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May 25th | Panel AMA with /r/AskBibleScholars Please Subscribe to our Google Calendar for Upcoming AMAs and Events To nominate someone else as a Quality Contributor, message the mods. Our flaired users have detailed knowledge of their historical specialty and a proven record of excellent contributions to /r/AskHistorians. Please Read and Understand the Rules Before Contributing. Report Comments That Break Reddiquette or the Subreddit Rules. Serious On-Topic Comments Only: No Jokes, Anecdotes, Clutter, or other Digressions. Provide Primary and Secondary Sources If Asked. Write Original, In-Depth and Comprehensive Answers, Using Good Historical Practices. Questions should be clear and specific in what they ask, and should be able to get detailed answers from historians whose expertise is likely to be in particular times and places. Nothing Less Than 20 Years Old, and Don't Soapbox.
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Be Nice: No Racism, Bigotry, or Offensive Behavior. Downvote and Report comments that are unhelpful or grossly off-topic.Upvote informative, well sourced answers.Proclamations have been read at the High Cross in Chester since the Middle Ages.New to /r/AskHistorians? Please read our subreddit rules and FAQ before posting! Apply for Flair You will find the crier at High Cross at midday (11am on race days) every Tuesday to Saturday between June and August.
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You can find them at local fetes, events and at town crier competitions.Ĭhester is the only place in Britain where you can hear the town crier regularly. Today’s town criers are dressed to impress in a red and gold coat, breeches, boots and a tricorne hat, a tradition that dates back to the 18th century. The town crier or bellman can be traced back at least to medieval times: two bellmen appear in the Bayeaux Tapestry, which depicts the invasion of England by William of Normandy and the Battle of Hastings in 1066. This was a necessary safeguard as the town criers often had to announce unwelcome news such as tax increases! Anything they did was done in the name of the monarch, therefore to harm a town crier was an act of treason. Bellmen would be paid for each proclamation they made: in the 18th century the rate was between 2d and 4d per cry. The key requirements of the role were the ability to read, a loud voice and an air of authority. It was also the role of the town crier at public hangings to read out why the person was being hanged, and then to help cut him or her down. It was also his job to make sure fires were damped down for the night after the curfew bell. Proclaiming the news was not however their only role: indeed, their original role was to patrol the streets after dark, acting as peace keepers, arresting miscreants and taking them to the stocks for punishment and posting their crimes to show why they were there. Having read out his message, the town crier would then attach it to the door post of the local inn, so ‘posting a notice’, the reason why newspapers are often called ‘The Post’. The cry would then end with the words, ‘ God save the King’ or ‘God save the Queen’. It was the job of the crier or bellman to inform the townspeople of the latest news, proclamations, bylaws and any other important information, as at this time most folk were illiterate and could not read. The town crier would begin his cry with these words, accompanied by the ringing of a large hand bell to attract attention. ‘Oyez’ (pronounced ‘oh yay’) comes from the French ouïr (‘to listen’) and means “Hear ye”. It would however have been a common cry on the streets of medieval England. This is the call or cry of the town crier, now usually only heard at ceremonials, fetes and local events.
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