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Richard Walker

Siller Bells

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Her shirt was o the grass-green silk
Her mantle o the velvet fyne
At ilka tett of her horse's mane
Hang fifty siller bells and nine.

Thomas the Rhymer

A little while back I was given a crotal bell. I'd never really thought about it before , but there are two basic bell plans.

The first is the flared, open-ended bell.

This is the type seen in church towers, handbells in Victorian school playgrounds, Liberty bells, and so on. But there's another kind, quite familiar from jester's caps, Morris dancers' legs, and kittens' collars. These are smaller bells, with crimped ends. Where a flared bell has a clapper, such "crotal" bells just have a "pea", retained within the bell but free to rattle.

Millions of these were made in medieval Europe. At first they were cast it two parts, which were then soldered together, with the pea inside. To make them look more fancy a variety of simple decoration was added, which evolved over time.

As technology advanced people saw that the bells could be cast in a single piece, open-ended, then the pea introduced and the end crimped. However to make them look and feel like "proper" bells the makers gave the bells a little equatorial girdle where the soldered joint would have been in the good old days. You can see this in the photo.


Decoration continued to change over the centuries, until about 1800, and these crotal bells are very easy to date from the stylistic features. Mine is from about the time of Shakespeare.

Why were so many crotal bells manufactured? Not of course because there were millions of jesters or Morris men. It was at least partly because where carts and horses moved about at night, in town or county, there was no lighting on vehicle or road. Bells gave audible warning of approach.

My bell isn't siller, like the one on the Queen of Elfland's horse. It's copper alloy. But it still rings with a silvery and magical sound.


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