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A fair (archaic: faire or fayre) is a gathering of people for a variety of entertainment or commercial activities. Fairs are typically temporary with scheduled times lasting from an afternoon to several weeks. Fairs showcase a wide range of goods, products, and services, and often include competitions, exhibitions, and educational activities. Fairs can be thematic, focusing on specific industries or interests.


Types
Variations of fairs include:
  • Art fairs, including and
  • Book Fairs in communities and schools provide an opportunity for readers, writers, publishers to come together and celebrate literature.
  • (US) or (UK), a public agricultural show exhibiting the equipment, animals, sports and recreation associated with agriculture and animal husbandry.
  • , an event ordinarily coordinated with a theme e.g. music, art, season, tradition, history, ethnicity, religion, or a national holiday.
  • , an event designed for outreach to provide basic preventive medicine and medical screening
  • Historical reenactments, including and
  • , an event where people buy and sell horses.
  • , event in which employers, recruiters, and schools give information to potential employees.
  • Regional or , an annual competitive and recreational gathering. Including exhibits or competitors that have won in their categories at the local fairs.
  • , a competitive event for entries employ the scientific method to test a hypothesis.
  • A town/city's or , including , celebrates character of a neighborhood and local merchants.
  • Temple fair or , yearly fair held in temples of various religions
  • , an exhibition organized so that companies in a specific industry can showcase and demonstrate their latest products and services, study activities of rivals, and examine recent market trends and opportunities.
  • Traveling funfair or carnival, an amusement show made up of amusement rides, food vending stalls, merchandise vending stalls, games of "chance and skill", thrill acts and (now less commonly) animal acts.
  • Village fair or fête, an elaborate periodic festival, party or celebration. Held by the locals to original to celebrate a good harvests or religious gatherings.
  • World's fair, an international exhibition designed to showcase achievements of nations


History
The fairs were on which work and business such as law courts were suspended. In the Roman provinces of Judea and , Jewish prohibited from participating in fairs in certain towns because the religious nature of the fairs contravened the prescribed practice of .
(2025). 9783161478529, Mohr Siebeck. .

In the , many fairs developed as temporary markets and were especially important for long-distance and international trade, as wholesale traders travelled, sometimes for many days, to fairs where they could be sure to meet those they needed to buy from or sell to. The most famous were the in northern France, which were spread over six towns for a total period of about six weeks, drawing goods and customers from much of Europe. The Frankfurt Book Fair in Germany, still the largest for the industry, began in the 12th century as a fair for manuscript books.

Fairs were usually tied to special , such as the day of the saint of the local church. Stagshaw in England, is documented to have held annual fairs as early as 1293 consisting of the sales of animals. Along with the main fair held on 4 July, the city also hosted smaller fairs throughout the year where specific types of animals were sold, such as one for horses, one for lambs, and one for ewes.

(2006). 9781850588382, Sigma Press. .

The , held every twelve years, at , , , and is one of the largest fairs in India, where more than 60 million people gathered in January 2001, making it the largest gathering anywhere in the world. Millions bathe at Hindu festival , January 3, 2007. Kumbh Mela pictured from space - probably the largest human gathering in history , January 26, 2001. means a pitcher and Mela means fair in Sanskrit.

In the United States, fairs draw in as many as 150 million people each summer. Children's competitions at an American fair range from breeding small animals to robotics, whilst the organizations National FFA Organization and 4-H have become the traditional associations.


Legacy

Legal implications
Fairs attracted great numbers of people and they often resulted in public order issues and sometimes riots. The holding of fairs was, therefore, granted by . Initially they were only allowed in towns and places where order could be maintained due to the presence of a bishop, sheriff or governor. Later various benefits were granted to specific fairs, such as the granting of a holiday status to a fair or protections against arrest for specific laws for the duration of the fair. Officials were authorised to mete out justice to those who attended their fair; this led to even the smallest fair having a court to adjudicate on offences and disputes arising within the fairground. These courts were called a pye powder court (from pieds pouldres, literally "dusty feet", meaning an itinerant trader, from pedes pulverosi).


In art and language
The chaotic nature of the Stagshaw Bank Fair with masses of people and animals and stalls inspired the Newcastle colloquialism "like a Stagey Bank Fair" to describe a general mess.

The American is featured in E. B. White's Charlotte's Web.


See also


Further reading

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