Soul Cakers, in the mid-1970s, gathered round Dick, their Wild Horse as a character in the mumming play
St George and the Dragon by the St Albans Mummers, 2015 Although the main season for mumming throughout Britain was around Christmas, some parts of England had plays performed around
All Souls' Day (known as
Souling or
soul-caking) or
Easter (
Pace-egging or
Peace-egging). In north-eastern England the plays are traditionally associated with
Sword dances or
Rapper dances. In some parts of Britain and Ireland the plays are traditionally performed on or near
Plough Monday. These are therefore known as
Plough plays and the performers as
Plough-jags,
Plough-jacks,
Plough-bullocks,
Plough-stots or
Plough witches. The Plough plays of the
East Midlands of England (principally
Lincolnshire and
Nottinghamshire) feature several different stock characters (including a Recruiting Sergeant, Tom Fool, Dame Jane and the "Lady bright and gay"). Tradition has it that ploughboys would take their plays from house to house and perform in exchange for money or gifts, some teams pulling a plough and threatened to plough up people's front gardens or path if they did not pay up. Examples of the play have been found in Denmark since the late 1940s.
England Around
Sheffield and in nearby parts of northern
Derbyshire and
Nottinghamshire a dramatised version of the well-known
Derby Ram folksong, known as the
Derby Tup (another word for ram), has been performed, since at least 1895, by teams of boys. The brief play is usually introduced by two characters, an old man and an old woman ("Me and our owd lass"). The Tup was usually represented by a boy, bent over forwards, covered with a sack, and carrying a broomstick with a rough, wooden sheep's head attached. The Tup was killed by a Butcher, and sometimes another boy held a basin to catch the "blood". There is a Sheffield version where the Tup is killed and then brought back to life by the Doctor. This is the main play performed by the Northstow Mummers based in
Cambridge. An ''Owd 'Oss'' play (Old Horse), another dramatised folksong in Yorkshire, was also known from roughly the same area, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, around Christmas. The custom persisted until at least 1970, when it was performed in private houses and pubs in
Dore on
New Year's Day. A group of men accompanied a hobby horse (either a wooden head, with jaws operated by strings, or a real horse's skull, painted black and red, mounted on a wooden pole so that its snapping jaws could be operated by a man stooping under a cloth to represent the horse's body) and sang a version of
The Old Horse or
Poor Old Horse, which describes a decrepit horse that is close to death. In
Lincolnshire, similar traditions were known as 'plough plays', many of these were collected by the folklorist
Ethel Rudkin.
Ireland All known Irish play scripts are in English though Irish custom and tradition have permeated mumming ceremony with famous characters from Irish history: Colmcille, Brian Boru, Art MacMorrough, Owen Roe O'Neill, Sarsfield and Wolfe Tone. The mummers are similar but distinct from the other traditions such as
wrenboys. The main characters are usually the Captain,
Beelzebub,
Saint Patrick, Prince George,
Oliver Cromwell, The Doctor and Miss Funny.
County Wexford, and the
Fingal area of
County Dublin. The practice was discouraged by the
Catholic Church in the early 20th century, but appears to have continued despite this condemnation. In 1935, the Carne Mummers were arrested for their street performance under the Dance Halls Act. In Fingal, the modern form of mummering was re-established by the Fingal Mummers in the 1980s, and is now documented as part of Ireland's
National Inventory of Intangible Cultural Heritage. A festival is held each October in Fingal by a local school, Scoil Seamus Ennis, which has hosted mummering troupes from across Ireland and England. The group,
The Armagh Rhymers, have been performing mummers' plays and other performances inspired by the traditional form since the 1970s.
Scotland In 1831,
Sir Walter Scott published a rhyme which had been used as a prelude to the
Papa Stour Sword Dance,
Shetland in around 1788. It features seven characters, Saint George, Saint James, Saint Dennis, Saint David, Saint Patrick, Saint Anthony and Saint Andrew, the
Seven Champions of Christendom. All the characters are introduced in turn by the Master, St. George. There is no real interplay between the characters and no combat or cure, so it is more of a "calling-on song" than a play. Some of the characters dance solos as they are introduced, then all dance a longsword dance together, which climaxes with their swords being meshed together to form a "shield". They each dance with the shield upon their head, then it is laid on the floor and they withdraw their swords to finish the dance. St. George makes a short speech to end the performance. In the 1950s, A.L. Taylor collected surviving fragments of seasonal Scottish folk plays he described as "Galoshens" or "Galatians". Later,
Emily Lyle recorded the oral history of fourteen people from the lowlands of Scotland recounting their memories of "Galoshin" dramas. Galoshin is the hero in a drama in the tradition of Robin Hood plays. Building on this research,
Brian Hayward investigated the geographical distribution of the play in Scotland, and published
Galoshins: the Scottish Folk Play, which includes several maps showing the locations where each version was performed. These are or were largely across the Central Belt of Scotland, with a strange and unexplained "outlier" at Ballater in Aberdeenshire. The Meadows Mummers are an all-female troupe who perform at local festivals inspired by both these writers, and by folk play workshops at the
Scottish Storytelling Centre. In 2019 they performed at the Scots Music School in
Barga, Italy.
Isle of Man in
Ramsey, 2020 First recorded in 1832, the Manx
White Boys play features a song and a sword dance at its conclusion. Although the key traditional characters include St. George, St. Patrick and others, modern versions frequently adapt the play to contemporary political concerns. Characters featured since the 1990s include Sir MHK, Sir Banker, Expert and Estate Agent. It continues to be performed on the Saturday before Christmas each year. ==Mummers in fiction==