This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/uk/8180791.stm
The article has changed 9 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 6 | Version 7 |
---|---|
Haggis is English, historian says | Haggis is English, historian says |
(29 minutes later) | |
A haggis recipe was published in an English book almost two hundred years before any evidence of the dish in Scotland, an historian has claimed. | A haggis recipe was published in an English book almost two hundred years before any evidence of the dish in Scotland, an historian has claimed. |
Historian Catherine Brown said she found references to the dish inside a 1615 book called The English Hus-Wife. | |
The title would pre-date Robert Burns' poem To A Haggis, which brought fame to the delicacy, by at least 171 years. | |
But former world champion haggis maker Robert Patrick insisted: "Nobody's going to believe it." | But former world champion haggis maker Robert Patrick insisted: "Nobody's going to believe it." |
'Popular in England' | |
Ms Brown said the book by Gervase Markham indicated haggis was first eaten in England and subsequently popularised by the Scots. | |
The first mention she could find of Scottish haggis was in 1747. | |
Anything that's to do with Scotland, everybody wants to get a part of Robert PatrickHaggis maker | |
Ms Brown told the BBC the author made it quite clear haggis was enjoyed by everyone, not just Scots. | |
She said: "It was popular in England until the middle of the 18th Century. Whatever happened in that period, the English decided they didn't like it and the Scots decided they did. | |
"We had Robert Burns come along who saw in it a very practical dish using up the odds and ends and making something good out of them. | |
"Obviously the English turned up their noses at it and ate their roast beef, and the Scots for 350 years have been making it their own." | |
Her findings are due to be broadcast in a documentary on STV in Scotland. | Her findings are due to be broadcast in a documentary on STV in Scotland. |
'Scottish product' | |
Mr Patrick said the idea haggis originated in England was akin to claims by the Dutch and Chinese to have invented golf. | |
He added: "Anything that's to do with Scotland, everybody wants to get a part of. | He added: "Anything that's to do with Scotland, everybody wants to get a part of. |
FROM BBC WORLD SERVICE More from BBC World Service | FROM BBC WORLD SERVICE More from BBC World Service |
"We've nurtured the thing for all these years, we've developed it, so I think very much it is a Scottish product. | |
"It's one of the mainstays of my business's economy so we'd never give it up." | |
James Macsween, whose Edinburgh-based company makes haggis, said it would remain a Scottish icon whatever its origin. | |
He said even if the haggis was eaten in England long before Burns made it famous, Scotland had done a better job of looking after it. | |
And he added: "I didn't hear of Shakespeare writing a poem about it." | And he added: "I didn't hear of Shakespeare writing a poem about it." |