The centuries-old Flitch Trials will return to Great Dunmow this summer after a six-year hiatus.
Married couples will vie for a flitch - or side - of bacon, which they will only receive if they can satisfy a judge and jury that they "had not wisht themselves unmarried for a twelvemonth and a day".
The Flitch Trials take place on July 9, 2022, but its origins are thought to date back some 918 years - to a priory in Little Dunmow in 1104.
According to the Flitch organisers, the Trials began when Lord of the Manor Reginald Fitzwalter and his wife dressed up as 'humble folk' and asked a prior to bless them one year and one day after their marriage.
The prior was so impressed with their devotion to one another, that he rewarded them with a flitch of bacon.
Fitzwalter agreed to hand his lands to the priory, on the condition that a Flitch should be awarded to any couple who could lodge a similar claim.
In the 14th century, Geoffrey Chaucer referenced the "bacon at Dunmowe" in his famous The Wife of Bath's Tale.
Richard Wright, from Norwich, was the first recorded Flitch winner in 1445.
The winners of the last Flitch in 2016 were: Ralph and Helen White of London; Christopher Atkinson and Meredith Atkinson-Wood of Stebbing; Mohammed Mizan Sabur and Emma Marcus of Dunmow; and Geoff and Caroline Parkes of Diseworth near Derby.
The successful Flitch claimants are carried shoulder-high through Dunmow to the Market Place.
There, they make an oath while kneeling on pointed stones.
The Flitch Trials are held every four years and was due to take place in 2020, but was pushed back to 2022 due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
Preparations are now underway for this summer's affair.
Helen Haines, vice-chair of the Flitch Trials Organising Committee, said: "The counsel are sharpening their pencils.
"The pigs are being fattened.
"The judge is trying on his robes and the jury are eagerly awaiting their chance to play a part in history."
The Flitch Trials take place at Talbards Ley, Great Dunmow.
Tickets are on sale now from Flitch Travel, High Street, or online: https://www.dunmowflitchtrials.co.uk/
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