oak apple dayの例文
- The holiday is still celebrated today as Oak Apple Day.
- Fownhope, Hereford have an ongoing tradition in the celebration of Oak Apple Day.
- The match was to celebrate Restoration Day, also known as Oak Apple Day.
- Oak Apple Day ( or Royal Oak Day ) is a former public holiday in England on 29 May that commemorated the oak tree.
- To celebrate " his Majesty's Return to his Parliament " May 29 was made a public holiday, popularly known as Oak Apple Day.
- Other related figures in Britain include the Burry Man of South Queensferry and the Garland King of Castleton, Derbyshire, who parades on Oak Apple Day.
- However, " Night " sometimes misidentified as being in September takes place on Oak Apple Day in May rather than in the autumn.
- The night is 29 May, Oak Apple Day, a public holiday which celebrated the Charles II hid after losing the Battle of Worcester in 1651.
- The public holiday, Oak Apple Day, was formally abolished by the Anniversary Days Observance Act 1859, but the date retains some significance in local or institutional customs.
- Although Oak Apple Day celebrations have decreased in popularity and knowledge, Fownhope has managed to keep the event going, increasing in popularity and turn-out every year.
- To commemorate this, each year on Oak Apple Day ( 29 May ), an oak branch is mounted on the top of the church tower to symbolise the historical allegiance.
- In 1664 the King's birthday of 29 May was designated Oak Apple Day, by Act of Parliament and a special service was inserted in the Book of Common Prayer.
- Oak Apple Day or Royal Oak Day was a national holiday celebrated in England for a number of centuries, on 29 May, to commemorate the restoration of the English monarchy.
- Instead of individual honours being made, 29 May, Charles'birthday, was set aside as " Royal Oak Day, " and " Oak Apple Day " to commemorate the Restoration.
- Oak Apple Day is also celebrated in the Cornish village of " Boys Love " ( Artemisia abrotanum ); tradition dictates that the punishment for not doing this results in being stung by nettles.
- At All Saints'Church, Northampton a statue of Charles II is wreathed at noon every Oak Apple Day, followed by a celebration of the Holy Communion according to the Book of Common Prayer.
- The 1662 book was the fourth version; some services have been added and then dropped, including the commemoration of the Gunpowder Plot of 1688 and Oak Apple Day celebrating the restoration of King Charles II in 1660.
- At noon on Oak Apple Day each year the choir sings a Latin hymn to Charles from the roof as the statue is wreathed in oak leaves; a similar ceremony takes place on Ascension Day at 7 : 00 am.
- The events of a modern Oak Apple Day include a " band " waking the villagers in the early hours of the morning, gathering oak branches from the woods at dawn, a village breakfast in the local pub ( Royal Oak ), then on to Salisbury, where there is dancing outside the Cathedral followed by claiming rights inside the cathedral by shouting " Grovely, Grovely, " Grovely " and all Grovely " . ( Although the charter requires just three'Grovely's, tradition demands four " Three for the charter and one for us " . ) In the afternoon there is a formal meal, and other events for villagers in Oak Apple Field.