User Tools

Site Tools


ins_guidman_of_ballangigh

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Next revision
Previous revision
ins_guidman_of_ballangigh [2023/06/07 02:16] – created - external edit 127.0.0.1ins_guidman_of_ballangigh [2025/06/30 03:46] (current) mar4uscha
Line 1: Line 1:
 ====== The Geud Man of Ballangigh ====== ====== The Geud Man of Ballangigh ======
-As in "The Playford Ball"    Tune "Hunt the Squirrel" +As in "The Playford Ball"  \\   
 +Tune "Hunt the Squirrel"\\ 
 +Cecil Sharp, 1922\\ 
 +Duple minor Longways\\
 Recording: {{ ::music:geud_man_of_ballangigh-068-bn12pb13.mp3.zip |}}\\ Recording: {{ ::music:geud_man_of_ballangigh-068-bn12pb13.mp3.zip |}}\\
 {{ ::music:hunt_the_squirrel_geud_man_of_ballangigh_--thp--047.mp3.zip |}}\\ {{ ::music:hunt_the_squirrel_geud_man_of_ballangigh_--thp--047.mp3.zip |}}\\
Line 24: Line 26:
        
        
-====== The Guidman of Ballangigh ======+====== The Guid Man of Ballangigh ======
 Longways  Longways 
        
Line 40: Line 42:
 </code> </code>
  
-The title is said to refer variously to King James V or James VIfrom the apocryphal tale of his going about the countryside dressed as a beggar in order to mingle with his subjects to hear what they were saying about his governanceThe discredited legend enduresif only as piece of Victorian indulgence.+ 
 +In her biography of James V, Caroline Bingham discusses the stories  
 +of his incognito wanderings, Which are part of the popular history of  
 +Scotland and are very much more reminiscent of folktales than of biographical anecdotes.   
 +In the classic form of the old English tale, "The King and the Miller of  
 +Mansfield," several stories are told about James's meeting with a countryman,  
 +and identifying himself only as the "gudeman of Ballengiech [sic]"-- 
 +meaning tenant in the hollow on the north side of Stirling Castle, his  
 +own residence. Credit for these stories may need to be given to Sir Walter Scott,  
 +nineteenth- century romantic and orchestrator of King George IV's 
 +visit to Scotland in 1822, for which many of today's "authentic" Scottish  
 +traditions were inventedIn the same decadeWilliam H. Murray developed  
 +the story into full-length play, Cramond Brig; o" the Gudeman O'Ballangeich 
 + 
ins_guidman_of_ballangigh.1686104174.txt.gz · Last modified: by 127.0.0.1