Common Riding

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

Common Riding (plural Common Ridings)

  1. Alternative form of common riding
    • 1913, Andrew Lang, John Lang, Highways and Byways in the Border, page 270:
      The great day of the whole year in Selkirk is that of the Common Riding, the Riding of the Marches of the town's property.
    • 2007, Michael Lynch, The Oxford Companion to Scottish History, page 507:
      There are four genuine or 'real' Common Ridings in the Borders: Selkirk Common Riding, with its 'Casting the Colours' ceremony, dates from the early 16th century; Harwick Common Riding was first recorded in 1640; Langholm Common Riding, which Hugh MacDiarmid loved to attend, dates from 1816, although the Langholm marches were perambulated before then; finally, Lauder Common Riding, like many other traditional customs, lapsed in the 19th century but was revived in 1911 to commemorate the coronation of George V.
    • 2014, Peter Ross, Daunderlust: Dispatches from Unreported Scotland:
      It is the duty of the band to waken Hawick and to alert its folk, known as Teries, that today is the Common Riding, the loudest, proudest day in the town's calendar.