I was wondering that as well.
Am I right in assuming that Renn is short for Renaissance?
(And that took Google to suggest it although it calls them "Ren Faires"  
http://www.renfaire.com/General/faire.html ). Not a phrase I have heard of in 
the UK.. 
Of course, we don't have to dress up for them here, we still walk around 
dressed like that - Forsooth! (Don't laugh, we went to a 200 year celebration 
in Looe in Cornwall in the 80's and got mistaken for part of it - and we were 
in our holiday clothes!).
The olde worlde spelling is Fayre here, by the way.
They sound like fun but then we have Morris Dancers all over the place - and 
Sword dancers as well (rapper sword, not the Scottish stuff).
What period do they cover?
Is it European or American (I presume European as I don't think the lute ever 
became big over there).
Maybe that declaration should never have been signed :)

Colin Hill
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jon Redpath 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Monday, February 04, 2008 10:31 PM
  Subject: [HG] Ren (Wren) Fairy bird


  This wren fairy bird, what is it? Is it some sort of brightly coloured brash 
sounding North amerikan bird. The only fairy birds I know of come from 
australia, and what has it got to do with Hurdy Gurdys? Or is some special 
indigenious type of hurdy gurdy in the North Amerikana. Please enlighten.  JON





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