The Easter tradition of women taking men hostage
In a few communities in Victorian England, there was a custom of men tying women to chairs with ribbons on Easter Monday and lifting them up, all the while singing the hymn ‘Jesus Christ is risen today’. On Easter Tuesday the custom was repeated, only this time it was the women who ‘lifted’ the men. The Victorian practice of ‘lifting’ can be traced back to the 18th century, but in reality it was an echo of a much earlier and stranger practice that originally took place a week later – at ‘Hocktide’, the Monday and Tuesday following Low Sunday (the first Sunday after Easter).