer) Day is an old English tradition held on the 7th of January. It is known in a small area of Fenland on the borders of Huntingdonshire and Cambridgeshire, including Ramsey Mereside. This day is believed to be traditional start of agricultural year in England. A man or a boy wears a straw costume covering him from his head to toes. He goes from house to house where he dances. As prize for his dancing people give him money, food or beer.
Worm charming is a way to of attracting earthworms from the ground. Many do it to collect bait for fishing. But there are also those who do it as sort of sport. The village of Willaston, near Nantwich, Cheshire is the place where since 1980 the annual World Championships have been organized. The competition was actually initiated by local man Tom Shufflebotham who on the 5th of July, 1980 charmed 511 worms from the ground in only half an hour. The competition has 18 rules. Here are just few of them. Each competitor competes in the 3 x 3 meters area. Music of any kind can be used to charm worms out of the ground. No drugs can be used! Water is considered to be a drug (stimulant).
A Morris dance is a form of English folk dance usually accompanied by music. It is based on rhythmic stepping and the execution of choreographed figures by a group of dancers. Implements such as sticks, swords, and handkerchiefs may also be wielded by the dancers. In a small number of dances for one or two men, steps are performed near and across a pair of clay tobacco pipes laid across each other on the floor.






























@mom424: Hi mom, great comment! I found this web page just for you; – it talkes about maypoles (with an appropriate image) about a third of the way down.
http://www.netglimse.com/holidays/may_day/traditions_and_customs_of_may_day.shtml
God Save The Queen!
Halloween is american. And we british know that. But it’s good fun, even if it is american (most of us get completely hammered on halloween.) But guy falks night is just as much good fun and thats british..
We used to do maypole dancing at lower school. It was fun.
Some languages (eg Korean) don’t have a separate word for “(Great) Britain” or “United Kingdom” in contrast to their word for “England”, so refer to the part and the whole by the same name – in Korean “Yeong-guk”. It was very hard for me to explain to them the geographical and political terminology of the islands to the north-west of the European continental mainland.
My ancestors came from various parts of Great Britain and Ireland (we have traced England, Cornwall, Scotland and Ireland, and my surname strongly hints at a Welsh connection). If anyone asks me what I am, I say “Australian of mixed British Islands descent”.
@astraya: woow great to know that. Now i have something of real interest to tell my friends. Thanks, my social life will sky rocket.
@Yawyack:
Hey, thanks a lot for enlightening me! Yeah, I didn’t think he was a sweel guy or anything, I just liked movie.
@Lifeschool: (50)(52):
–i am from washington d. c. and live 45mi from new orleans and they do ghost walks in both places (in georgetown and the garden district, respectively)…they also do them in charleston, sc among other cities…..
– trick or treating has probably become a bigger social phenomenon in the u.s., but its origin came from england and ireland….um…im a little sketchy on this, but i know it had something to do with dressing up as the dead and praying for their souls….the door to door bit was *****ogus to christmas caroling….the begging and/or recieving food bit comes from the medieval practice of the poor recieving goods for the prayers of the souls of the dead. the term trick-or-treat is canadian…..the u.s. joined in a few years later….somewhere in the northern midwest…..probably chicago
the only thing that i never understood is that the europeans who started this practice did so on all hallows eve……once it got to canada, and subsequently, the u.s. the socially acceptable time to do this became halloween night….and i dont have any idea what the change in date is all about
@deeeziner:
wait…what?
they race pigs and toss cow *****?
where the hell do you live?
i mean…i believe you
but i went to state and county fairs and i have never ever ever ever seen anyone spit crickets…..
thats *****ing crazy sounding…..
sorry about the extra post, but i just re-read my last comment…
in no way shape or form was i implying that bog snorkeling, cheese-rolling, or gurning werent any less crazy sounding…..
your ascot ladies day sounds similar to u.s.’s kentucky derby……ultra important race, rich important people, weird women in *****ed up crazy ass hats……..
@Arsnl: I am very honoured to help you in some small way. Please let me know if there’s anything more I can do for you.
@oliveralbq: The name Halloween is a shortened form of the day’s original name, All Hallow’s Eve, or All Hallow’s Evening.
It becomes fairly obvious that they are the same day when you consider the fact that All Hallows (or All Saints) is the first of November, the day after Halloween.
So when the custom of trick or treating moved to the North America, the date stayed the same but what it was called was different – though the name may well have changed in Europe also.
hahahaha english people crack me up
@rowena:
–well, *****……that does make perfect sense….
somewhere along the line i got the impression that when it originated, medieval folks went door to door on 01november, and when it moved over, somehow, for some reason, people started going door to door on 31october instead, at what time trick or treating, as its known in present day, was born.. *thats* what i didnt understand…..
you read 18000 lists in a 3 year span, and little details do get jumbled sometimes…thx for the clarification
Item 11 – The Teddy Toss (I fear this may be endemic to sleepy East Sus***** villages though.)
Children of the village enter their favourite teddy bears to be simultaneously thrown from the tower of the local church and whichever bear lands first, wins! What do they win though I hear you say? A bottle of plonk usually (the parents of the winning child, not the child itself.)
Great day out. FACT.
@devonsfridge: “Halloween is american. And we british know that.” – interesting theory. I went over to wiki to check this out and this is what it said: “Some folklorists have detected its origins in the Roman feast of Pomona, the goddess of fruits and seeds, or in the festival of the dead called Parentalia, it is more typically linked to the Celtic festival of Samhain [original spelling was Samuin (pronounced sow-an or sow-in). The name is derived from Old Celtic and means roughly "summer's end"]. The word Halloween is first attested in the 16th century and represents a Scottish variant of the fuller All-Hallows-Eve, that is, the night before All Hallows Day.”
Well I suppose that settles it – it’s either Iron Age Celtic or Roman – which means it could have originated practically anywhere in Western Europe between 1200BC and 476AD.
@oliveralbq:
I’m guessing that you are going for the humorous/sarcastic response…..if not, Goggle them, for they seem to be televised somewhere or other each year.\
As for Cowchip throwing….my favorite rule of play is the one that states:
“A licking of the fingers, before the second throw is mandatory.”
@astraya:…I was about to suggest that surnames like Shufflebotham are a very strange British tradition…
****
astrara, I went to kindergarten in Sydney with a boy named Peter Ramsbottom. I don’t know what kind of teasing he’d be in for there, but back here in the U.S. he’d probably be begging to have it legally changed by 14!
@segues:
“…I went to kindergarten in Sydney with a boy named Peter Ramsbottom. …”
Or he’d be running from Randall, Bucslim and Maggot at the very least!!
@deeeziner: (77):
–my response was primarily sarcastic, although leaning toward bewilderment at cricket spitting…..honestly, never seen that one….
however when i googled it per your suggestion, i found out that i havnt been to a fair of any kind since cricket spitting was “invented” 13 years ago, so it goes into the “learn something new everyday” section of my head
alas … deprived of yet another classic
oh….and your cowpatty throwing rule…..thats funny for real………nasty as *****….but funny
I knew about most of those except for Gurning and Straw Bear Day. In the US, we also try “worm charming”. I should go to a town where a festival for it is held and watch, I find it odd that music can “charm” worms from the earth.
@tripsyman: Everyone knows Andy Murray is British… until he loses or throws a monumental tanty, then he is Scottish.
Cheers
Lee
@19 Btw i never reallt understood why gloucester is read gluster or leicester lester.
Add to that Towcester pronounced Toaster, Worcester as Wooster, but Cirencester as Siren-ces-ter. Mind you, Americans pronounce K-A-N-S-A-S as
Kansas but when they put AR in front it becomes Ar-ken-saw. Why not
Ar-kansas?
Interesting… Haven’t heard of items 1, 2 and 3! Learned something new.
Fun list! I think if a Straw Bear showed up at my door, it’d scare the bejeebers out of me. Love it!
The maypole dance is nothing more than phallic worship – love it!
@amnyc: Is marmite anything like vegimite? Because I can just feel the bile rising up in my throat….
@deeeziner: Great, thanks… Licking fingers and cow poop all rolled into one gory mental image… Here comes the puke…
Can’t remember where/when I heard/saw/read that the tradition of dressing as ghosts, ghouls and goblins came from the Celtic/Druidic custom. All Hallows Eve was a trime when the barrier between the netherworld and our own was very thin and demons of all kinds would be roaming the earth, and if you absolutely had to go outside that night, you would dress as one of these demons so you wouldn’t be recognized as human, and would be left alone to go about your business. To not be dressed this way would likely mean a nasty death at the hands of the devils minions. Anyone else know of this?
I have vague memories of the Maypole dance with the ribbons as a kid in England. I recall a very twisted and knoted bunch of ribbons. Someone would always goof up on the unwinding part. Ahhh, the good old days…
Cant be asked to read all the other replies. But Huntingdon is a town in Cambridgeshire. There is no Huntingdonshrie. Its like saying that there’s loads of desert on the border of Nevade and New Las Vegas…..
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huntingdonshire
Guess again.
wow this was a cool list , made me try to think what traditions my cultural group have ( english speaking white south african) for the life of me i cant think of any except – making fires cooking loads of meat and drinking too much – but thats a national obsession so it dosent really count – would be cool to see follow up lists paticularly of Scotland and Ireland thats where my familys are from
ooopssssss m sorrry by mistak i clicked the 1st comment as report abuseeee neways m sorryyyy …..nd reallyyyy unsual thngs brits hav2 their credit hmmmm
omg why cant it be easy for anyone to understand that england scotland ireland and whales and different countries and together they make britain.
I agree, being scottish myself that this is a lise about england.
england love to put scotland down and vice versa. Its what we do, though sometimes its just not needed like with the andy murray being scottish and when he wins hes classed by the english as british as that includes all the countries so will stop england from looking bad. so when he loses he becomes scottish to the english just so they can look good.
it just seems to be a british tradition to compete with each other, when we are all united but we are all very patriotic from where were from.
and for the scots
yes its been found we never invented the stereotypical things you would image us to have. its just been found that haggis may infact not of been invented in scotland.
what we do know is the tv, telephone, penicillin and many other things. they always seem to be forgotten about these days.
As for halloween i never knew about any of that apart from that its obv on 31st oct as it is the eve of all saints day.
If you wanna go on a good ghost hunt head up to edinburgh.
its ment to be the most haunted place in the britian, but dont hold me to that part.
and why on eath would the comment about yorkshire and scotland being compared. if you live in the uk you clearly know that living in yorkshire means your in england and that scotland is a different company.
all the confusion does get a tad annoying
sorry but i just read all the comments and i relise this isnt taught very well to other countrys. its just one of the uk’s little quirks
I say that all this is a big ball of poop! No one does any of these things! I don’t and I have lived here in Britain for 14 years now I I don’t know anyone who does that stuff! I mean Cheese Rolling, Maypole Dancing and I CAN’T EVEN SAY IT!Bog Snorkeling! Ha! No one does that kind of stuff!
@monkey3137 [1]: IT SOOOOOOOO ISN’T!
bless your heart – us nasty english not paying you scots enough attention and giving you enough credit. It’s supposed to be a United Kingdom come on lets be friends
To the ***** who calls him/herself mkoua: you said “This list is too British.” Had you read the title (10 Very Strange British Traditions) that might have given you a clue as to the nature of the article. What a tosser. I assume you are American, so translate tosser as *****er and you will perhaps understand how stupid you are.
Charlotte, I beg to differ.
I spent just 7 years in England, outer London specifically.
I recall doing Maypole dancing at school, it was part of the Harvest festival as I recall. Which was a lovely tradition that involved children picking fruit and gathering food, then going off to give it to the elderly (and to spend some time with them).
I saw Morris Dancers at many street parades. I saw quite a few Pearly Kings and Queens in the east end.
And I definitely remember Gurning and Cheese rolling on TV (not as a sport, more as a yearly humorous news item.)
Bog swimming is in the same category, but is quite a recent development. (20 years old?)
But my absolute favourite as a child was Guy Fawkes.
You take your dads old clothes, sew them together in the shape of a man, then stuff it with newspaper and paint a silly face on it. Then everyone builds a huge bonfire with your “Guy” on top, and sets fire to it. Then everyone lets off fireworks and runs around with sparklers, while the adults drink beer. Everyone cheers when “Guy” catches fire.
Almost every nation has some sort of event focussed around fireworks. America has the 4th of July, which celebrates independence. England has Guy Fawkes, which celebrates a victory over terrorism.
lol i love how americans (not every american) make fun of cultures and traditions from all around the world and forget to mention that one of their great tradition is to wait for a groundhog to look for it's shadow and determine the length of winter…….i mean how bizarre is that lol.
Excuse me but Halloween is A British festival, just made more commercial by the yanks.
We celebrated it Lancashire as children over 40 years ago by apple bobbing and telling ghost stories and parading down streets dressed as ghosts with carved lanterns.
It annoys me greatly that Americans claim it as their festival when it has Celtic origins.
In the UK we don't dress as Tinkerbell or Politicians but as horror creatures and ghosts and the range of activities to celebrate it are always spooky and varied.
while on the right track, Halloween is actually derived from the Irish festival of Samhain. Halloween has only been celebrated in Britain rather recently and probably as a result of US influences, any celebration in Lancashire likely has its roots in the influence of the large proportion of Irish immigrants in that area of England. Nonetheless, this I find the use of the word "bizarre" in this list strange given some of the traditions that people in America have…
Yeah, we stole Halloween(Hallowed Evening) from the Europeans. But we left Walpurgisnacht alone. What's up with that? Anyway, the idea of Halloween is to dress up as a scary monster. This year a lot of people will go as Lady Gaga, so we finally got it right.
now i wish i live england
do you not have bonfire night in america? your missing out, it’s great!
Conquered repeatedly? Not for almost 1,000 years I’ll have you know
Ah Good Ol’ England Proud To Be A Nutter
I grew up in Es***** (which is the county North-East of London for any non-UKers) and when I was at primary school we used to put on maypole dances at school summer fetes. It was quite fun. I don’t think they do it anymore, which is a shame.
Haha it censored the word E$$ex!
im british and the only one of those events i know is guy faukes night which we call bonfire night
What about penny trees?
I’m from Gloucestershire where the cheese rolling happens and I have not yet met one person who finds it weird! It’s just normal to us I suppose, though I can see why people would find it odd
I live in Nantwich in Cheshire, and have never heard of worm charming.
Its good to see the Straw Bear in this list – details aren’t exactly correct though..
It is in fact not held on the 7th January but the second weekend of January with events going on for most of the week leading up to the main event on the Saturday and concluding with the “burning of the bear” on the Sunday where the straw costume is set on fire. The main festival is held in a small town called Whittlesey (where I live) near Peterborough and is surprisingly not that well known outside the town (although morris dancers and folk musicians/performers etc do travel from all over the country to join in). Over recent years our straw bear has been joined by a slightly smaller one from Germany as they have a similar festival (not the one in the picture; the german one is wrapped differently – the picture is the big bear and the baby bear). For the most part of the Saturday access to the town is restricted as many roads are closed for the procession where hundreds of locals & performers parade around the streets behind the bear.
These aren’t British – they’re English. There are some pretty strange Scottish, Irish, Welsh, Manx etc etc traditions. But all the above 10 are English, without doubt. Get it right.
wow, it’s strange and at the same time it’s fun reading it too.this is going to help me in my research,thank you lovely.
In wierd and anarchist Hay-On-Wye (Town of Books) I seem to remember them burning a dude in a crown instead of a Guy. Some people celebrate the fact that he tried, rather than the fact that he failed.
this is not a very good website and not all British people do these things i think whoever made this theory should ree think this and I did not find any correct information on this website.
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I’m English Welsh and Scottish. I have to say my fellow Welshies and Scots, you need to stop being babies. I’ve noticed that for instance in the Olympics scots (I remember that bike rider Chris someone) was asked about competing and winning for scotland. It was an English person asking. Stop bribing babies and get on with your lives!