An old village custom in the civil parish of Braughing, Hertfordshire, England.
On 2nd October 1571, a young farmer by the name of Matthew Wall, from the hamlet of Braughing in Hertfordshire, England apparently died just before his wedding. As the funeral bell was being tolled, the coffin was carried down Fleece Lane towards the village Church of St Mary the Virgin.
Matthew's fiancée and other mourners were deeply distressed. He was only a young man. As they made their way to the funeral service, one of the pallbearers slipped on the damp autumn leaves and they dropped the coffin - waking young Matthew, from what was simply a deep sleep. Confused and wondering wherever he was, he began frantically hitting the inside of the wooden case with his fist. The mourners removed the lid and were overjoyed to find him alive and well.
Matthew had been in a coma and had been suffering from what is believed to be a form of epilepsy. A year after this strange event he married his beautiful fiancée and lived many more years. When eventually he did die in 1595, his will made financial provision for Fleece Lane to be swept each year, after which the funeral bell, and then a wedding peal, were to be rung. The money, invested in Braughing Parish Charities also paid for his grave to be pegged with brambles to prevent grazing sheep from damaging it.
The 2nd October is, to this very day, known as Old Man's Day. The tradition still continues and schoolchildren now sweep the leaves from the lane, the bells are rung, and a short service is held at Matthew Wall's graveside.
Fascinating. My greatest fear is being buried alive. Kill me any other way: firing squad, hanging, stabbing, burning at the stake, I'd take any torture over being buried alive. Just the thought of it freaks me right out.
ReplyDeleteImagine jumping out of this coffin and finding yourself in 2008 - Heaven or Hell?
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