Annotation:Sheep Shanks
X:1 T:Sheep Shanks M:C L:1/8 R:Reel B:Lowe's Collection of Reels, Strathspeys & Jigs, Book 6 (1844, p. 2) Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:A g|a2 ed (cA)ec|Bcde fBbg|a2 ed (cA)ec|dfec A/A/A A:| e|cAEA cAec|Bcde fBfd|cAEA cAec|dfec A/A/A (Ae)| cAEA cAec|Bcde fBfd|ceae dfba|gefg aAA||
SHEEP SHANKS. AKA and see “Honorable Mrs. Maule,” "Linen Cap (The)," “Miss Maule's Reel.” Scottish, Reel (cut time). A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB (Athole, Hunter): AABB' (Gatherer, Kerr). An 18th century composition by biography:Robert Mackintosh ('Red Rob', 1745-1807), a contemporary of fiddler-composer Niel Gow, originally titled “Miss Maule's Reel,” or “Honorable Mrs. Maule” (in MacDonald’s collection). It is among Mackintosh's more popular melodies among Cape Breton fiddlers.
Sheep shanks probably refers to a leg of mutton; good eating in and of itself, but the bones could also be used in a variety of ways. The were often boiled in soup for their marrow, but there were other uses as well. They were sometimes used as blades for makeshift ice-skates. In 1881 the English traveler John Coles observed that a farmer at Galtalaekur, Iceland, "had ornamented his house outside with the bones of sheep's-legs, which were stuck in layers round the doors and window frames." In 19th century Iceland an entire wall built from sheep shanks and sheep shanks embedded between layers of turf in farmhouse walls were also seen[1]. Finally, sheepshanks is a type of knot.
- ↑ Dick Ringler et al, "Bard of Iceland: Jonas Hallrimsson, Poet and Scientist", 2002, p. 337.