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- Hocktide abstract "Hocktide, Hock tide or Hoke Day is a very old term used to denote the Monday and Tuesday in the week following the second Tuesday after Easter. It was an English mediaeval festival; it and the preceding Monday were the Hock-days. Together with Whitsuntide and the twelve days of Yuletide the week following Easter marked the only vacations of the husbandman's year, during slack times in the cycle of the year when the villein ceased work on his lord's demesne, and most likely on his own land as well.".
- Hocktide thumbnail Hungerford_Town_Hall.jpg?width=300.
- Hocktide wikiPageExternalLink osc18.htm.
- Hocktide wikiPageID "11139192".
- Hocktide wikiPageLength "9773".
- Hocktide wikiPageOutDegree "38".
- Hocktide wikiPageRevisionID "707216450".
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Brice_of_Tours.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cultural_festivals_in_the_United_Kingdom.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Category:Festivals_in_England.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Category:Moveable_holidays_(Easter_date_based).
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Category:West_Berkshire.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Clove.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Demesne.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Duchy_of_Lancaster.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Duke_of_Lancaster.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Easter_Week.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Elizabeth_I_of_England.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Epiphany_(holiday).
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Harthacnut.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Henry_VIII_of_England.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Hungerford.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink John_of_Gaunt.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Kenilworth.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Kenilworth_(novel).
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Michaelmas.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Middle_Ages.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Nosegay.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Old_English.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Oxford_English_Dictionary.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Protestant_Reformation.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Quarter_days.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Radonitsa.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink River_Kennet.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Hock-tide.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Serfdom.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink St._Brices_Day_massacre.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Town_crier.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Walter_Scott.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Whitsun.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Yule.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink Æthelred_the_Unready.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLink File:Hungerford_Town_Hall.jpg.
- Hocktide wikiPageWikiLinkText "Hocktide".
- Hocktide wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:As_of.
- Hocktide wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Hocktide wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_encyclopedia.
- Hocktide wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_news.
- Hocktide wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_web.
- Hocktide wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:EB1911.
- Hocktide wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:EngvarB.
- Hocktide wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Hocktide wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.
- Hocktide subject Category:Cultural_festivals_in_the_United_Kingdom.
- Hocktide subject Category:Festivals_in_England.
- Hocktide subject Category:Moveable_holidays_(Easter_date_based).
- Hocktide subject Category:West_Berkshire.
- Hocktide type District.
- Hocktide type Event.
- Hocktide type Art.
- Hocktide type Authority.
- Hocktide type District.
- Hocktide type Event.
- Hocktide comment "Hocktide, Hock tide or Hoke Day is a very old term used to denote the Monday and Tuesday in the week following the second Tuesday after Easter. It was an English mediaeval festival; it and the preceding Monday were the Hock-days.".
- Hocktide label "Hocktide".
- Hocktide sameAs Q5875846.
- Hocktide sameAs m.02r1b6r.
- Hocktide sameAs Q5875846.
- Hocktide wasDerivedFrom Hocktide?oldid=707216450.
- Hocktide depiction Hungerford_Town_Hall.jpg.
- Hocktide isPrimaryTopicOf Hocktide.