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Montol Festival 2024

The streets of Penzance will be packed with people wearing awesome costumes for the Montol Festival. Image courtesy of Ian Mayou Photography and Cornwall News Images

In Brief

Name: Montol Festival 2024
Date: Saturday 21 December 2024
Times: TBC but see below from 2.30pm for the rundown from 2023. 2024 could be similar…
Type: Traditional, colourful Celtic-meets-Christmas midwinter festival in Penzance
Suitable for: Families before dark and adults after dark
Location: All over Penzance, including Causewayhead
Prices: Free. But bring some cash for some warm refreshments, though!

THE MONTOL FESTIVAL 2024 BRINGS COLOURFUL WEST CORNISH MIDWINTER TRADITIONS AND CUSTOMS INTO THE MODERN DAY. IT TAKES PLACE ON SATURDAY 21 DECEMBER 2024 WITH PROCESSIONS, GUISE GUILDS AND MASKS…

Much of Cornwall’s cultural past is Celtic and pagan in origin. It’s full of folklore, myth and legend. So that ancient past (and we mean ancient!) is about as Christian as someone claiming that a pasty represents the body of Christ. Wind the clock forward to the modern day, however, and it follows that an event that’s inherently Celtic can’t also be an event that’s Christian, right?

Wrong. And massively wrong if you subscribe to that idea, in fact, because isn’t Christmas itself a wonderful mix of ancient pagan traditions with the more modern stories of Christ and St Nicholas? And isn’t Cornwall itself a land that’s built on strong Celtic and Christian ideals that so often go hand-in-hand too?

What we’re trying to say here is that a handful of traditional Cornish festivals combine the Duchy’s Celtic roots with its Christian ideals to great, colourful, exciting effect. And Montol 2024 has to be one of the best examples of this marriage of cultures, customs and traditions. It happens during every winter solstice (which, incidentally, is also the feast of St Thomas the Apostle) on 21 December every year in Penzance.

A young girl stands in the centre of a packed Penzance street for the 2023 Montol Festival for the winter solstice. She looks like she's firing an arrow at us as she is surrounded by people in fascinating costumes
I see you (at the 2024 Montol Festival!). Image courtesy of Ian Mayou Photography and Cornwall News Images

The Montol Festival began in 2007, organised by the same people who run the town’s Golowan Festival during every summer. Over the past nine years, though, the Cornish Culture Association charity has been behind the annual festival, which is a revival of traditional Cornish midwinter customs and traditions that stretch back for hundreds of years. Expect masks, folklore and a welcoming atmosphere.

Of course, the Montol Festival is focused on Penzance and the sorts of Christmas and midwinter customs that used to take place in and around the Cornish town. It’s actually traditionally a six-day arts and community festival but its final day, called Montol Eve, on 21 December is its big day of celebration. Activities in the run-up to Montol Eve include lantern and mask-making workshops around the town alongside carol services and traditional Mummers plays.

WHAT COULD HAPPEN AT MONTOL EVE 2024 ON SATURDAY 21 DECEMBER 2024? THIS WAS THE 21 DECEMBER 2023 RUNDOWN SO PERHAPS THE ITINERARY COULD LOOK LIKE THIS AGAIN:

2.30pm — The day begins with community singing at the Jubilee Pool in Battery Road.

3pm — At the top of Causewayhead, which is just off Alverton Road, there’s a performance by Pensans Morris, who are ‘entertainers bordering on morris in West Cornwall’, while the Coddliwompers (Town Criers) perform at the bottom of Causewayhead.

4pm — The Sundown Procession begins in Causewayhead. At 4.10pm, the Sundowners assemble and they head off at 4.21pm.

4.45pm — Cornish dancing in Market Place.

5.30pm — A Mummers play is performed in Queens Square.

6pm — The Main Procession starts from the top of Chapel Street.

6.45pm — The Midwinter Fire blazes at the Princess May Recreation Ground. Plenty of dancing and music abounds.

7.15pm — The march heads back to town, led by the Raffidy Dummitz band.

7.30pm — The Guise Guilds roam all over Chapel Street and beyond over the next couple of hours. These groups are based on the guild groups from the early 19th century and there’s always some grand period costumes and a central theme to each guild. They perform acts and enter a range of establishments.

9pm — Carol singing takes place outside the Union Hotel in Chapel Street.

9.30pm — A mock torchlit parade begins in Chapel Street and ends with dancing in and around the town. The osses also make an appearance around the Benbow in Chapel Street at 9.45pm and there is the ‘chalking of the mock ceremony’ from 10.15pm.

Two people in masks and bright costumes greet each other in a Penzance street for the Montol 2023 Festival. They are circled by many others in robes, masks and bright costumes
The Montol Festival never fails to capture the imagination. Image courtesy of Ian Mayou Photography and Cornwall News Images

SEE A GREAT VIDEO ON THE FESTIVAL HERE, THANKS TO VIDEOGRAPHER CHRIS TRE: HERE

Enjoy the Montol 2024 festival in Penzance on Saturday 21 December 2024. Prepare for all sorts of costumes and performers alongside traditional guide beasts, folk musicians, storytellers and ‘Obby ‘Osses. Expect them all to be out and about from midday, especially around Causewayhead, Market Jew Street and Green Market.

For families: the daytime is really family-friendly. But after dark? Well, you’ll have to see for yourselves at the dark, traditional and wonderful Montol Festival!