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Wheel of the Year

The Wheel of the Year is an annual cycle of seasonal festivals, observed by many modern pagans, consisting of the year's chief solar events (solstices and equinoxes) and the midpoints between them. While names for each festival vary among diverse pagan traditions, syncretic treatments often refer to the four solar events as "quarter days", with the four midpoint events as "cross-quarter days".[1] Differing paths of modern paganism may vary regarding the precise timing of each celebration, based on such distinctions as lunar phase and geographic hemisphere.

The Wheel of the Year in the Northern Hemisphere. Some Pagans in the Southern Hemisphere advance these dates six months to coincide with their own seasons.

Observing the cycle of the seasons has been important to many people, both ancient and modern. Contemporary Pagan festivals that rely on the Wheel are based to varying degrees on folk traditions, regardless of actual historical pagan practices.[2] Among Wiccans, each festival is also referred to as a sabbat (/ˈsæbət/), based on Gerald Gardner's view that the term was passed down from the Middle Ages, when the terminology for Jewish Shabbat was commingled with that of other heretical celebrations.[3] Contemporary conceptions of the Wheel of the Year calendar were largely influenced by mid-20th century British paganism.

Origins

 
Illustration of a Witches' Sabbath, "Darstellung des Hexensabbats" from the Wickiana, circa 1570.

Historical and archaeological evidence suggests ancient pagan and polytheist peoples varied in their cultural observations; Anglo-Saxons celebrated the solstices and equinoxes, while Celts celebrated the seasonal divisions with various fire festivals.[4] In the tenth century Cormac Mac Cárthaigh wrote about "four great fires...lighted up on the four great festivals of the Druids...in February, May, August, and November."[5]

The contemporary Neopagan festival cycle, prior to being known as the Wheel of the Year, was influenced by works such as The Golden Bough by James George Frazer (1890) and The Witch-Cult in Western Europe (1921) by Margaret Murray. Frazer claimed that Beltane (the beginning of summer) and Samhain (the beginning of winter) were the most important of the four Gaelic festivals mentioned by Cormac. Murray used records from early modern witch trials, as well as the folklore surrounding European witchcraft, in an attempt to identify the festivals celebrated by a supposedly widespread underground pagan religion that had survived into the early modern period. Murray reports a 1661 trial record from Forfar, Scotland, where the accused witch (Issobell Smyth) is connected with meetings held "every quarter at Candlemas, Rud−day, Lammas, and Hallomas."[6] In The White Goddess (1948) Robert Graves claimed that, despite Christianization, the importance of agricultural and social cycles had preserved the "continuity of the ancient British festal system" consisting of eight holidays: "English social life was based on agriculture, grazing, and hunting" implicit in "the popular celebration of the festivals now known as Candlemas, Lady Day, May Day, Midsummer Day, Lammas, Michaelmas, All-Hallowe'en, and Christmas; it was also secretly preserved as religious doctrine in the covens of the anti-Christian witch-cult."[7]

 
The Witches' Cottage, where the Bricket Wood coven celebrated their sabbats (2006).

By the late 1950s the Bricket Wood coven led by Gerald Gardner and the Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids led by Ross Nichols had both adopted eight-fold ritual calendars, in order to hold more frequent celebrations. Popular legend holds that Gardner and Nichols developed the calendar during a naturist retreat, where Gardner advocated for celebrating the solstices and equinoxes while Nichols preferred celebrating the four Celtic fire festivals; ultimately they combined the two approaches into a single festival cycle. Though this coordination eventually had the benefit of more closely aligning celebrations between the two early Neopagan groups,[8] Gardner's first published writings omit any mention of the solstices and equinoxes, focusing exclusively on the fire festivals. Gardner initially referred to these as "May eve, August eve, November eve (Hallowe'en), and February eve." Gardner further identified these modern witch festivals with the Gaelic fire festivals Beltene, Lugnasadh, Samhuin, and Brigid (Imbolc).[3]

The phrase Wheel of the Year was being used by the mid-1960s to describe the annual cycle of eight holidays.[9] Aidan Kelly gave names to the summer solstice (Litha) and equinox holidays (Ostara and Mabon) of Wicca in 1974, which were subsequently promulgated by Timothy Zell through his Green Egg magazine.[10] Popularization of these names happened gradually; in her 1978 book Witchcraft For Tomorrow influential Wiccan author Doreen Valiente did not use Kelly's holiday names, instead simply identifying the solstices and equinoxes ("Lesser Sabbats") by their seasons.[11] Valiente identified the four "Greater Sabbats", or fire festivals, by the names Candlemas, May Eve, Lammas, and Hallowe'en, though she also identified their Irish counterparts as Imbolc, Beltane, Lughnassadh, and Samhain.[12]

Due to early Wicca's influence on modern paganism and the syncretic adoption of Anglo-Saxon and Celtic motifs, the most commonly used English festival names for the Wheel of the Year tend to be the Celtic ones introduced by Gardner and the mostly Germanic-derived names introduced by Kelly, regardless whether the celebrations are based on those cultures.

Festivals

 
The eight-armed sun cross is often used to represent the Neopagan Wheel of the Year.

In many traditions of modern pagan cosmology, all things are considered to be cyclical, with time as a perpetual cycle of growth and retreat tied to the Sun's annual death and rebirth. This cycle is also viewed as a micro- and macrocosm of other life cycles in an immeasurable series of cycles composing the Universe. The days that fall on the landmarks of the yearly cycle traditionally mark the beginnings and middles of the four seasons. They are regarded with significance and host to major communal festivals. These eight festivals are the most common times for community celebrations.[2][13][14]

In addition to the quarter and cross-quarter days, other festivals may also be celebrated throughout the year, especially in the context of polytheistic reconstructionism and other ethnic traditions. While festivals of the Wheel are steeped in solar mythology and symbolism, many Wiccan esbats are commonly based on lunar cycles. Together, they represent the most common celebrations in Wiccan-influenced forms of Neopaganism, especially in contemporary Witchcraft groups.[13][14]

Winter Solstice (Yule)

Midwinter, known commonly as Yule or within modern Druid traditions as Alban Arthan,[15] has been recognised as a significant turning point in the yearly cycle since the late Stone Age. The ancient megalithic sites of Newgrange and Stonehenge, carefully aligned with the solstice sunrise and sunset, exemplify this.[16] The reversal of the Sun's ebbing presence in the sky symbolizes the rebirth of the solar god and presages the return of fertile seasons. From Germanic to Roman tradition, this is the most important time of celebration.[17][18]

Practices vary, but sacrifice offerings, feasting, and gift giving are common elements of Midwinter festivities. Bringing sprigs and wreaths of evergreenery (such as holly, ivy, mistletoe, yew, and pine) into the home and tree decorating are also common during this time.[17][19][20]

In Roman traditions additional festivities take place during the six days leading up to Midwinter.[18]

Imbolc (Candlemas)

The cross-quarter day following Midwinter falls on the first of February and traditionally marks the first stirrings of spring. It aligns with the contemporary observance of Groundhog Day. It is time for purification and spring cleaning in anticipation of the year's new life. In Rome, it was historically a shepherd's holiday,[21] while the Celts associated it with the onset of ewes' lactation, prior to birthing the spring lambs.[22][23]

For Celtic pagans, the festival is dedicated to the goddess Brigid, daughter of The Dagda and one of the Tuatha Dé Danann.[23]

Among Reclaiming tradition Witches, this is the traditional time for pledges and rededications for the coming year[24] and for initiation among Dianic Wiccans.[25]

Spring Equinox (Ostara)

 
The annual cycle of insolation for the northern hemisphere (Sun energy, shown in blue) with key points for seasons (middle), quarter days (top) and cross-quarter days (bottom) along with months (lower) and Zodiac houses (upper). The cycle of temperature (shown in pink) is delayed by seasonal lag.

Derived from a reconstruction produced by linguist Jacob Grimm of an Old High German form of the Old English goddess name Ēostre, Ostara marks the vernal equinox in some modern Pagan traditions.

Known as Alban Eilir to modern Druid traditions, this holiday is the second of three spring celebrations (the midpoint between Imbolc and Beltane), during which light and darkness are again in balance, with light on the rise. It is a time of new beginnings and of life emerging further from the grips of winter.[26]

Beltane (May Eve)

Traditionally the first day of summer in Ireland, in Rome the earliest celebrations appeared in pre-Christian times with the festival of Flora, the Roman goddess of flowers, and the Walpurgisnacht celebrations of the Germanic countries.[27]

Since the Christianisation of Europe, a more secular version of the festival has continued in Europe and America, commonly referred to as May Day. In this form, it is well known for maypole dancing and the crowning of the Queen of the May.

Celebrated by many pagan traditions, among modern Druids this festival recognizes the power of life in its fullness, the greening of the world, youthfulness and flourishing.[28]

Summer Solstice (Litha)

Midsummer is one of the four solar holidays and is considered the turning point at which summer reaches its height and the sun shines longest. Among the Wiccan sabbats, Midsummer is preceded by Beltane, and followed by Lammas or Lughnasadh.

Some Wiccan traditions call the festival Litha, a name occurring in Bede's The Reckoning of Time (De Temporum Ratione, eighth century), which preserves a list of the (then-obsolete) Anglo-Saxon names for the twelve months. Ærra Liða (first or preceding Liða) roughly corresponds to June in the Gregorian calendar, and Æfterra Liða (following Liða) to July. Bede writes that "Litha means gentle or navigable, because in both these months the calm breezes are gentle and they were wont to sail upon the smooth sea".[29]

Modern Druids celebrate this festival as Alban Hefin. The sun in its greatest strength is greeted and celebrated on this holiday. While it is the time of greatest strength of the solar current, it also marks a turning point, for the sun also begins its time of decline as the wheel of the year turns. Arguably the most important festival of the Druid traditions, due to the great focus on the sun and its light as a symbol of divine inspiration. Druid groups frequently celebrate this event at Stonehenge.[30]

Lughnasadh (Lammas)

Lammas or Lughnasadh (/ˈlnæsə/) is the first of the three Wiccan harvest festivals, the other two being the autumnal equinox (or Mabon) and Samhain. Wiccans mark the holiday by baking a figure of the god in bread and eating it, to symbolise the sanctity and importance of the harvest. Celebrations vary, as not all Pagans are Wiccans. The Irish name Lughnasadh[4][31] is used in some traditions to designate this holiday. Wiccan celebrations of this holiday are neither generally based on Celtic culture nor centered on the Celtic deity Lugh. This name seems to have been a late adoption among Wiccans. In early versions of Wiccan literature the festival is referred to as August Eve.[32]

The name Lammas (contraction of loaf mass) implies it is an agrarian-based festival and feast of thanksgiving for grain and bread, which symbolises the first fruits of the harvest. Christian festivals may incorporate elements from the Pagan Ritual.[31][33]

Autumn Equinox (Mabon)

The holiday of the autumnal equinox, Harvest Home, Mabon, the Feast of the Ingathering, Meán Fómhair, An Clabhsúr, or Alban Elfed (in Neo-Druid traditions), is a modern Pagan ritual of thanksgiving for the fruits of the earth and a recognition of the need to share them to secure the blessings of the Goddess and the Gods during the coming winter months. The name Mabon was coined by Aidan Kelly around 1970 as a reference to Mabon ap Modron, a character from Welsh mythology.[34] Among the sabbats, it is the second of the three Pagan harvest festivals, preceded by Lammas / Lughnasadh and followed by Samhain.

Samhain (Hallows)

 
Neopagans honoring the dead as part of a Samhain ritual

Samhain (/ˈsɑːwɪn/) is one of the four Greater Sabbats among Wiccans. Samhain is typically considered as a time to celebrate the lives of those who have passed on, and it often involves paying respect to ancestors, family members, elders of the faith, friends, pets, and other loved ones who have died. Aligned with the contemporary observance of Halloween and Day of the Dead, in some traditions the spirits of the departed are invited to attend the festivities. It is seen as a festival of darkness, which is balanced at the opposite point of the Wheel by the festival of Beltane, which is celebrated as a festival of light and fertility.[35]

Many Neopagans believe that the veil between this world and the afterlife is at its thinnest point of the year at Samhain, making it easier to communicate with those who have departed.[14]

Some authorities claim the Christian festival of All Hallows Day (All Saints Day) and the preceding evening are appropriations of Samhain by early Christian missionaries to the British Isles.[36][37]

Practice

Celebration commonly takes place outdoors in the form of a communal gathering.

Dates of celebration

The precise dates on which festivals are celebrated often vary to some degree, as would the related agricultural milestones of the local region. Celebrations may occur on the astrologically precise quarter and cross-quarter days, the nearest full moon, the nearest new moon, or the nearest weekend for contemporary convenience. The festivals were originally celebrated by peoples in the middle latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere. Consequently, the traditional timing for seasonal celebrations do not align with the seasons in the Southern Hemisphere or near the equator. Pagans in the Southern Hemisphere often advance these dates by six months to coincide with their own seasons.[14][38][39][40]

Offerings

 
Romuva ceremony

Offerings of food, drink, various objects, etc. have been central in ritual propitiation and veneration for millennia. Modern pagan practice strongly avoids sacrificing animals in favour of grains, herbs, milk, wines, incense, baked goods, minerals, etc. The exception being with ritual feasts including meat, where the inedible parts of the animal are often burned as offerings while the community eats the rest.[41][42]

Sacrifices are typically offered to gods and ancestors by burning them. Burying and leaving offerings in the open are also common in certain circumstances. The purpose of offering is to benefit the venerated, show gratitude, and give something back, strengthening the bonds between humans and divine and between members of a community.[41][43][44]

Heathen observances

 
Holidays of the Ásatrú Alliance,[45] with black text used for main terms, gray text for alternative terms, and purple for minor observances.

Heathens may add to the demarcations of the Wheel of the Year with various Days of Remembrance celebrating heroes of the Edda and the Sagas, figures of Germanic history, and the Viking Leif Ericson, who explored parts of North America. The American Ásatrú movement has adopted the Runic Era Calendar, which includes:

Vali's Blot (14 February)
Celebration dedicated to the god Váli and to love[45]
Feast of the Einherjar (11 November)
Celebration to honor kin who died in battle[45]
Ancestors’ Blot (11 November)
Celebration to honor one's ancestors[46]
Yggdrasil Day (22 April)
Celebration of the world tree Yggdrasil, of the reality world it represents, of trees and nature[45]
Winterfinding (mid-October)
Celebration marking the beginning of winter, held on a date between Haustblot and Winternights[45][47]
Summerfinding (mid-April)
Celebration marking the beginning of summer, held on a date between Ostara and Walpurgis Night[45][47]

Narratives

Celtic

It is a misconception in some quarters of the Neopagan community, influenced by the writings of Robert Graves,[48] that historical Celts had an overarching narrative for the entire cycle of the year. While the various Celtic calendars include some cyclical patterns, and a belief in the balance of light and dark, these beliefs vary between the different Celtic cultures. Modern preservationists and revivalists usually observe the four 'fire festivals' of the Gaelic Calendar, and some also observe local festivals that are held on dates of significance in the different Celtic nations.[49][50]

Slavic

 
Kołomir – the Slavic example of Wheel of the Year indicating seasons of the year. Four-point and eight-point swastika-shaped wheels were more common.

Slavic mythology tells of a persisting conflict involving Perun, god of thunder and lightning, and Veles, the black god and horned god of the underworld. Enmity between the two is initiated by Veles' annual ascent up the world tree in the form of a huge serpent and his ultimate theft of Perun's divine cattle from the heavenly domain. Perun retaliates to this challenge of the divine order by pursuing Veles, attacking with his lightning bolts from the sky. Veles taunts Perun and flees, transforming himself into various animals and hiding behind trees, houses, even people. (Lightning bolts striking down trees or homes were explained as results of this.) In the end Perun overcomes and defeats Veles, returning him to his place in the realm of the dead. Thus the order of the world is maintained.[51][52][53]

The idea that storms and thunder are actually divine battle is pivotal to the changing of the seasons. Dry periods are identified as chaotic results of Veles' thievery. This duality and conflict represents an opposition of the natural principles of earth, water, substance, and chaos (Veles) and of heaven, fire, spirit, order (Perun), not a clash of good and evil. The cosmic battle between the two also echoes the ancient Indo-European narrative of a fight between the sky-borne storm god and chthonic dragon.

On the great night (New Year), two children of Perun are born, Jarilo, god of fertility and vegetation and son of the Moon, and Morana, goddess of nature and death and daughter of the Sun. On the same night, the infant Jarilo is snatched and taken to the underworld, where Veles raises him as his own. At the time of the spring equinox, Jarilo returns across the sea from the world of the dead, bringing with him fertility and spring from the evergreen underworld into the realm of the living. He meets his sister Morana and courts her. With the beginning of summer, the two are married bringing fertility and abundance to Earth, ensuring a bountiful harvest. The union of Perun's kin and Veles' stepson brings peace between two great gods, staving off storms which could damage the harvest. After the harvest, however, Jarilo is unfaithful to his wife and she vengefully slays him, returning him to the underworld and renewing enmity between Perun and Veles. Without her husband, god of fertility and vegetation, Morana – and all of nature with her – withers and freezes in the ensuing winter. She grows into the old and dangerous goddess of darkness and frost, eventually dying by the year's end only to be reborn again with her brother in the new year.[51][52]

Wicca and Druidry

 
Painted Wheel of the Year from the Museum of Witchcraft, Boscastle.

In Wicca, the narrative of the Wheel of the Year traditionally centers on the sacred marriage of the God and the Goddess and the god/goddess duality. In this cycle, the God is perpetually born from the Goddess at Yule, grows in power at the vernal equinox (as does the Goddess, now in her maiden aspect), courts and impregnates the Goddess at Beltane, reaches his peak at the summer solstice, wanes in power at Lammas, passes into the underworld at Samhain (taking with him the fertility of the Goddess/Earth, who is now in her crone aspect) until he is once again born from Her mother/crone aspect at Yule. The Goddess, in turn, ages and rejuvenates endlessly with the seasons, being courted by and giving birth to the Horned God.[14][54][55]

Many Wiccan, Neo-Druid, and eclectic Neopagans incorporate a narrative of the Holly King and Oak King as rulers of the waning year and the waxing year respectively. These two figures battle endlessly with the turning of the seasons. At the summer solstice, the Holly King defeats the Oak King and commences his reign.[56]: 94  After the Autumn equinox the Oak King slowly begins to regain his power as the sun begins to wane. Come the winter solstice the Oak King in turn vanquishes the Holly King.[56]: 137 After the spring equinox the sun begins to wax again and the Holly King slowly regains his strength until he once again defeats the Oak King at the summer solstice. The two are ultimately seen as essential parts of a whole, light and dark aspects of the male God, and would not exist without each other.[14][57][58][59]

The Holly King is often portrayed as a woodsy figure, similar to the modern Santa Claus, dressed in red with sprigs of holly in his hair and the Oak King as a fertility god.[60][61]

See also

Calendars

References

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  55. ^ Starhawk (1999). The Spiral Dance: A Rebirth of the Ancient Religion of the Great Goddess: 20th Anniversary Edition. San Francisco: HarperOne. pp. 197–213. ISBN 9780062516329.
  56. ^ a b Farrar, Janet & Stewart Farrar; with line illustrations by Stewart; Farrar, photographs by Ian David & Stewart (1984). A witches bible. New York: Magickal Childe. ISBN 093970806X.
  57. ^ Farrar, Janet and Stewart (1988). Eight Sabbats for Witches, revised edition. Phoenix Publishing. ISBN 0-919345-26-3.
  58. ^ Joanne Pearson (2002). A Popular Dictionary of Paganism. London: Taylor & Francis Ltd. p. 80. ISBN 9780700715916.
  59. ^ Carl McColman (2002). The Complete Idiot's Guide to Paganism. Indianapolis, IN: Alpha. p. 121. ISBN 9780028642666.
  60. ^ Raven Grimassi (2000). Encyclopedia of Wicca & Witchcraft. St Paul, Minnesota: Llewellyn Worldwide. p. 219. ISBN 9781567182576.
  61. ^ Wigington, Patti. "The Legend of the Holly King and the Oak King". paganwiccan.about.com. Retrieved 25 October 2012.

External links

  • Astronomical cusps and pagan holidays
  • Celebrating the Seasons at Circle Sanctuary
  • Sun Moon calendar
  • Festival Calendar for the Indo-Europeans
  • Atheopagan Sabbaths

wheel, year, sabbat, redirects, here, other, uses, sabbat, sabbat, disambiguation, wheel, time, wheel, time, disambiguation, annual, cycle, seasonal, festivals, observed, many, modern, pagans, consisting, year, chief, solar, events, solstices, equinoxes, midpo. Sabbat redirects here For other uses of Sabbat see Sabbat disambiguation For Wheel of time see Wheel of time disambiguation The Wheel of the Year is an annual cycle of seasonal festivals observed by many modern pagans consisting of the year s chief solar events solstices and equinoxes and the midpoints between them While names for each festival vary among diverse pagan traditions syncretic treatments often refer to the four solar events as quarter days with the four midpoint events as cross quarter days 1 Differing paths of modern paganism may vary regarding the precise timing of each celebration based on such distinctions as lunar phase and geographic hemisphere The Wheel of the Year in the Northern Hemisphere Some Pagans in the Southern Hemisphere advance these dates six months to coincide with their own seasons Observing the cycle of the seasons has been important to many people both ancient and modern Contemporary Pagan festivals that rely on the Wheel are based to varying degrees on folk traditions regardless of actual historical pagan practices 2 Among Wiccans each festival is also referred to as a sabbat ˈ s ae b e t based on Gerald Gardner s view that the term was passed down from the Middle Ages when the terminology for Jewish Shabbat was commingled with that of other heretical celebrations 3 Contemporary conceptions of the Wheel of the Year calendar were largely influenced by mid 20th century British paganism Contents 1 Origins 2 Festivals 2 1 Winter Solstice Yule 2 2 Imbolc Candlemas 2 3 Spring Equinox Ostara 2 4 Beltane May Eve 2 5 Summer Solstice Litha 2 6 Lughnasadh Lammas 2 7 Autumn Equinox Mabon 2 8 Samhain Hallows 3 Practice 3 1 Dates of celebration 3 2 Offerings 3 3 Heathen observances 4 Narratives 4 1 Celtic 4 2 Slavic 4 3 Wicca and Druidry 5 See also 5 1 Calendars 6 References 7 External linksOrigins Edit Illustration of a Witches Sabbath Darstellung des Hexensabbats from the Wickiana circa 1570 Historical and archaeological evidence suggests ancient pagan and polytheist peoples varied in their cultural observations Anglo Saxons celebrated the solstices and equinoxes while Celts celebrated the seasonal divisions with various fire festivals 4 In the tenth century Cormac Mac Carthaigh wrote about four great fires lighted up on the four great festivals of the Druids in February May August and November 5 The contemporary Neopagan festival cycle prior to being known as the Wheel of the Year was influenced by works such as The Golden Bough by James George Frazer 1890 and The Witch Cult in Western Europe 1921 by Margaret Murray Frazer claimed that Beltane the beginning of summer and Samhain the beginning of winter were the most important of the four Gaelic festivals mentioned by Cormac Murray used records from early modern witch trials as well as the folklore surrounding European witchcraft in an attempt to identify the festivals celebrated by a supposedly widespread underground pagan religion that had survived into the early modern period Murray reports a 1661 trial record from Forfar Scotland where the accused witch Issobell Smyth is connected with meetings held every quarter at Candlemas Rud day Lammas and Hallomas 6 In The White Goddess 1948 Robert Graves claimed that despite Christianization the importance of agricultural and social cycles had preserved the continuity of the ancient British festal system consisting of eight holidays English social life was based on agriculture grazing and hunting implicit in the popular celebration of the festivals now known as Candlemas Lady Day May Day Midsummer Day Lammas Michaelmas All Hallowe en and Christmas it was also secretly preserved as religious doctrine in the covens of the anti Christian witch cult 7 The Witches Cottage where the Bricket Wood coven celebrated their sabbats 2006 By the late 1950s the Bricket Wood coven led by Gerald Gardner and the Order of Bards Ovates and Druids led by Ross Nichols had both adopted eight fold ritual calendars in order to hold more frequent celebrations Popular legend holds that Gardner and Nichols developed the calendar during a naturist retreat where Gardner advocated for celebrating the solstices and equinoxes while Nichols preferred celebrating the four Celtic fire festivals ultimately they combined the two approaches into a single festival cycle Though this coordination eventually had the benefit of more closely aligning celebrations between the two early Neopagan groups 8 Gardner s first published writings omit any mention of the solstices and equinoxes focusing exclusively on the fire festivals Gardner initially referred to these as May eve August eve November eve Hallowe en and February eve Gardner further identified these modern witch festivals with the Gaelic fire festivals Beltene Lugnasadh Samhuin and Brigid Imbolc 3 The phrase Wheel of the Year was being used by the mid 1960s to describe the annual cycle of eight holidays 9 Aidan Kelly gave names to the summer solstice Litha and equinox holidays Ostara and Mabon of Wicca in 1974 which were subsequently promulgated by Timothy Zell through his Green Egg magazine 10 Popularization of these names happened gradually in her 1978 book Witchcraft For Tomorrow influential Wiccan author Doreen Valiente did not use Kelly s holiday names instead simply identifying the solstices and equinoxes Lesser Sabbats by their seasons 11 Valiente identified the four Greater Sabbats or fire festivals by the names Candlemas May Eve Lammas and Hallowe en though she also identified their Irish counterparts as Imbolc Beltane Lughnassadh and Samhain 12 Due to early Wicca s influence on modern paganism and the syncretic adoption of Anglo Saxon and Celtic motifs the most commonly used English festival names for the Wheel of the Year tend to be the Celtic ones introduced by Gardner and the mostly Germanic derived names introduced by Kelly regardless whether the celebrations are based on those cultures Festivals Edit The eight armed sun cross is often used to represent the Neopagan Wheel of the Year In many traditions of modern pagan cosmology all things are considered to be cyclical with time as a perpetual cycle of growth and retreat tied to the Sun s annual death and rebirth This cycle is also viewed as a micro and macrocosm of other life cycles in an immeasurable series of cycles composing the Universe The days that fall on the landmarks of the yearly cycle traditionally mark the beginnings and middles of the four seasons They are regarded with significance and host to major communal festivals These eight festivals are the most common times for community celebrations 2 13 14 In addition to the quarter and cross quarter days other festivals may also be celebrated throughout the year especially in the context of polytheistic reconstructionism and other ethnic traditions While festivals of the Wheel are steeped in solar mythology and symbolism many Wiccan esbats are commonly based on lunar cycles Together they represent the most common celebrations in Wiccan influenced forms of Neopaganism especially in contemporary Witchcraft groups 13 14 Winter Solstice Yule Edit Main articles Winter solstice and Yule See also Midwinter Brumalia and Saturnalia Midwinter known commonly as Yule or within modern Druid traditions as Alban Arthan 15 has been recognised as a significant turning point in the yearly cycle since the late Stone Age The ancient megalithic sites of Newgrange and Stonehenge carefully aligned with the solstice sunrise and sunset exemplify this 16 The reversal of the Sun s ebbing presence in the sky symbolizes the rebirth of the solar god and presages the return of fertile seasons From Germanic to Roman tradition this is the most important time of celebration 17 18 Practices vary but sacrifice offerings feasting and gift giving are common elements of Midwinter festivities Bringing sprigs and wreaths of evergreenery such as holly ivy mistletoe yew and pine into the home and tree decorating are also common during this time 17 19 20 In Roman traditions additional festivities take place during the six days leading up to Midwinter 18 Imbolc Candlemas Edit Main articles Imbolc and Candlemas See also Disablot The cross quarter day following Midwinter falls on the first of February and traditionally marks the first stirrings of spring It aligns with the contemporary observance of Groundhog Day It is time for purification and spring cleaning in anticipation of the year s new life In Rome it was historically a shepherd s holiday 21 while the Celts associated it with the onset of ewes lactation prior to birthing the spring lambs 22 23 For Celtic pagans the festival is dedicated to the goddess Brigid daughter of The Dagda and one of the Tuatha De Danann 23 Among Reclaiming tradition Witches this is the traditional time for pledges and rededications for the coming year 24 and for initiation among Dianic Wiccans 25 Spring Equinox Ostara Edit Main article March equinox See also Liberalia Hilaria and Nowruz The annual cycle of insolation for the northern hemisphere Sun energy shown in blue with key points for seasons middle quarter days top and cross quarter days bottom along with months lower and Zodiac houses upper The cycle of temperature shown in pink is delayed by seasonal lag Derived from a reconstruction produced by linguist Jacob Grimm of an Old High German form of the Old English goddess name Eostre Ostara marks the vernal equinox in some modern Pagan traditions Known as Alban Eilir to modern Druid traditions this holiday is the second of three spring celebrations the midpoint between Imbolc and Beltane during which light and darkness are again in balance with light on the rise It is a time of new beginnings and of life emerging further from the grips of winter 26 Beltane May Eve Edit Main article Beltane See also May Day Floralia and Walpurgis Night Traditionally the first day of summer in Ireland in Rome the earliest celebrations appeared in pre Christian times with the festival of Flora the Roman goddess of flowers and the Walpurgisnacht celebrations of the Germanic countries 27 Since the Christianisation of Europe a more secular version of the festival has continued in Europe and America commonly referred to as May Day In this form it is well known for maypole dancing and the crowning of the Queen of the May Celebrated by many pagan traditions among modern Druids this festival recognizes the power of life in its fullness the greening of the world youthfulness and flourishing 28 Summer Solstice Litha Edit Main articles Midsummer and Summer solstice Midsummer is one of the four solar holidays and is considered the turning point at which summer reaches its height and the sun shines longest Among the Wiccan sabbats Midsummer is preceded by Beltane and followed by Lammas or Lughnasadh Some Wiccan traditions call the festival Litha a name occurring in Bede s The Reckoning of Time De Temporum Ratione eighth century which preserves a list of the then obsolete Anglo Saxon names for the twelve months AErra Lida first or preceding Lida roughly corresponds to June in the Gregorian calendar and AEfterra Lida following Lida to July Bede writes that Litha means gentle or navigable because in both these months the calm breezes are gentle and they were wont to sail upon the smooth sea 29 Modern Druids celebrate this festival as Alban Hefin The sun in its greatest strength is greeted and celebrated on this holiday While it is the time of greatest strength of the solar current it also marks a turning point for the sun also begins its time of decline as the wheel of the year turns Arguably the most important festival of the Druid traditions due to the great focus on the sun and its light as a symbol of divine inspiration Druid groups frequently celebrate this event at Stonehenge 30 Lughnasadh Lammas Edit Main articles Lammas and Lughnasadh Lammas or Lughnasadh ˈ l uː n ae s e is the first of the three Wiccan harvest festivals the other two being the autumnal equinox or Mabon and Samhain Wiccans mark the holiday by baking a figure of the god in bread and eating it to symbolise the sanctity and importance of the harvest Celebrations vary as not all Pagans are Wiccans The Irish name Lughnasadh 4 31 is used in some traditions to designate this holiday Wiccan celebrations of this holiday are neither generally based on Celtic culture nor centered on the Celtic deity Lugh This name seems to have been a late adoption among Wiccans In early versions of Wiccan literature the festival is referred to as August Eve 32 The name Lammas contraction of loaf mass implies it is an agrarian based festival and feast of thanksgiving for grain and bread which symbolises the first fruits of the harvest Christian festivals may incorporate elements from the Pagan Ritual 31 33 Autumn Equinox Mabon Edit Main article September equinox The holiday of the autumnal equinox Harvest Home Mabon the Feast of the Ingathering Mean Fomhair An Clabhsur or Alban Elfed in Neo Druid traditions is a modern Pagan ritual of thanksgiving for the fruits of the earth and a recognition of the need to share them to secure the blessings of the Goddess and the Gods during the coming winter months The name Mabon was coined by Aidan Kelly around 1970 as a reference to Mabon ap Modron a character from Welsh mythology 34 Among the sabbats it is the second of the three Pagan harvest festivals preceded by Lammas Lughnasadh and followed by Samhain Samhain Hallows Edit Neopagans honoring the dead as part of a Samhain ritual Main articles Samhain and Halloween Samhain ˈ s ɑː w ɪ n is one of the four Greater Sabbats among Wiccans Samhain is typically considered as a time to celebrate the lives of those who have passed on and it often involves paying respect to ancestors family members elders of the faith friends pets and other loved ones who have died Aligned with the contemporary observance of Halloween and Day of the Dead in some traditions the spirits of the departed are invited to attend the festivities It is seen as a festival of darkness which is balanced at the opposite point of the Wheel by the festival of Beltane which is celebrated as a festival of light and fertility 35 Many Neopagans believe that the veil between this world and the afterlife is at its thinnest point of the year at Samhain making it easier to communicate with those who have departed 14 Some authorities claim the Christian festival of All Hallows Day All Saints Day and the preceding evening are appropriations of Samhain by early Christian missionaries to the British Isles 36 37 Practice EditCelebration commonly takes place outdoors in the form of a communal gathering Dates of celebration Edit The precise dates on which festivals are celebrated often vary to some degree as would the related agricultural milestones of the local region Celebrations may occur on the astrologically precise quarter and cross quarter days the nearest full moon the nearest new moon or the nearest weekend for contemporary convenience The festivals were originally celebrated by peoples in the middle latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere Consequently the traditional timing for seasonal celebrations do not align with the seasons in the Southern Hemisphere or near the equator Pagans in the Southern Hemisphere often advance these dates by six months to coincide with their own seasons 14 38 39 40 Offerings Edit Romuva ceremony See also Blotan Holocaustos Sacrificium Romanam Thyesthai Equus October and Ritual of oak and mistletoe Offerings of food drink various objects etc have been central in ritual propitiation and veneration for millennia Modern pagan practice strongly avoids sacrificing animals in favour of grains herbs milk wines incense baked goods minerals etc The exception being with ritual feasts including meat where the inedible parts of the animal are often burned as offerings while the community eats the rest 41 42 Sacrifices are typically offered to gods and ancestors by burning them Burying and leaving offerings in the open are also common in certain circumstances The purpose of offering is to benefit the venerated show gratitude and give something back strengthening the bonds between humans and divine and between members of a community 41 43 44 Heathen observances Edit Holidays of the Asatru Alliance 45 with black text used for main terms gray text for alternative terms and purple for minor observances Heathens may add to the demarcations of the Wheel of the Year with various Days of Remembrance celebrating heroes of the Edda and the Sagas figures of Germanic history and the Viking Leif Ericson who explored parts of North America The American Asatru movement has adopted the Runic Era Calendar which includes Vali s Blot 14 February Celebration dedicated to the god Vali and to love 45 Feast of the Einherjar 11 November Celebration to honor kin who died in battle 45 Ancestors Blot 11 November Celebration to honor one s ancestors 46 Yggdrasil Day 22 April Celebration of the world tree Yggdrasil of the reality world it represents of trees and nature 45 Winterfinding mid October Celebration marking the beginning of winter held on a date between Haustblot and Winternights 45 47 Summerfinding mid April Celebration marking the beginning of summer held on a date between Ostara and Walpurgis Night 45 47 Narratives EditCeltic Edit See also Celtic mythology It is a misconception in some quarters of the Neopagan community influenced by the writings of Robert Graves 48 that historical Celts had an overarching narrative for the entire cycle of the year While the various Celtic calendars include some cyclical patterns and a belief in the balance of light and dark these beliefs vary between the different Celtic cultures Modern preservationists and revivalists usually observe the four fire festivals of the Gaelic Calendar and some also observe local festivals that are held on dates of significance in the different Celtic nations 49 50 Slavic Edit Kolomir the Slavic example of Wheel of the Year indicating seasons of the year Four point and eight point swastika shaped wheels were more common See also Slavic mythology Slavic mythology tells of a persisting conflict involving Perun god of thunder and lightning and Veles the black god and horned god of the underworld Enmity between the two is initiated by Veles annual ascent up the world tree in the form of a huge serpent and his ultimate theft of Perun s divine cattle from the heavenly domain Perun retaliates to this challenge of the divine order by pursuing Veles attacking with his lightning bolts from the sky Veles taunts Perun and flees transforming himself into various animals and hiding behind trees houses even people Lightning bolts striking down trees or homes were explained as results of this In the end Perun overcomes and defeats Veles returning him to his place in the realm of the dead Thus the order of the world is maintained 51 52 53 The idea that storms and thunder are actually divine battle is pivotal to the changing of the seasons Dry periods are identified as chaotic results of Veles thievery This duality and conflict represents an opposition of the natural principles of earth water substance and chaos Veles and of heaven fire spirit order Perun not a clash of good and evil The cosmic battle between the two also echoes the ancient Indo European narrative of a fight between the sky borne storm god and chthonic dragon On the great night New Year two children of Perun are born Jarilo god of fertility and vegetation and son of the Moon and Morana goddess of nature and death and daughter of the Sun On the same night the infant Jarilo is snatched and taken to the underworld where Veles raises him as his own At the time of the spring equinox Jarilo returns across the sea from the world of the dead bringing with him fertility and spring from the evergreen underworld into the realm of the living He meets his sister Morana and courts her With the beginning of summer the two are married bringing fertility and abundance to Earth ensuring a bountiful harvest The union of Perun s kin and Veles stepson brings peace between two great gods staving off storms which could damage the harvest After the harvest however Jarilo is unfaithful to his wife and she vengefully slays him returning him to the underworld and renewing enmity between Perun and Veles Without her husband god of fertility and vegetation Morana and all of nature with her withers and freezes in the ensuing winter She grows into the old and dangerous goddess of darkness and frost eventually dying by the year s end only to be reborn again with her brother in the new year 51 52 Wicca and Druidry Edit Painted Wheel of the Year from the Museum of Witchcraft Boscastle Further information Wiccan views of divinity In Wicca the narrative of the Wheel of the Year traditionally centers on the sacred marriage of the God and the Goddess and the god goddess duality In this cycle the God is perpetually born from the Goddess at Yule grows in power at the vernal equinox as does the Goddess now in her maiden aspect courts and impregnates the Goddess at Beltane reaches his peak at the summer solstice wanes in power at Lammas passes into the underworld at Samhain taking with him the fertility of the Goddess Earth who is now in her crone aspect until he is once again born from Her mother crone aspect at Yule The Goddess in turn ages and rejuvenates endlessly with the seasons being courted by and giving birth to the Horned God 14 54 55 Many Wiccan Neo Druid and eclectic Neopagans incorporate a narrative of the Holly King and Oak King as rulers of the waning year and the waxing year respectively These two figures battle endlessly with the turning of the seasons At the summer solstice the Holly King defeats the Oak King and commences his reign 56 94 After the Autumn equinox the Oak King slowly begins to regain his power as the sun begins to wane Come the winter solstice the Oak King in turn vanquishes the Holly King 56 137 After the spring equinox the sun begins to wax again and the Holly King slowly regains his strength until he once again defeats the Oak King at the summer solstice The two are ultimately seen as essential parts of a whole light and dark aspects of the male God and would not exist without each other 14 57 58 59 The Holly King is often portrayed as a woodsy figure similar to the modern Santa Claus dressed in red with sprigs of holly in his hair and the Oak King as a fertility god 60 61 See also EditEmber days quarterly periods usually three days of prayer and fasting in the liturgical calendar of Western Christian churches List of neo pagan festivals and events Medicine wheel metaphor for a variety of Native American spiritual concepts Solar terms year s divisions in China and East AsiaCalendars Edit Celtic calendar Gaelic calendar Welsh seasonal festivals Germanic calendar Runic calendar Hellenic calendars Attic calendar Macedonian calendar Roman calendar Roman festivalsReferences Edit Williams Liz 29 July 2013 Paganism part 3 the Wheel of the Year The Guardian Retrieved 23 October 2021 a b Harvey Graham 1994 The Roots of Pagan Ecology Journal of Contemporary Religion 9 3 38 41 doi 10 1080 13537909408580720 a b Gardner Gerald 1954 Witchcraft Today p 147 a b Hutton Ronald 8 December 1993 The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles Oxford Blackwell pp 337 341 ISBN 0 631 18946 7 Murray Margaret 1931 The God of the Witches Kinloch George Ritchie Reliquiae Antiquae Scoticae Edinburgh 1848 Robert Graves The White Goddess New York Creative Age Press 1948 Published in London by Faber amp Faber Lamond Frederic 2004 Fifty Years of Wicca Sutton Mallet England Green Magic pp 16 17 ISBN 0 9547230 1 5 Glass Justine 1965 Witchcraft the Sixth Sense and Us London Neville Spearman p 98 Kelly Aidan About Naming Ostara Litha and Mabon Including Paganism Patheos Accessed 8 May 2019 Beckett John Enough With the Mabon Hate Under the Ancient Oaks Patheos 11 Sep 2018 Valiente Doreen 1978 Witchcraft For Tomorrow London Robert Hale Limited a b Zell Ravenheart Oberon Zell Ravenheart Morning Glory 2006 Book III Wheel of the Year In Kirsten Dalley and Artemisia ed Creating Circles amp Ceremonies Rituals for All Seasons And Reasons Book Mart Press p 192 ISBN 1 56414 864 5 a b c d e f Drury Nevill 2009 The Modern Magical Revival Esbats and Sabbats In Pizza Murphy Lewis James R eds Handbook of Contemporary Paganism Leiden Netherlands Brill Publishers pp 63 67 ISBN 9789004163737 Winter Solstice Alban Arthan Order of Bards Ovates and Druids 10 January 2012 Retrieved 20 February 2019 Johnson Anthony 2008 Solving Stonehenge The New Key to an Ancient Enigma Thames amp Hudson pp 252 253 ISBN 978 0 500 05155 9 a b Zell Ravenheart Oberon Zell Ravenheart Morning Glory 2006 7 Yule Winter Solstice Creating Circles amp Ceremonies Rituals for All Seasons And Reasons Career Press pp 250 252 ISBN 1 56414 864 5 a b Gagarin Michael 2010 S The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece and Rome Volume 1 Oxford University Press p 231 ISBN 978 0 19517 072 6 Selbie John A 1914 Gifts Greek and Roman In Hastings James ed Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics Volume 6 New York Edinburgh Charles Scribner s Sons T amp T Clark p 212 Harvey Graham 2000 1 Celebrating the Seasons Contemporary Paganism Listening People Speaking Earth NYU Press pp 6 8 ISBN 0 8147 3549 5 Plutarch Life of Caesar Parallel Lives Vol Alexander and Caesar Chadwick Nora K Cunliffe Barry 1970 The Celts Harmondsworth Penguin p 181 ISBN 0 14 021211 6 a b Rabinovitch Shelley T Lewis James R 2004 The Encyclopedia of Modern Witchcraft and Neo Paganism Citadel Press pp 232 233 ISBN 0 8065 2407 3 Starhawk 1979 The Spiral Dance A Rebirth of the Ancient Religion of the Great Goddess 1989 revised ed New York New York Harper and Row pp 7 186 246 ISBN 0 06 250814 8 Budapest Zsuzsanna E 1980 The Holy Book of Women s Mysteries ISBN 0 914728 67 9 Deeper into Alban Eilir Order of Bards Ovates and Druids 18 January 2012 Retrieved 20 February 2019 Zell Ravenheart Oberon Zell Ravenheart Morning Glory 2006 Book III Wheel of the Year In Kirsten Dalley and Artemisia ed Creating Circles amp Ceremonies Rituals for All Seasons And Reasons Book Mart Press pp 203 206 ISBN 1 56414 864 5 Deeper Into Beltane Order of Bards Ovates and Druids 18 January 2012 Retrieved 20 February 2019 Beda Venerabilis 1999 Bede the reckoning of time Liverpool Liverpool University Press p 54 ISBN 9781846312663 Deeper into Alban Hefin Order of Bards Ovates and Druids 18 January 2012 Retrieved 20 February 2019 a b Starhawk 1979 1989 The Spiral Dance A Rebirth of the Ancient Religion of the Great Goddess New York Harper and Row ISBN 0 06 250814 8 pp 191 2 revised edition Gardnerian Book of Shadows The Sabbat Rituals August Eve www sacred texts com Retrieved 20 September 2017 Lammas n etymonline com Retrieved 25 November 2012 Zell Ravenheart Oberon Zell Ravenheart amp Morning Glory 2006 Creating circles amp ceremonies rituals for all seasons amp reasons Franklin Lakes NJ New Page Books p 227 ISBN 1564148645 Starhawk 1979 1989 The Spiral Dance A Rebirth of the Ancient Religion of the Great Goddess New York Harper and Row ISBN 0 06 250814 8 pp 193 6 revised edition Smith Bonnie G 2004 Women s History in Global Perspective University of Illinois Press p 66 ISBN 978 0 252 02931 8 Retrieved 14 December 2015 The pre Christian observance obviously influenced the Christian celebration of All Hallows Eve just as the Taoist festival affected the newer Buddhist Ullambana festival Although the Christian version of All Saints and All Souls Days came to emphasize prayers for the dead visits to graves and the role of the living assuring the safe passage to heaven of their departed loved ones older notions never disappeared Roberts Brian K 1987 The Making of the English Village A Study in Historical Geography Longman Scientific amp Technical ISBN 978 0 582 30143 6 Retrieved 14 December 2015 Time out of time when the barriers between this world and the next were down the dead returned from the grave and gods and strangers from the underworld walked abroad was a twice yearly reality on dates Christianised as All Hallows Eve and All Hallows Day Hume Lynne 1997 Witchcraft and Paganism in Australia Melbourne Melbourne University Press ISBN 9780522847826 Vos Donna 2002 Dancing Under an African Moon Paganism and Wicca in South Africa Cape Town Zebra Press pp 79 86 ISBN 9781868726530 Bodsworth Roxanne T 2003 Sunwyse Celebrating the Sacred Wheel of the Year in Australia Victoria Australia Hihorse Publishing ISBN 9780909223038 a b Thomas Kirk The Nature of Sacrifice Cosmology Ar nDraiocht Fein A Druid Fellowship Retrieved 8 November 2012 Bradbury Scott 1995 Julian s Pagan Revival and the Decline of Blood Sacrifice Phoenix 49 4 Winter 331 356 doi 10 2307 1088885 JSTOR 1088885 Krasskova Galina Wodening Swain forward 2005 Exploring the northern tradition A guide to the gods lore rites and celebrations from the Norse German and Anglo Saxon traditions Franklin Lakes NJ New Page Books ISBN 9781435658943 Meuli 1946 a b c d e f Runic Era Calender asatru org Retrieved 24 November 2012 Arith Harger November 2012 Ancestors Blot 11th of November whispersofyggdrasil blogspot com Retrieved 24 November 2012 a b William Bil R Linzie July 2003 Germanic Spirituality PDF p 27 Hutton Ronald 1993 The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles Their Nature and Legacy Oxford Blackwell publishing p 145 ISBN 0 631 18946 7 Bonewits Isaac 2006 Bonewits s Essential Guide to Druidism New York New York Kensington Publishing Group pp 179 183 4 128 140 ISBN 0 8065 2710 2 McColman Carl 2003 Complete Idiot s Guide to Celtic Wisdom Alpha Press pp 12 51 ISBN 0 02 864417 4 a b Leeming David 2005 A Z Entries The Oxford Companion to World Mythology New York New York Oxford University Press p 360 ISBN 0 19 515669 2 a b Hlobil Karel 2009 Chapter Eleven Slavic Mythology Before You Insomniac Press ISBN 978 1 92 658247 4 Lyle Emily 2008 Time and the Indo European Gods in the Slavic Context PDF Studia Mythologica Slavica 11 115 126 doi 10 3986 sms v11i0 1691 Vivianne Crowley 1989 Wicca The Old Religion in the New Age London Aquarian Press pp 162 200 ISBN 9780850307375 Starhawk 1999 The Spiral Dance A Rebirth of the Ancient Religion of the Great Goddess 20th Anniversary Edition San Francisco HarperOne pp 197 213 ISBN 9780062516329 a b Farrar Janet amp Stewart Farrar with line illustrations by Stewart Farrar photographs by Ian David amp Stewart 1984 A witches bible New York Magickal Childe ISBN 093970806X Farrar Janet and Stewart 1988 Eight Sabbats for Witches revised edition Phoenix Publishing ISBN 0 919345 26 3 Joanne Pearson 2002 A Popular Dictionary of Paganism London Taylor amp Francis Ltd p 80 ISBN 9780700715916 Carl McColman 2002 The Complete Idiot s Guide to Paganism Indianapolis IN Alpha p 121 ISBN 9780028642666 Raven Grimassi 2000 Encyclopedia of Wicca amp Witchcraft St Paul Minnesota Llewellyn Worldwide p 219 ISBN 9781567182576 Wigington Patti The Legend of the Holly King and the Oak King paganwiccan about com Retrieved 25 October 2012 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wiccan holidays Astronomical cusps and pagan holidays Celebrating the Seasons at Circle Sanctuary Sun Moon calendar Festival Calendar for the Indo Europeans Atheopagan Sabbaths Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wheel of the Year amp oldid 1144115661, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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