The stations of the sun : a history of the ritual year in Britain

by Ronald Hutton

Paperback, 1996

Status

Available

Call number

394.20941

Collection

Publication

Oxford : Oxford University Press, 1996

Description

From the twelve days of Christmas to the Spring traditions of Valentine, Shrovetide, and Easter eggs, through May Day revels and Midsummer fires, and on to the waning of the year, Harvest Home, and Hallowe'en; Ronald Hutton takes us on a fascinating journey through the ritual year in Britain.His comprehensive study covers all the British Isles and the whole sweep of history from the earliest written records to the present day. Great and lesser, ancient and modern, Christian and pagan, all rituals are treated with the same attention. The result is a colourful and absorbing account inwhich Ronald Hutton illuminates the history of the calender we live by, and challenges many commonly held assumptions about the customs of the past and the festivals of the present.Stations of the Sun is the first complete scholarly work to cover the full span of British rituals, challenging the work of specialists from the late Victorian period onwards, reworking our picture of the field thoroughly, and raising issues for historians of every period.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member wyvernfriend
Didn't really finish this one but its exactly what you would need to investigate the historic roots of festivals in Great Britain, IIRC there is a gap in the market for a similar work on Irish festivals.
LibraryThing member LadyintheLibrary
Perhaps occasionally more information than one needs, but the arcane detail is often delightful and intriguing.
LibraryThing member particle_p
This is such a dense text that I still haven't made my way through it after several months, not for lack of trying. The information is interesting, but the book has no "pull" to it beyond the facts themselves; I feel like a Bill Bryson could have taken the same information and made it engaging and
Show More
readable. Instead this is the literary equivalent of baklava: sweet, heavy, and you can't finish your whole slice. (Mind you, I'm sure plenty of people LOVE baklava and force down every last bite, which is probably true of this book also.)
Show Less

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1996

Physical description

xvii, 542 p.; 20 cm

ISBN

0192854488 / 9780192854483

Local notes

MFT

Similar in this library

Page: 0.3861 seconds