
The Horn Dance. Twelve dancers carry reindeer antlers through the village every September, as they have done since at least the 12th century. The oldest documented ritual dance in England.
Every September, on the Monday following the first Sunday after the 4th of September, twelve dancers process through the village of Abbots Bromley in Staffordshire carrying six sets of reindeer antlers, accompanied by a fool, a hobby horse, a bowman, and musicians. The antlers themselves have been carbon-dated to the 11th century. The dance is documented from at least the 12th century, making it the oldest surviving ritual dance in England.
The Archive documents the Horn Dance as the purest example of a Carriers tradition - it exists solely because twelve specific individuals agree to carry it every year. The dancers are villagers, not performers. Their commitment is inherited or volunteered, unpaid and lifelong. The antlers are stored in the church between dances, collected at dawn on the day, and carried through a route that has not changed in centuries. When a dancer retires, a replacement must be found from the village. The dance cannot be moved, delegated, or professionalised. It is local, personal, and irreplaceable.
Every September, six men carry reindeer antlers through the streets of Abbots Bromley. It is the oldest ritual dance in Europe - and it depends entirely on the people who show up.