Golowan Festival
Golowan (sometimes also Goluan or Gol-Jowan) is the
The 2023 Golowan Festival dates are 16 to 25 June with Mazey Day taking place on Saturday 24 June.
The historic festival
The ancient festival was first described by Dr William Borlase in 1754 in his book Antiquities of Cornwall:[2]
"In Cornwall, the festival Fires, called Bonfires, are kindled on the Eve of St. John the Baptist and St. Peter's Day; and Midsummer is thence, in the Cornish tongue, called 'Goluan,' which signifies both light and rejoicing. At these Fires the Cornish attend with lighted torches, tarr'd and pitch'd at the end, and make their perambulations round their Fires, and go from village to village carrying their torches before them; and this is certainly the remains of the Druid superstition, for 'faces praeferre,' to carry lighted torches, was reckoned a kind of Gentilism, and as such particularly prohibited by the Gallick Councils: they were in the eye of the law 'accensores facularum,' and thought to sacrifice to the devil, and to deserve capital punishment."
Penzance
The Penzance Golowan was one of the last examples of this practice in Cornwall until its prohibition by the Penzance
Two descriptions of the fire festival in Victorian times follow below:
In Penzance, and in nearly all the parishes of West Penwith, immediately after nightfall on the eves of St John and St Peter, the 23rd and 28th of June, lines of tar-barrels, occasionally broken by bonfires were simultaneously lighted in all the streets, whilst, at the same time, bonfires were kindled on all the cairns and hills around Mounts Bay, throwing the outlines in bold relief against the sky.
Then the villagers, linked in circles hand-in-hand, danced round them to preserve themselves against witchcraft, and when they burnt low, one person here and there detached himself from the rest and leaped through the flames to insure himself from some special evil. The old people counted these fires and drew a presage from them." At dusk the mayor of Penzance sent the
town-crier through the streets to give notice that no fireworks were allowed to be let off in the town; but this was done simply that he should not be held responsible if any accident happened, for all in Penzance knew quite well that the law would be set at defiance. Large numbers of men women and boys came up soon after from the quay and lower parts of the town swinging immense torches around their heads; these were made of pieces of canvas about 2 feet square fastened in the middle either to a long pole or a strong chain, dipped until completely saturated in tar.Of course they required to be swung with great dexterity or the holder would have been burnt. The heat they gave out was something dreadful and the smoke suffocating."
St Peter's Eve
St Just
The people of St Just in Penwith had their own particular practices, Lake's Parochial history of Cornwall (1868) states:[5]
On Midsummer-day, in modern times, the inhabitants, of this parish were greeted with sounds resembling the discharge of musketry in different directions, proceeding from holes bored in rocks, which being charged with powder were exploded in succession; and on the same day a new flag was displayed on every mine, and the night was ushered in with noisy festivities, and bonfires blazing on many of the hills.
Similar festivals
Throughout Europe there are similar fire festivals held on 23 and 24 June.
Modern Golowan celebrations
The modern Golowan Festival in Penzance started in 1991 as an attempt to revive many of the traditions stated above. The core of the modern festival is long weekend which includes Mazey Eve, Mazey Day and Quay Fair Day. Thursday features a popular election of the 'Mayor of the Quay' and the Friday, Mazey Eve takes place around the harbour area of Penzance from where there is large firework display. The following day, Mazey Day, is a large community and arts celebration. Schools, entertainers, community groups and others take part in a series of processions that include music, giant sculptures and variety of other artistic activities. Contributions from musicians and artists from the Celtic nations are a regular feature as are a variety of other musical contributions. Penzance itself during this day is decorated with large amounts of greenery, mirroring the practice in the town during the ancient festival. A large number of market stalls are also present throughout the town. Mazey Day attracts thousands of visitors to the area and has become an important symbol of the identity of town amongst local people. Quay Fair Day is a celebration that is similar in many ways to 'Midsummer Fair' described in the ancient festival with the addition of popular street entertainment.
In October 2015 Penzance Town Council outsourced the running of the festival to a not-for-profit community interest company, which, having run the festival successfully from 2016 to 2019, has now been contracted to run the Festival until 2021.[6]
Penglaz the Penzance 'Obby 'Oss
During the evening of Mazey Eve and on 23 June (St John's Eve) every year Penglaz the Penzance 'Obby 'Oss appears. Penglaz owes its origins to the descriptions of the hobby horse that once accompanied the Christmas guise dancers in their perambulation of Penzance during the nineteenth century. The classic, contemporary account of the guise dancers' horse was given by Richard Edmonds who described the horse as being:
"represented by a man carrying a piece of wood in the form of a horse’s head and neck, with some contrivance for opening and shutting the mouth with a loud snapping noise, the performer being so covered with a horse cloth, or hide of a horse, as to resemble the animal whose curvettings, biting, and other motions, he imitated."
The horse was a character associated with 'Old Penglaze' in the guise dancers' games of forfeiture, described by William Sandys:
"Another essential character is Old Penglaze who has a blackened face and a staff in his hand, and a person girded round with a horse’s hide … to serve has his horse … The master then goes up to the delinqent and, taking up his foot, says: "Here is my seal, where is old Penglaze’s seal?” … Old Penglaze then comes in on his horse which winces and capers about grotesquely … The shoe of the "colt" is taken off and Penglaze gives him one or two hard blows on the sole of the foot, after which he rides off again, his horse capering more than ever before and sometimes throwing the old gentleman off."
Barbara Spooner in her work on the Padstow 'Obby 'Oss further describes the 'Obby 'Oss associated with "Old Penglaze".
"The Hobby Horse that went with the Land's End mummers not so very long ago was the sort that consists of a horse's skull held up on a stick by a hide covered or sheet draped man, and had its own name in the Cornish Language Penglas or 'Grey head'"
Her description is of the 'mast' type of hobby horse, and Spooner followed
In his Cornish dictionary,
Regardless of the accuracy of its linguistic origins and accuracy of naming, etc., the modern Golowan festival's Penglaz takes its appearance from the later quotations descriptions and resembles strongly the
Old Cornwall Society
The ancient Golowan celebrations were also the inspiration for the
See also
- Montol Festival
- St. John's Eve
- Midsummer
- Allantide
- Furry Dance
- Tom Bawcock's Eve
- Guise dancing
- West Cornwall May Day celebrations
- Halloween
- Feast of Saints Peter and Paul
- St Peter's Eve
References
- ^ "Midsummer's Eve Bonfire, at Reduth". Archived from the original on 14 November 2012.
- ^ Borlase, William (1754) Antiquities of Cornwall
- ^ Jenkin, A. K. Hamilton (1932) Cornwall and the Cornish, page 439
- ^ Cornish Feasts and Folklore
- ^ Polsue, Joseph (1868). Parochial History of Cornwall
- ^ "Penzance's Golowan festival to be run by community group?". 30 October 2015. Archived from the original on 31 October 2015.
- ^ Edmonds, Richard (1851) The Celtic and other antiquities of the Land's End district of Cornwall, Penzance Antiquarian and Natural History Society
- ^ * Sandys, William (ed.) (1833) Christmas Carols Ancient and Modern, (edited) full transcript here [1]
- ^ * Cawte, Edwin (1978). Ritual Animal Disguise. London: The Folklore Society
- ^ * Semmens, Jason (2005). "Guising, Ritual and Revival: The Hobby Horse in Cornwall." Old Cornwall 13, No. 6 (2005) pp. 39–46.
- ^ * Email communication to Montol Festival group, 2008
External links
- Official Website of the Golowan Festival
- Detailed Description of the Ancient Golowan Festival
- The 5.00 pm serpent dance on Mazey Day
- [2] The Golowan Festival on Purely Penzance, including picture galleries
- Mazey Day, Obby Oss and fireworks at the Penzance Golowan Festival (Eyewitness account of the celebration)