Merrymaking and Frolic: A History of Fairs and the People who Made Them

By Nicholas Fogg

ISBN:

Description

Few other trades bring together such a variety of skills and talents as showmanship. In Merrymaking and Frolic, Nicholas Fogg traces the history, customs and hardships faced by British travelling showmen and -women, arguing that this oft-misunderstood community is a cultural group, not an ethnic one. Although frequently confused with gypsies and other travellers, they are bonded by a way of life which is quite unique.

Many showmen have been on the road for generations, but the fairs themselves form a tradition even more ancient. Some date from the Middle Ages and are incorporated into Borough Charters; St. Giles Church in Oxford was consecrated in 1200 and its fair dates from its inception. The status of ‘statute fairs’, such as the 17 West Midland ‘Mop’ fairs, is also guaranteed by Act of Parliament.

Annual fairs are the highlight of the year for many communities and, as one of the most popular forms of mass entertainment, they merit scholarly attention. If world-changing technologies and art forms like film have emerged from fairs, what further developments might they bring in future?

Additional information

Format

Trade Information LGENPOD

About the Author

Nicholas Fogg MBE has been thrice mayor of Marlborough and is Fellow of the Royal Societies of Art and History. He has authored many and varied works, including Forgotten Englishman: Thomas Stephens and the Mission to the East (2021), Wellington’s American General (2022) and Tudor Theatre 1587-1642 (2026). Having worked in Belgium, Canada, the US and the Middle East, he is now settled in the UK, and is married with children and grandchildren.

Endorsements and Reviews

Nicholas captures the quintessential spirit of British Showmanship. A beautiful and insightful journey through the ages of frivolity which transcends regional borders and eschews the norms of Britain’s ‘stiff upper-lip’. Mark Luson, Mayor of Marlborough