Gaudy - Universities of Dundee and St Andrews

Universities of Dundee and St Andrews

At the University of Dundee, formerly Queens College St Andrews, gaudie nights are traditional student celebrations involving the issue of junior students with senior 'academic parents' in order to introduce them to higher education and to provide socialisation. These events are usually held a short time after the institution's Freshers' Week. The Night itself involves the academic parents (typically one male, one female) taking their younger charges out for an evening's entertainment at the parent's expense.

These evenings are followed by a Raisin Night which is used by the junior students to thank the academic parents (usually in a ritualised fashion) for gaudie night. This typical happens at some point in the early winter of the first semester.

In more recent years, the Dundee Medical School Society (DUMS for short) has introduced an additional 'academic family' event into the social calendar known as Farkin Wednesday. This well-anticipated event traditionally takes place on the second Wednesday in February, providing 'academic parents' the opportunity to check up on their 'juniors', ensuring they have settled in well. The origins of the name are still up for debate. Some believe the event was introduced in memoriam of Lord Archibald Kwigsworth MacKenzie Farkin, previous Lord Mayor of the City of Dundee, who was known to be fond of both fraternity and inebriation. Some believe that the event was named after Farkin Way, a historical Celtic path that ran through the area where Ninewells Hospital is currently located. However some scholars dispute the existence of such a path, declaring, "there's no Farkin Way".

Similar traditions remain at Dundee's parent institution, the University of St Andrews, but are however incorporated into a Raisin Weekend and the term gaudie night is not used for the first night. Many traditions surround this event including Raison receipts in Latin, a foam fight and Raison strings given by the academic mother to be hung on the Bejant/Bejantine's academic gown. St Andrews has a separate ceremony known as the gaudie which involves a gowned torchlight procession and singing of the Gaudeamus in memory of a student, John Honey who risked his life in 1800 to save survivors of a shipping accident offshore.

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