Forwarded message: > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > > * When did morris dancing begin in Britain? > > * When and where was the morris danced? > > * What sort of people danced? > > * Did women dance? > > * Did the people approve of it? > > * Did the authorities approve of it? > > * What was the costume like? > > * Did the dancers use sticks? > > The answers to these and hundreds of other questions about the history and > development of morris can be found in: > > ANNALS OF EARLY MORRIS > > by Michael Heaney and John Forrest > > Published by the Centre for English Cultural Tradition and Language, University > of Sheffield, in association with the Morris Ring. viii, 109 p., A4 size. > > ANNALS OF EARLY MORRIS is a classified and analytical listing of all the > references to morris dancing before 1750. Over 800 entries in date order, with > a full bibliography, and indexes of places and source-types. > > Available from: > > The Centre for English Cultural Tradition and Language > The University of Sheffield > Sheffield S10 2TN > England > > Price: 8 pounds sterling + 0.75 p&p within the UK, 1.50 p&p from abroad. > Cheques, payable to the University of Sheffield, must be in sterling payable > through a British clearing bank. > > >