Friday 23 November 2012

St Clement's Day - 23rd November


Saint Clement’s Day was traditionally celebrated on the 23rd November (and in some places still is). It was a festival held between Halloween and Christmas. Pope Clement I is the patron saint of metalworkers and blacksmiths and so these workers traditionally enjoyed a holiday on his feast day. A Feast Day is usually a Christian celebration and is the day of the year that is dedicated to honouring a particular saint – this is usually the day of the saint’s death (the day the saint entered heaven). Feast Days are celebrations that are held annually.

Legends and Customs
Ancient legends surrounding Saint Clement suggest that he was the first man to refine iron from ore and to shoe a horse. Clementine customs may originate from earlier pagan rituals as there has allegedly been some confusion of Saint Clement with the early Saxon – Wayland - also known as Wayland the Smith - a fabled metalworker. Wayland the Smith shares this feast day - which marks the beginning of winter – with Saint Clement. Also Saint Clement was a martyr as he was tied to an anchor and tossed into the sea.

Rural Festivities
“Old Clem’s Night” literally started with a bang and a shower of sparks during the ritual called “firing of the anvil”. A blacksmith packed gunpowder into a small hole in an anvil and then struck it severely with a hammer thus causing a small explosion. Anvil firing was twofold as it also tested the anvil’s durability whereas weak anvils would break under the pressure and therefore had to be melted down and recast. The blacksmith or the apprentice would dress up in wig / mask and cloak to represent “Old Clem” and lead a procession of blacksmiths (singing) through the streets - stopping at taverns along the way. The more taverns the blacksmiths stopped at – the more boisterous the singing became and they also demanded free beer or money for the “Clem feast”. Traditional toasts included:
True hearts and sound bottoms
Check shirts and leather aprons
and
Here's to old Vulcan as bold as a lion
A large shop and no iron
A big hearth and no coal
And a large pair of bellows full of holes.
“Vulcan”: In ancient Roman religion Vulcan is the God of beneficial and hindering fire – including the fire of volcanoes. Vulcan is often depicted with a blacksmith’s hammer.

In the nineteenth century in the village of Bramber in West Sussex an effigy of “Old Clem” would be propped up in the public bar while the blacksmiths enjoyed their dinner. The evening would then be rounded off with the Blacksmith’s anthem - “Twanky Dillo”:
Health to the jolly blacksmith the best of all fellows
Who works at his anvil while the boy blows the bellows!

In some rural areas blacksmiths visited homes to beg for beer or wine. To encourage generosity - sometimes an iron pot was passed around: St Clement’s Day was represented on old calendars with the figure of a cauldron. This custom stretched into the visiting custom of “clementing” or “clemening” – this is when children called door-to-door asking for apples / pears and other sweet treats in exchange for singing traditional songs associated with the night. They sang verses such as:
Clementsing, clementsing
Apples and pears
or
Clemany clemany clemany mine
A roasted apple and some good red wine!

Urban Festivities
Celebrating Saint Clements Day was not restricted to just rural areas. Ironworkers’ apprentices at Woolwich Dockyard would disguise one of their fellow workers to play the part of Old Clem. Wielding a hammer and tongs which were the tools of his trade he would be carried in the air by his comrades through the town. Through streets and taverns the apprentices would shout and sing the praises of Old Clem and repeatedly toast his name: “To the memory of Old Clem and prosperity to all his descendants!” As with their “rural cousins” the generous cash donations received would pay for the apprentices’ holiday dinner.
There was one old begging song in particular that referred to the combination (St Clements Day & St Catherine’s Day) with the “catterning” custom two days later on St Catherine’s Day (25th November):
Cattern and Clemen
Be here be here!
Some of your apples and some of your beer!
One for Peter, Two for Paul,
Three for Him who made us all,
Clemen’ was a good man,
Cattern’ was his mother,
Give us your best. And not your worst,
And God will give your soul good rest.

Again children sang for fruit / nuts or money. This continued until 1541 when Henry VIII passed a law forbidding children to beg in this way within the London churches of Saints Clement / St Catherine and St Nicholas. This rule did not apply outside the church buildings where the custom cheerfully continued.

Modern Day Customs
During the 20th century clementing had more or less died out however St Clement’s Day is still celebrated in a few rural parishes with donations going to various charities nowadays.
Burwash – East Sussex
An effigy of Old Clem is still mounted above the door of a tavern (pub) for the annual Clem Feast every 23rd November.
Mayfield – East Sussex
Old Clem and Saint Dunstan - another blacksmith saint who was said to have pulled off the devil’s nose with hot tongs meet together on the same day where a local blacksmith plays Old Clem for the day. He is pulled around in a cart collecting money and firing off his anvil.
Okehampton - Devon
Ironworkers gather from all over the Britain to celebrate St Clement’s Day at Finch Foundry located near Okehampton. Blacksmiths demonstrate their art and display decorative ironware as part of a national competition. The blacksmiths and the public can enjoy Morris Dancing / mince pies and mulled wine.
For more information about Finch Foundry follow the link:

So whatever you’re doing on St Clement’s Day – have a great time :D 

No comments:

Post a Comment