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Beltane Customs Notes
from a Workshop by Selena Fox presented at 1997 Beltane Festival at Circle
Sanctuary from a work in progress © 1997, Selena Fox, PO Box 219,
Mt. Horeb, WI 53572 USA
Sacred Time
Going A-Maying & Bringing in the May -- Merry-making and Nature
communion. * Midpoint between Spring Equinox and Summer Solstice. * In
Pagan Rome, Floralia, from April 27-May 3 was the festival of the Flower
Goddess Flora and the flowering of Springtime. On May 1, offerings were
made to Bona Dea (as Mother Earth), the Lares (household guardian spirits),
and Maia (Goddess of Increase) from whom May gets its name. * Roman Catholic
traditions of crowning statues of Mary with flowers on May 1 have Roman
Pagan roots. * Marks the second half of the Celtic Year; one of the four
Celtic Fire Festivals. Complement to Samhain, it is a time of divination
and communion with Fairy Folk/Nature Spirits. * Pastoral tradition of turning
sheep, cows, other livestock out to pasture. * In Pagan Scandinavia, mock
battles between Winter and Summer were enacted at this time. * Building
on older tradition of this time being a holiday for the masses, in the
twentieth century, May Day has been a workers' holiday in many places.
* Some say that Mother's Day, in the USA, Mexico, and elsewhere has Pagan
roots.
Maypole
Forms include pole, tree, bush, cross; communal or household; permanent
or annual. * In Germany, Fir tree was cut on May Eve by young unmarried
men, branches removed, decorated, put up in village square, & guarded
all night until dance occurred on May Day. * In England, permanent Maypoles
were erected on village greens * In some villages, there also were smaller
Maypoles in the yards of households. * Maypole ribbondances, with two circles
interweaving; around decorated bush/tree, clockwise circle dances.
Flowers & Greenwood
Gathering and exchange of Flowers and Greens on May Eve, pre-dawn May
Day, Beltane. * Decorating homes, barns, and other buildings with Green
budding branches, including Hawthorn. * Making and wearing of garland wreaths
of Flowers and/or Greens. * May Baskets were given or placed secretly on
doorsteps to friends, shut-ins, lovers, others. * May Bowl was punch (wine
or non-alcoholic) made of Sweet Woodruff blossoms.
Beltane Fires
Traditionally, sacred woods kindled by spark from flint or by friction
-- in Irish Gaelic, the Beltane Fire has been called teine eigin (fire
from rubbing sticks). * Jump over the Beltane Fire, move through it, or
dance clockwise around it. * Livestock was driven through it or between
two fires for purification and fertility blessings. * In ancient times
Druid priests kindled it at sacred places; later times, Christian priests
kindled it in fields near the church after peforming a Christian church
service. * Rowan twigs were carried around the fire three times, then hung
over hearths to bless homes. * In the past, Beltane community fire purification
customs included symbolic sacrifice of effigy knobs on the Beltane Cake
(of barley) to the fire, or, in medieval times, mock sacrifice of Beltane
Carline (Hag) who received blackened piece of Beltane Cake; Maypoles in
Spain were each topped with a male effigy which was later burned. Contemporary
Pagans burn sacred wood and dried herbs as offerings in their Beltane fires.
May Waters
Rolling in May Eve dew or washing face in pre-dawn May Day dew for
health, luck, beauty. * Getting head and hair wet in Beltane rain to bless
the head. * Blessing springs, ponds, other sacred waters with flowers,
garlands, ribbons, other offerings. * Collecting sacred waters and scrying
in sacred springs, wells, ponds, other waters.
Sacred Union & Fertility
Union with the Land focus, often with actual mating outside on the
Land to bless fields, herds, home. * May Queen (May Bride) as personification
of the Earth Goddess and Goddesses of Fertility. * May King (May Groom)
as personification of Vegetation God, Jack-in-Green -- often covered in
green leaves. * At Circle Sanctuary, in addition to May Queen & May
King, is May Spirit Couple, an already bonded pair. * Symbolic Union of
Goddess and God in election/selection, crowning, processional, Maypole
dance, feast. * Morris Dancers and pageants (with Hag & Jack-in-Green)
to awaken the fertility in the Land.
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