Abbots Bromley Horn Dance

On Wakes Monday (the first Monday between the 6th and 12th of September) the small village of Abbots Bromley in Staffordshire is host to a unique Horn Dance. (Details of the event can be found here)

Abbots Bromley Horn Dance

The dancers start the procession at St. Nicholas Church.

The”horns” are six sets of antlers attacked to wooden skulls, three black and three white (although it is notable that Cecil Sharp referred to the black horns as being painted blue and an account from 1686 says they are red.) The horns themselves have been carbon dated to the early 11th century. These horns are on display in St Nicholas Church for the rest of the year, a replica set being used any other time the dance is performed.

The six “Deer-men” are accompanied by a musician playing an accordion, Maid Marian (played by a man), the hobby-horse, a jester or fool, a child with a bow and arrow and another with a triangle. Until the end of the 19th century the dancers were all members of the Bentley family, before the dance was passed to the related Fowell family.

The dance follows a procession around the parish and local farms and pubs of around 10 miles.

The earliest reference to the Horn Dance is in “The Natural History of Staffordshire”

At Abbots, or now rather Pagets Bromley, they had also, within memory, a sort of sport, which they celebrated at Christmas (on New-year and Twelft-day) call’d the Hobby-horse dance, from a person that carryed the image of a horse between his legs, made of thin boards, and in his hand a bow and arrow, which passing through a hole in the bow, and stopping upon a shoulder it had in it, he made a snapping noise as he drew it to and fro, keeping time with the music: with this man danced six others, carrying on their shoulders as many Rain deers heads, 3 of them painted white and 3 red, with the Armes of the cheif families (viz. of Paget, Bagot, and Wells) to whom the revenews of the Town chiefly belonged, depicted on the palms of them, with which they danced the Hays and other Country dances.

Sword Dances of Northern England

An earlier reference (1532) to the Hobby-horse dance mentions the horse but not the horn dance although it may be that the revival in 1660 (The practice was discontinued during Cromwell’s reign) when the dance was confined to Wakes Monday merged different rituals into one.

It is thought that the ritual is linked to sympathetic magic rituals dating back to the pagan period. The Kings of Mercia, based at Tamworth, 15 miles away, owned extensive hunting grounds in the area including the Forrest of Bentylee within the parish and the hereditary forester, (the family being named after the woods they cared for,) would have organised rituals to ensure a plentiful catch each year.

 

 

 

One comment

  • joyce govier says:

    I grew up hearing about the horn dance , my family were always in it my mother was Elsie Fowell from Bagot street ,, came from a large family lived next door to Lucy and Fred Rock Aunt Lucy was my grandfathers sister. i have not seen the dance as i live in U.s.A. hope one day to come and see for myself

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