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CURFEU See also: FEU, a See also: signal, as by tolling a See also: bell, to warn the inhabitants of a See also: town to extinguish their fires or cover them up (hence the name) and retire to rest
.
This was a See also: common practice throughout See also: Europe during the See also: middle ages, especially in cities taken in war
.
In the See also: law Latin of those times it was termed ignitegium or pyritegium
.
In See also: medieval Venice it was a regulation from which only the Barbers' Quarter was exempt, doubtless because they were also surgeons and their services might be needed during the See also: night
.
The See also: curfew originated in the fear of fire when most cities were built of See also: timber
.
That it was a most useful and See also: practical measure is obvious when it is remembered that the See also: household fire was usually made in a hole in the middle of the floor, under an opening in the roof through which the smoke escaped
.
The See also: custom is commonly said to have been introduced into See also: England by See also: William the Conqueror, who ordained, under severe penalties, that at the ringing of the curfew-bell at eight o'
See also: clock in the evening all See also: lights and fires should be extinguished
.
But as there is See also: good reason to believe that the curfew-bell was See also: rung each night at Carfax, See also: Oxford (see Peshall, Hist. of Oxford), in the reign of See also: Alfred the See also: Great, it would seem that all William did was to enforce more strictly an existing regulation
.
The absolute prohibition of lights after the ringing of the curfew-bell was abolished by See also: Henry I. in 11oo
.
The practice of tolling a bell at a fixed
See also: hour in the evening, still extant in many places, isa survival of the See also: ancient curfew
.
The common hour was at first seven, and it was gradually advanced to eight, and in some places to nine o'clock
.
In Scotland ten was not an unusual hour
.
In earlySee also: Roman times curfew may possibly have served a See also: political purpose by obliging See also: people to keep within doors, thus preventing treasonable nocturnal assemblies, and generally assisting in the preservation of law and See also: order
.
The ringing of the " prayer-bell," as it is called, which is still practised in some See also: Protestant countries, originated in that of the curfew-bell
.
In 1848 the curfew was still rung at Hastings, See also: Sussex, from
Michaelmas to Lady-See also: Day, and this was the custom too at Wrexham, N
.
See also: Wales
.
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