A Gŵyl Mabsant ( Welsh for "Feast of the Patron"), also known as the patronal festival or Wake of a parish, [1] is a traditional Welsh festival held annually in commemoration of the patron saint of a parish. Prior to 1752, the corresponding fair was reckoned by the Saint's Day according to tradition or to the official Catholic or Anglican Calendar of Saints; following the shift to New Style dating, however, the fair was reckoned eleven days later. [1] (For example, St. Teilo's Fair in Llandeilo was originally held on 9 February but came to be held on the 20th. [1]) By the 19th century, the fair often began on the following Sunday and then lasted between three days and a week. [1]
By that time, the Reformation had already removed the religious solemnities formerly observed and replaced them with programmes of recreational activities. [1] Owing to the combination of betting, feasting, and drinking, parish festivals built up a reputation for their rowdiness. [2] [3] The local, rural nature of the fairs also occasioned many variations in the rules of the contests, leading to disagreements between parishes. [2] [3] The fairs had mostly died out by the 1860s. [1]
A Gŵyl Mabsant ( Welsh for "Feast of the Patron"), also known as the patronal festival or Wake of a parish, [1] is a traditional Welsh festival held annually in commemoration of the patron saint of a parish. Prior to 1752, the corresponding fair was reckoned by the Saint's Day according to tradition or to the official Catholic or Anglican Calendar of Saints; following the shift to New Style dating, however, the fair was reckoned eleven days later. [1] (For example, St. Teilo's Fair in Llandeilo was originally held on 9 February but came to be held on the 20th. [1]) By the 19th century, the fair often began on the following Sunday and then lasted between three days and a week. [1]
By that time, the Reformation had already removed the religious solemnities formerly observed and replaced them with programmes of recreational activities. [1] Owing to the combination of betting, feasting, and drinking, parish festivals built up a reputation for their rowdiness. [2] [3] The local, rural nature of the fairs also occasioned many variations in the rules of the contests, leading to disagreements between parishes. [2] [3] The fairs had mostly died out by the 1860s. [1]