Llantrisant: Beating the Bounds Compilation
Автор: Llantrisant
Загружено: 2013-02-14
Просмотров: 5958
Описание:
Images of Llantrisant''s Beating the Bounds Ceremony from 1889 to 2009. The pictures are accompanied by the composition especially commissioned by Trustee Martin Hooker to mark the special occasion. The work was composed by Bill Hunt of Tewkesbury (previously a member of the Electric Light Orchestra).
Beating the Bounds originated in Llantrisant centuries ago. The seven-mile walk around the boundary of the ancient borough marks the area covered by the 1346 Charter. It was within this area that the Freemen could trade freely. Originally, it was referred to as the Perambulation of the Boundaries. According to the Court Leet Records, there were two versions of the walk. There was a beating of the parish boundaries by the clergy to claim their tithe from the earnings of the farmers.
Secondly, the walk around the borough boundaries was held to ensure anyone who was not a Freemen wasn't trading within the boundary line free of charge. The walk leads to the most southerly point of the boundary at Cross Inn, then north to the furthest point at Talyfedw Farm, before returning to the old town via Talbot Green.
Maen Llwyd is the stone found in a garden of a cottage in Cross Inn, while Maen Brych can be found in the land adjacent to Talyfedw Farm. The young sons or grandsons of Freemen, are bumped on their buttocks to remind them of where the boundaries occur.
Both points are marked by a boundary stone, which are named in the 1630 survey of the town.
Today Freemen will cross streams, main roads, a golf course, the Royal Mint, the Royal Glamorgan Hospital and also through farmhouses and people's living rooms!
On the walk, according to custom, money was thrown into the streams and ponds by the Freemen for the young boys to dive in or wade in to recover.
Повторяем попытку...
Доступные форматы для скачивания:
Скачать видео
-
Информация по загрузке: