
The chalk and the flame
The South Downs run from Winchester to Eastbourne - chalk downland, ancient trackways, and one of the most concentrated bonfire traditions in England. November here is the most urgent window in the Archive\'s calendar.
The South Downs are a landscape of two registers. Above, the chalk downland - ancient grassland maintained by grazing, rich in wildflowers, defined by the long views from the escarpment. Below, the towns of the Weald, where the November bonfire tradition burns with rare intensity. Lewes Bonfire Night is not a municipal fireworks display. It is a contested, dangerous, centuries-old expression of local identity.
The Archive\'s South Downs work is organised around two calendars: the agricultural year of the downland shepherds and the bonfire year of Lewes and its neighbouring towns. November is the most time-pressured window in the entire Archive - the bonfire societies operate for one night only, and the documentary opportunity is gone within hours.
Among the largest Bonfire Night celebrations in England. Seven rival societies, thousands of participants, and a tradition that has survived every attempt to suppress it.
Ancient downland maintained by shepherds and graziers. A landscape that exists only because someone keeps it.
Where Eric Gill established the Guild of St Joseph and St Dominic. The craft tradition continues - letterpress, weaving, woodwork.
On the fifth of November, Lewes burns. Six bonfire societies process through the streets with flaming torches. One person leads each society - and the weight of that role is heavier than it looks.
The chalk downs were made by sheep. The shepherds who tend them are maintaining a landscape as much as a flock.
The South Downs sustain an unusually dense concentration of carrier traditions - from Lewes Bonfire's six societies to the maintenance of chalk hill figures and the downland sheep fairs that have run since the Middle Ages.
“The chalk holds the bones. The fire holds the memory. November on the South Downs is the most urgent night in the Archive\'s calendar.”