A Short History of Gypsies & Travellers in Great Britain
"To look at this subject we must first establish the various kinds of Travellers and
Gypsies and then look at their origins.
Here follows a list of nomadic peoples in The British Isles:
• Romany Gypsies, Roma, Scottish Travellers, Welsh (Kale)
• Irish Travellers
• New Travellers
• Bargees
• Showmen
• Circus People
• Irish Travellers
• New Travellers
• Bargees
• Showmen
• Circus People
Let us now look at the history and culture of these Travelling groups.
• Romany Gypsies are, by far, the largest group of Travelling people in the UK. They
were thought to have originated from Egypt, hence the name Gypsy. However the studies
of English Romany in the 19th century lead to the conclusion that their origins were
from Northern India. Scholars such as John Samson realised that English Romany language
was mainly Sanskrit with foreign words added. These words would have been picked
up along the way and incorporated into their native tongue.
It is possible to track their progress through Europe by the words they now speak.
There are still Roma tribes living in India who share the same linguistic and cultural
roots. We know now that they left India about 1000 A.D. They arrived in Western Europe
about 1300 and crossed over into Britain about 1514 when we have the first record
of them. By then many of them had accepted the Catholic faith mainly because they
could mask themselves as pilgrims and could travel anywhere in Europe without hindrance.
When they arrived in Britain, it was at the time of the protestant reformation and
Henry VIII thought of them as dangerous spies for the Roman Church. In 1530 Henry
forbade Gypsies to come into the country. In 1554 Mary 1 passed a law in England
making it a crime, punishable by death, to enter the country as a Gypsy. Elizabeth
I passed a law, that if Gypsies did not give up their way of life they would be put
to death and their belongings taken away. The Romany Gypsies survived all of these
persecutions and became a useful part of country life. The farming community used
Gypsies and Travellers for many years to harvest the crops. They were useful in that,
they were itinerant and after their work was done were happy to move on elsewhere.
The word Romany comes from the word Rom which means in Romany, man or human being.
Romany people have a strong family based culture where the family is very much their
support system. Romany people are from birth to death, governed by strict hygiene
laws known as Mochadi which can be translated as unclean. Romany's believe cleanliness
to be of great importance and strict principles have been laid down. Washing one's
hands is very important: *Prior to handling food or dishes, *After getting dressed
in the morning *Before going to the kitchen.
To a Gypsy, bodily fluids are thought to be “Dirty”, therefore latrines are to be
well away from the living area. This is why Gypsies find modern housing very difficult
as it breaks Mochadi. To the Romany a house is a dark and depressing place because
they are very much out of doors people.
• Roma are Romany Gypsies who have arrived here in the last century mainly as refugees
from Eastern Europe. Under Stalin the Roma as they call themselves, were forced to
settle, they literally took the wheels off their caravans and in some parts of Eastern
Europe they are still living in those vans. However Stalin set up Roma schools all
over the Soviet Union and wrote down Romany in Russian script. He wanted to create
a Roma communist elite and in some circumstances he succeeded. Many of the children
in these schools became high up officials in government and the Red Army. At the
collapse of the Soviet State the Roma became the target for racial abuse and this
continues to this day.
• Welsh Romanies or Kale as they call themselves, are mostly the descendants off
Abram Wood, who was a talented violinist. They entered Wales about 1700 and until
recently they spoke their own type of Romany which is very much more like continental
Romany and was of great interest to the linguist John Samson. He thought of it as
being a purer language and thought it was far closer to the original language of
those who left India a thousand years ago.
• The Irish Travellers, or Pavee, are one of the oldest Travelling people of the
British Isles and some scholars believe them to be the descendents of the original
hunter gatherer people of these islands. They speak two languages, Gammon, which
is spoken in the south of Eire and Cant which is spoken in the north and the west
of Ireland. They were at one time tin smiths, tinkers and peddlers and also brought
information from place to place. This was valued because before 1700 Dublin was the
only Irish town to have its own news paper. In culture they have the same hygiene
laws as the Romany Travellers, which is very much a mystery to anthropologists as
they have little to do with each other and intermarriage is rare even to this day.
• Groups of Scottish Travellers developed between 1500 and 1800 from Scottish craft
workers, who married into immigrant Romany groups from France and Spain. In 1969
one third of them were still living in tents. Much of Scotland's traditional music
has been collected from Traveller families. They have their own language which is
known as Cant. In October 2008 K MacLennan v Gypsy Traveller Education and Information
Project (CaseCheck Case Reports 2008) led to a landmark ruling that Scottish Gypsy/Travellers
are a distinct ethnic group bringing them within the protection of the Race Relations
Act (Amnesty International UK Blogs 2009).
• New Travellers or as some quite wrongly call them New Age Travellers started to
form in the 1970s. Most of them come from the settled community and there are many
reasons for this. Some chose the way of life because they thought it was better for
the environment, being that they used less of the worlds depleting energy stocks.
Others however are just poor people who have been forced through economic circumstances
to live on the road. In the dark old days of unemployment and the poll tax, many
young people from the North and from the Midlands where poverty and unemployment
were at their highest, groups of homeless young people simply did what the then minister
told them to do, they bought old vehicles such as Buses, Lorries and took to the
road to live like Gypsies. Today many of those people would like to come off the
road but because they are being constantly moved on they have no chance of getting
into council housing.
• Bargees are a distinct group of Travellers who live and work on barges. There are
now very few Bargees in Britain as canals are no longer usually used to carry freight.
However some New Travellers wishing to get away from constantly being moved on by
local authorities have bought up old narrow boats and travel on the canals. Recently
this has come under fire from the water authority, who again want to move them on.
• The Showmen and Circus People probably travel the most out of all these groups.
The word fair comes from the Latin word Feria meaning holiday. There were probably
fairs in Britain before the Roman invasion. In the middle ages, traders from Europe
brought goods to trade from all over the world. Travelling entertainers such as jugglers,
musicians and tumblers performed wherever people gathered to buy their goods. Rides
first appeared in the 1800s. In 1889 the fair ground people formed the Showmen's
Guild. Some of the guild members are from Gypsy decent, others are not but this made
them distinct from all other Travellers.
• The first Circuses were travelling shows with musicians, jugglers and acrobats
performing in open spaces and collecting money for acts. Later circuses were held
in enclosed spaces and people paid to watch. The first modern circus was held in
London in 1768, but tents were probably not used until the 1820s.
The plight of Gypsies & Travellers today is not easy. In 1968 a law was passed saying
that each local council had an obligation to provide a site for every Traveller.
This promise was never honoured and the sites that were provided were often old rubbish
tips or even under flyovers, places no one else would want to live.
In 1994 the conservative government abolished the Caravan Sites Act and took away
the obligation for local councils to provide sites. At least 5000 families were left
without any legal home. The Gypsies and Travellers were told that they should look
for their own sites and that councils would give them planning permission. Again
this never happened and families were forced to either go into housing or apply for
planning permission retrospectively, because no Gypsy could ever get planning permission
granted because of local prejudice.
In recent years many of the old traditional stopping places such as commons, old
roads etc. have been sealed up and this has made it more difficult to live on the
road. Those who have chosen the housing route have often found hostility from the
settled population and many of these folk forced to live in houses have landed up
clinically depressed. Young people living on these estates have lost their cultural
roots and have ended up with a dysfunctional family life.
It is difficult to count how many Gypsy Travellers there are in the UK because they
move so often. It is thought that at the least there are 120,000 of them. It would
not be greatly difficult to solve this problem, if only the settled population were
less prejudiced. It costs the tax payer over £20,000,000 a year to just evict these
people from one place to another and make their lives a misery. That money could
build many sites and solve the problem. However; there is a lack of political will
to do this, because the settled community are so hostile to the Travelling community.
This hostility comes from fear and ignorance and until this is addressed, as the
Gypsies would say- We are on a puckering cosh to nowhere- (a sign post to nowhere.)
Revd Roger Redding, Chaplain to Gypsies & Travellers, Chairman, SWANomads."
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