Lerwick Up Helly Aa

Where: Lerwick, Shetland
When: Last Tuesday in January
Time: From 8.30 am, burning 7.30 onwards

 

Up Helly Aa is the biggest fire festival in Europe and takes place on the last Tuesday in January each year, celebrating the Viking heritage of Shetland . Groups of fancy-dressed folk march through town led by Guiser Jarl with his Galley – this takes place during the day with regular stops for photography and refreshment. The Shetland Museum stop around 3 pm (time is a little variable for this one as it depends on how quickly the earlier visits to schools, residential homes etc have been completed) is recommended as a good place for visitors to meet the participants and see the elaborate costumes in good light as much of the later action is during the hours of darkness. Look out for the Proclamation posted at the Market Cross, and for the many shop windows decorated for the event using costumes and props from earlier years. Processions begin at 5.30 on the Hillhead for Juniors, followed by the adults at 7.30 – expect literally hundreds of torch bearers and Guizer Jarl with his Squad hauling their specially built galley. Following the procession, the ship is ceremonially burned at the King George V Playing Field with a crowd of up to five thousand spectators before the Guisers dance the night away in a series of organised ceilidhs at halls around town, at which each Squad of guises put on a performance in turn. The spectacle of the massed hundreds of guisers marching around the galley at the burning site is particularly impressive, and the sight of them hurling their flaming torches into the ship to set it alight. Guiser Jarl is elected each year so plenty of people get the chance to play the role – the festival has been going well over 100 years and is absolutely magnificent. Note that while older sources may state that only men may take part in the processions, this has now changed and for the first time in 2024, there were women and girls in the Guiser’s own Squad.

Other places have their own version of Up Helly Aa like Scalloway, Cullivoe and Brae but the Lerwick event is by far the biggest and best known.

Helpful Hints

In 2025 it should be on Tuesday 28th January.

You’ll need to plan this visit well in advance to arrange transport and accommodation, both of which are limited (see links on the website below). Programmes are available at the local shops and Tourist Centre during the day (and a visit to the Up Helly Aa Exhibition at the Galley Shed on St Sunniva Street is recommended if you’re also in the area during the summer months).

The streets around the playing field give a good view of the burning site and of the torchlit Procession, especially St Olaf Street.

Click here for the event website : http://www.uphellyaa.org/

View this location on the map.