Video: Up-Helly-Aa festival lights up Shetland
![The Up Helly Aa Viking festival. Picture: Getty](https://www.scotsman.com/webimg/legacy_elm_32052110.jpg?crop=3:2,smart&width=640&quality=65&enable=upscale)
![The Up Helly Aa Viking festival. Picture: Getty](/img/placeholder.png)
Since 1880, local people have marked the turning of the year and their Viking heritage with a torch-lit march through the island capital, culminating in up to 1,000 torchbearers throwing their firebrands into a specially built replica Viking longship, the centrepiece of a spectacular bonfire.
Up-Helly-Aa is always held on the last Tuesday of January, though it has occasionally been postponed – first for two weeks when Queen Victoria died in 1901, and the last time for a fortnight in 1965 after Sir Winston Churchill died.
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Hide AdAfter the festival, Shetlanders and an increasing number of tourist visitors to the islands can enjoy another customary annual event, a Wednesday off to recover from the excesses of the night before.
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