common riding
English
editAlternative forms
editNoun
editcommon riding (plural common ridings)
- An annual festival in some Scottish towns, in which people conduct a ceremonial procession around the boundaries of the town in order to delineate the area and check for encroachment by neighbouring landowners.
- 1898 July, W. E. Wilson, chapter 1514, in The Border Magazine, volume 3, number 30, page 140:
- It was this folk-moot which instituted the common riding and invested it with all the religious ceremonial which primitive religion attached to every event in the life of its votaries.
- 1906, Alexander Porteous, The Town Council Seals of Scotland, page 145:
- This flag, or at least a copy of it, is said to have been borne at the annual 'common riding' ever since.
- 2011, Alistair Moffat, “The Borders: A History of the Borders from Earliest Times”, in (Please provide the book title or journal name):
- Because the order of each summer's common ridings is printed on the soul of native Borderers, it can be difficult to find the sequence written down anywhere.