- Hoodening
Hoodening, also called Hodening, is an East
Kent tradition vaguely related to Mumming and theMorris dance , and dating back at least to the mid-18th century. Related traditions also exist inWales andLancashire . It was centred on the ploughing teams at farms in and aroundThanet , although groups also existed in Deal which were more related to the men-at-sea, and who concentrated on performing music. The common feature to all groups was the appearance of a Hooden Horse - a wooden horse's head mounted on a pole, with asackcloth attached to hide the bearer. The head would normally have a hinged jaw which could snap shut with a mighty crack.The groups would tour the area in the period leading up to Christmas (or the
Winter Solstice ), engaging in tomfoolery (horseplay) at local landowners' houses and requesting 'largesse', i.e. funds to tide them over the slack period of the year.Despite occasional breaks, the tradition is a living one, and is currently performed by several teams around East Kent. The money raised is now normally given to charity.
Possible origins
The edited (unknown scribe, approx 1000AD) Pseudo-
Penitential ofArchbishop Theodore (d. 690) speaks of any who, on thekalends of January (January 1 ), clothe themselves with the skins of cattle and carry heads of animals. This, coupled with the fact that among the paganScandinavians the horse was often the sacrifice made at thewinter solstice toOdin for success in battle,Fact|date=February 2008 has been thought to justify the theory that "hodening" is a corruption of Odining.Fact|date=February 2008 Others believe that that it is called the hooden horse because the horse forms a hood over the operator.Fact|date=February 2008External links
* [http://www.japanesetranslations.co.uk/hooden/hoodening.htm Hoodening latest news]
References
*1911
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