Carolina Renaissance Festival

The Carolina Renaissance Festival is a 25 acre renaissance themed amusement park. The festival is set in a fictional storybook village of "Fairhaven". The open air village and artisan marketplace contain permanent cottages and bungalows based on 16th century European architecture. Sixteen outdoor stages are used for comedy theater, dance, and circus-like entertainments. Featured, live-action shows include knights on horseback (who joust three times daily); presentations of the art of falconry; and live swimming mermaids. The festival is held annually on Saturdays and Sundays in October and November. An average of 195,000 visitors a year attend the festival during its Fall season.[citation needed]

Carolina Renaissance Festival
A group of costumed revelers walk past the castle-like entrance to the fair
Carolina Renaissance Festival, November 2015
GenreRenaissance fair
DatesOctober – November
Location(s)Huntersville, North Carolina, United States
Inaugurated1994
Attendance195,000 (average)
Stages16
Websitewww.carolina.renfestinfo.com

History

edit

The Carolina Renaissance Festival was inaugurated in 1994 by Jeff Siegel, owner of Royal Faires, Ltd., the parent company. Royal Faires also owns and operates the Arizona Renaissance Festival.[1] The festival takes place on 25 acres (10 ha) of land located just north of Charlotte, North Carolina, between the towns of Huntersville and Concord.[2] The land is leased to festival organizers by the estate of Porter Byrum.[3] It is one of the largest—by acreage—Renaissance fairs in America.[citation needed]

Acts and attractions

edit

Carolina Renaissance Festival stage shows feature live music, dance, comedy shows, and performers with circus variety skills such as juggling, aerial skills, acrobatics, and sideshow antics. Musicians perform with traditional instruments such as the harp, bagpipes, and other obscure "period" instruments. Roaming the lanes of the festival are a variety of traveling street performers who engage visitors in interactive performance experiences. An in-house performance company that features over 100 costumed characters that interact directly with visitors at the fair creates an authentic feel of the renaissance-era town. Professional and volunteer actors help bring the "village" to life. Individuals in the company have developed unique characters such as the "Village Baker," the "Tavern Keeper," the village "Lord Mayor," and a fictional Royal family that has come to visit Fairhaven. The volunteers in the company are primarily people from surrounding communities, including Concord, Greensboro, Raleigh, and Charlotte.

Major attractions

edit

In addition to 16 stages of rotating, scheduled entertainers, there are three premier attractions: The jousting knights on horseback; the falconry demonstration; and the "Sea Fairies" mermaid exhibit.[4]

Jousting

The jousts are enacted by performers from Aventail Productions; and the competition is judged with points that are awarded using a historically accurate scoring system. The victory is awarded to the true winners of each competition. The final joust of the day ends with a conflict settled by an unhorsing and ground fight to the "death".

Falconry

A variety of birds-of-prey are put on display highlighting their unique abilities and training that enraptured nobles long ago and made falconry the 'sport of kings.'

Mermaids

The Sea Fairies exhibit features mermaids swimming in a 3,000 gallon aquarium tank. Near the tank is a Mermaid sitting on a throne where children can have their photos taken.

Retail sales and services

edit

Over 140 vendors sell a variety of handmade arts and craft goods such as artisan jewelry and leather goods, blown glass (made during live demonstrations), candles, and custom chain mail. The festival vends an assortment of medieval themed foods, including: giant turkey legs, savory soups, stews, and chowders (served in "bread bowls"), "Steak on a Stake", fish and chips, corn on the cob, and Scotch eggs. The site also features games such as archery target-shooting, crossbow shooting, axe throwing, frog catapults, and a gold coin hunt.

Special events

edit

Weddings and vow-renewal ceremonies are attended by the cast of the Royal Court and take place in a covered pavilion reserved for the event.

The festival has themed weekends throughout the course of the season. Themes include: "Time Travelers Weekend" where costume players of all genres (science fiction, comic books, etc.) are invited to time travel to the renaissance; "BrewFest" weekend, "Halloween Daze & Spooky Knights" weekend, and "Pirate's Christmas" weekend.

Every year, three consecutive week dates in October are set aside for area schools as a field trip destination for students and faculty.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Behind the scenes at the Carolina Renaissance Festival". Herald Weekly. 2013-09-26. Retrieved 2013-10-01.
  2. ^ 18th Annual Carolina Renaissance Festival : Elevate; article; October 8, 2011; Elevate Lifestyle Magazine; retrieved November 2023
  3. ^ King ('85), Kerry M. (2011-07-21). "Modest Man". Wake Forest Magazine. Retrieved 2023-11-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Carolina Renaissance Festival; Charlotte Now webpage; accessed October 2023
edit

35°25′44″N 80°46′12″W / 35.429°N 80.770°W / 35.429; -80.770