Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1990-12, Page 36ftlerrp Cryristmag Warmest of wishes to our customers and friends this joyous season! �I 'aMXOLLMr REAVIE rFARM EQUIPMENT Lucknow �'VERUM 519-529-7995 STILL SEARCHING FOR THE RIGHT SOFTWARE? EMM BUSINESS SOF TWME ONE OF NORTH AMERICA'S SYSTEMS MC- MAJOR SUPPLIERS OF AGRICULTURAL SOFTWARE Call Now For a Free Demonstration & Software Catalogue K.S. SOFTWARE 519-845-0109 32 THE RURAL VOICE BOAR'S HEAD You will quite often see old English prints of the Christmas meal with a boar's head gracing the festive banquet table. This association probably dates back to pagan ties when the Germanic god, Frey, who cared for the fertility of the herds, was symbolized by a boar. Therefore, at midwinter, a boar would be sacrificed to the god. This sacrifice was carried over into the Christmas tradition as a non -religious custom. It was an important part of the medieval English Christmas feast. It took more than a week to properly skin, soak, salt, preserve, prepare, and cook — not to mention the problems of hunting it down in the first place, since the wild boar was a very dangerous animal. The boar's head was brought into the banquet in a procession of cooks, huntsmen, and servants, all elaborately dressed to provide as much spectacle as possible. While bringing it in, they would sing the "Boar's Head Carol," which is one of the earliest English carols, having appeared in a book printed in 1521. This custom started to die out as early as the thirteenth century as the wild boar began to become extinct in the British Isles. There are still some places that preserve the custom with a suckling pig. OLD HOB Another very rare custom that would be of particular interest to horse lovers is that of Old Hob. Old Hob is a horse who may have had his origin in pre -Christian representations of Odin's eight -footed horse. Like the Welsh Mari Llwyd, the English Old Hob is represented by a horse's head on a pole carried by a man under a sheet. It was accompanied by groups of waifs who sang Christmas ditties and rang hand bells for coins. The Old Hob festivities would begin as early as All Soul's Day, November 2, and usually ended by Boxing Day, December 26. Mari Llwyd is a Welsh Christmas fantasy creature that is half -man, half -animal. It wears a white sheet on which hang such holiday ornaments as bells, Christmas balls, baubles, holly, and tinsel, while a huge headpiece resembling the head of a horse covers the upper torso. Making queer shrill noises, prancing like a hobby horse, dancing and darting at the children, the Mari Llwyd stirs up laughter and mirth as it parades about the countryside. In former times, the head was actually made from the skull of a horse, wired so that the jaws could be worked. If someone was bitten by the Mari Llwyd, he or she had to pay a fine. There was a similar tradition in northern Germany where the horse was called Schimmel.