This Wooset was recorded as having been paraded by youths in the Marlborough district until the 1830s, where it was used to mock neighbours whose partners were suspected of marital infidelity, the horns being a traditional sign of cuckoldry.[3] Similar traditions have been recorded in Wiltshire and Somerset, where they can be traced back to at least the early seventeenth
This Wooset was recorded as having been paraded by youths in the Marlborough district until the 1830s, where it was used to mock neighbours whose partners were suspected of marital infidelity, the horns being a traditional sign of cuckoldry.[3] Similar traditions have been recorded in Wiltshire and Somerset, where they can be traced back to at least the early seventeenth