The
Parish ale was a festival in an English
parish at which
ale made and donated for the event was the chief drink. The word "ale" was generally used as part of a compound term. Thus there was the
leet-ale (held on "leet", the
manorial court day); the
lamb-ale (held at lamb-shearing); the
Whitsun-ale (held at
Whitsun), the
clerk-ale, the
church-ale etc. The word "bridal" originally derives from
bride-ale, the wedding feast organised to raise money for the couple. The
bid-ale, once very common throughout England, was a benefit feast to which a general invitation was given, and all those attending were expected to make some contribution to help the object of the benefit, usually a poor person or family or some other charitable cause. These parish festivals were of much ecclesiastical and social importance in medieval England. The chief purpose of the church-ale (which was originally instituted to honour the church saint) and the clerk-ale, was to facilitate the collection of parish dues and to make a profit for the church from the sale of ale by the church wardens. These profits kept the parish church in repair, or were distributed as alms to the poor.