ABSTRACT

Enid Porter spent many years collecting and recording from Cambridgeshire people the folk beliefs and customs held and observed in the country, both past and present. The subjects covered in the book, first published in 1969, range from the folklore of courtship, marriage, birth and death, of trees and plants and the whole world of nature to traditional Cambridgeshire food and drink; from ghosts and witchcraft and the cure of disease to charity and land-letting customs. The traditional occupations of the county, as well as the dress worn by the workers in the various crafts and the tools and implements they used, are also recorded, and there are accounts of various Cambridgeshire sports and pastimes. There is a section on University customs, ranging from the ancient procedure observed at examinations and degree ceremonies, through College Stamps and Mock Funerals, to the appointment made formerly of a Christmas Lord in the Colleges. Miss Porter spent most of her life in Cambridge and her mother’s family have lived there since the sixteenth century, so she includes information based on her own observations and on those of members of her family. The Fenland material has largely been provided by W. H. Barrett, well known through his collections of Fen Tales.

chapter 1|36 pages

Folklore and Customs of Human Life

chapter 2|33 pages

Folklore of Nature

chapter 3|26 pages

Curing the Sick

chapter 4|51 pages

Calendar Customs

chapter 5|36 pages

The World of Magic

chapter 6|24 pages

Narratives and Traditions

chapter 7|45 pages

Games, Sports and Pastimes

chapter 8|76 pages

University Customs

chapter 9|20 pages

Customs of Municipal and Corporate Life