The 2009 Tewkesbury Medieval Festival takes place on July 11th and 12th, 11am to 6pm, on fields just south of Tewkesbury, England. It has been fleeing for 26 years. Among the things to see and do there is a huge medieval fayre
Cas Sharing Reduces Blood Pressure and Saves Cash _3979, and a battle re-enactment (at 4pm on Saturday and 3pm on Sunday) which commemorates the 1471 Battle of Tewkesbury. www.history-for-kids.com had a few answers for Peggy Clatworthy, spokesperson for the event.
Hfk: What sort of people work to a medieval festival?
PC: The festival attracts a broad scope of people. A lot of families come for a (free) daytime out; it also attracts teenagers seeing fknow next to nothing ofmething alter to do, and older people, who love browsing the colossal mall. We know from correspondence that we have had guests from as distant away as America and Australia who have intended their vacation nigh a visit to the festival. Local hotels, visitor houses, camping and caravan sites are fully booked months in advance.
Hfk: What is there at the festival because children?
PC: There are jesters
The Different Requirements when Purchasing New Bui, minstrals, horsemen, stilt walkers and a entire host of other entertainers around the site. Children might come along dragons, or be skillful to see a warrior getting helped into or out of his armour by his squire.
There are craft and crafts activities, and this annual for the first period we have a rodeo capabilities workshop, where they can learn to juggle, or stilt walk, or pick up other skills that could possibly see them performing at the event in the hereafter
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The Tewkesbury Medieval Festival 2009 too has the Bright Knight Learning Tent, where they tin speak to some of the folk who take part in the battle re-enactment, and maybe attempt on a helmet alternatively feel the weight of a safeguard.
Young babies love the festival. They can look entities they are taught by educate coming to life ahead their eyes. They are normally joyed to detect kid of their own old clothed in medieval costume and alive a medieval life neatness.
Hfk: How historically exactly is the battle re-enactment?
PC: Whilst our battle re-enactment is probably the largest medieval event of its variety and has been narrated by people who have taken part as the nearest experience they can have to creature in a real medieval battle
Abercrombie and Fitch UK, it is of course smaller (and safer) than what happened on May 4 1471. Then, around 12,000 fighters took part - our event has somewhere around 2,000. Then, thousands were massacred, even now we have not lost anyone!
Apart from that our battle is for accurate a reconstruction of the original for we can make it, with episodes that are understood to have occurred in 1471 recreated on the field. It does take area on part of the site of the incipient battle.
On Saturday nightfall when the fair site closes at 6pm the festival pushes into the area around our stately Abbey where a small band of re-enactors recreate the infamous storming of the Abbey and shuffling out of vanquished Lancastrians. This is followed by their synopsis trial and (not too serious) execution at the hand of the dreaded axeman.
Hfk: Do anybody of the re-enactors ever obtain carried away and impair each other?
PC: Safety is a important publish, and the event is quite closely controlled - everyone catching part is a member of one seasoned group and anyone current to re-enactment is kept out of the cardinal area of fighting for their first year.
There are strict rules of appointment, for example blows to the pate are completly banned and arrows are not shot instantly at anyone. Anyone deemed to be deeding dangerously or getting carried away would be sent from the field by an of our eagle eyed marshals.
Hfk: Are any of the organisers solemn historians, or do you view it as just a morsel of fun?
PC: We are very serious almost local history, particularly the day that our small town stood at the crossroads of English history. However, whilst the event is great fun
Abercrombie and Fitch, it is not a strict duplicate of a medieval fair; more an try to re-create the air of one.