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For self catering accommodation in the heart of Padstow there is a hideaway that is close to the heart of Padstow. Padstow self catering in Cornwall could fit the bill. The cottage is in a secluded position, accessed through a passageway between neighbouring cottages, but is only a two minute walk from the picturesque harbour, restaurants and shops.
For other holiday accommodation in Padstow please try these resources.
For bed and breakfast accommodation in Padstow
For self catering accommodation in Padstow.
Padstow
is best known for its "'Obby 'Oss" festival. Although its origins are
unclear, it most likely stems from an ancient fertility rite, perhaps the
Celtic festival of Beltane. The festival starts at midnight on May Eve
when townspeople sing the "Morning Song". In the morning, the town is
dressed with greenery and flowers are placed around a maypole. The climax
arrives when male dancers cavort through the town dressed as one of two
'Obby 'Osses, the "Old" and the "Blue Ribbon" 'Obby 'Osses; as the name
suggests, they are stylised kinds of horses. The blue ribbon Oss emerges
from the Padstow Institute he has come on the scene since the First World
war being the temperance oss' developed by the towns folk as an
alternative to the drunkenness associated with the original. Prodded on by
acolytes known as "Teasers", each wears a gruesome mask and black
frame-hung cape under which they try to catch young maidens as they pass
through the town. Finally, at midnight on May Day, the crowd sings of the
'Obby 'Oss death, until its resurrection the following May Eve. On Boxing
Day and New Year's Day, it was a tradition for some residents to don
blackface and parade through the town singing 'minstrel' songs. The origin
of this custom, once called "Darky Day" is unknown, although it has been
speculated that it is associated with freedoms given to the occupants of
passing slave ships on those days. Folklorists associate the practice with
the widespread British custom of blacking up for mumming and morris
dancing, and suggest there is no record of slave ships coming to Padstow.
Once an unknown local charity event, the day has recently become
controversial, perhaps since a description was published. Also some now
suggest it is racist for white people to "black up" for any reason
Although "outsiders" have linked the day with racism, Padstonians insist
that this is not the case and are incredulous at both description and
allegations. Long before the controversy Charlie Bate, noted Padstow folk
advocate, recounted that in the 1970s the content and conduct of the day
were carefully reviewed to avoid potential offence. The Devon and Cornwall
Constabulary have taken video evidence twice and concluded there were no
grounds for prosecution Nonetheless protests resurface annually. The day
has now been renamed mummer's day in an attempt to avoid offence and
identify it more clearly with established British tradition. The debate
has now been subject to academic scrutiny Padstow was originally named
Petroc-stow, after the Welsh missionary St. Petroc, who landed at nearby
Trebetherick around AD 500. Padstow isn't usually thought of as a "Viking
town", but it was near Padstow that in 722 AD the Britons of Cornwall
united with the Vikings of Denmark to destroy an invading Anglo-Saxon army
led by Ine of Wessex at "Hehil". The Saxons army was slaughtered, and this
decisive battle gave Cornwall 100 years of freedom from attacks by Wessex.
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