Folklore

The folklore of south-west Scotland is rich and varied. It combines the customs and traditions of industrial Ayshire and Nithsdale with the beliefs and folk magic of rural Galloway.

The folklore of south-west Scotland is rich and varied. It combines the customs and traditions of industrial Ayshire and Nithsdale with the beliefs and folk magic of rural Galloway. 

The folklore of Galloway is particularly rich and has attracted the attention of writers and antiquaries from the late 18th century onwards. John MacTaggart's (1791-1830) 'Scottish Gallovidian Encyclopedia' is a fascinating cornucopia of local tales and traditions. The stories collected by Joseph Train (1779-1852) of Newton Stewart were used in the novels of Walter Scott while another Galloway folk tale was the inspiration behind William Nicholson's classic Wigtownshire poem 'The Brownie of Blednoch'. 

The remoteness of Galloway - both geographically and culturally - made it an ideal hunting ground for Victorian anthropologists and folklore recorders. It even received special attention from the British Association for the Advancement of Science which in the 1890s established a special committee to investigate the area's folklore. The group spent most of its time recording the customs and traditions of the Wigtownshire Rhins and Machars including the following from Mochrum parish: 

• A cure for the bite of an adder is to kill a chicken, split it up, and while still warm tie the whole bird over the wound. 

• If a sower inadvertently omitted to sow a "rig" when he was sowing the seed, a member of the family would die before that time next year. 

• Human hair was never burned. Burning the hair made one cross. It was twisted up, and put commonly on the "wa' head," but at times into crevices of the walls of the dwelling-houses. My informant has seen tufts of human hair in holes of the walls of old uninhabited houses. 

• Notwithstanding the introduction of reaping machines, the "hare" is still cut in the old fashion. Here is the mode of cutting it. A small quantity is left to form the "hare." It is divided into three parts and plaited, and the ears are tied into a  knot. The reapers then retire the distance of a few yards, and each throws his or her "heuk," i.e., hook, in turn, and tries to hit and cut down the "hare." It must be cut below the grain-knot, and the reapers continue to throw their hooks in regular succession till one is skilful enough to cut it below the knot. This one is said to be the "best han'," and receives as reward double the quantity of whisky the others receive. The "hare" is carried home and given to the female servant in the kitchen, who places it over the kitchen-door inside. The christian name of the first male that  enters the kitchen is the christian name of her future husband. If there are several female servants, each in turn, as agreed, gets her chance. The "hare" is allowed to hang for a considerable length of time in the place where it is first laid. 

The results of the Association's work in Galloway were intended to form part of a huge ethnological survey of Great Britain. In the event only Wigtownshire, Kirkcudbrightshire and Aberdeenshire were visited. 

You must enable javascript to view this website