Beltane 2010 – History & Rituals

  • April 30, 2010 6:11 pm

Beltane, a celebration of new growth, fertility, purification and transition, is nearly upon us! This ancient Gaelic festival is still celebrated in some areas, and also by numerous pagan groups. It heralds the beginning of Summer, marking the midpoint in the Sun’s progress between the spring equinox and summer solstice. Beltane, the fifth sabbat of the year and one of the two great fire festivals,  is directly opposite Samhain on the wheel of the year. As such, this is a time when the veils between worlds are thin.  The origin, tBeltane Grove Posterhe meaning, the date and even the name, of Beltane is in dispute. Find what speaks to you as truth, and follow those dates/traditions/etc!

Origin (possibilities)

  1. possible connections to the Roman festival of Floralia
  2. named for Irish fire-god Belenus

Meaning

  1. May Day
  2. Bright fire
  3. Sacred fire
  4. Bel-fire
  5. Feast of the god Bel

Date

  1. April 30th (May eve)
  2. May 1st
  3. April 28th – May 2nd
  4. first full moon after May 1st
  5. when the sun reaches 15 degrees of the zodiac sign (Taurus)

Name

  1. Beltane
  2. Beltaine
  3. Bealtaine
  4. Bealltainn
  5. Roodmass
  6. Walpurgisnacht

Traditions

  1. lighting the Beltain fire
  2. hanging May Boughs on doors and windows
  3. giving May Baskets of flowers
  4. driving cattle between two fires
  5. walking between, or jumping over, the fires
  6. gathering flowers as a (romantic) couple
  7. sacred orgies to bring fertility to the land
  8. honoring love, lust & fertility deities
  9. feasting
  10. dancing the maypole
  11. drinking May wine (white wine, lemon slices, sweet woodruff)
  12. love & lust spells
  13. a “Great Rite,” or sexual act done in a scared space
  14. selecting a May King & May Queen
  15. joining a chalice & blade to symbolize the Great Rite of the Lord & Lady
  16. planting something
  17. burying a magickally charged crystal
  18. making a “may gad,” a mini maypole made from a branch and wrapped with ribbons symbolizing wishes
  19. pouring milk onto the ground
  20. dancing

Powers

  1. fertility
  2. luck
  3. abundant milk
  4. new growth
  5. purification
  6. transition
  7. protection from spirits
  8. abundance
  9. sexual desire

Flowers

  1. roses
  2. tulips
  3. daisies
  4. lavender
  5. hibiscus
  6. violets
  7. columbines
  8. hyacinths
  9. jasmine
  10. orchids
  11. pansies

Herbs

  1. patchouli
  2. rosemary
  3. thyme
  4. sweet basil
  5. cinnamon sticks
  6. juniper
  7. lady’s mantle
  8. peppermint
  9. willow
  10. yarrow
  11. dill
  12. lemongrass

Deities

  1. Aphrodite
  2. Astarte
  3. Belenus
  4. Cernunnos
  5. Flora
  6. Freya
  7. Pan
  8. Venus

The above lists are not meant to be all inclusive by any means. I can not even imagine the time and research needed for such a project, especially when this small article took me more than 5 hours! Plus, I doubt it could have be fully complete. In any event, ths should give you enough info, and plenty of possible ideas, for your own uses. May you have a blessed Beltane!

~Anyanka

Information for this article was collected from, and checked against, the following sources: Llewellyn’s Sabbats Almanac, A Witches’ Bible by Janet and StewartFarrar, The Encyclopedia of Wicca and Witchcraft by Raven Grimassi, Witchvox article by Peg Aloi, Wikipedia.com, and (as always!) personal knowledge.

I found two especially divine quotes in Llewellyn’s Sabbats 2009/2010 Almanac:

“When lovers come together in passion, the energy between them builds and builds, and becomes a tangible force that is much greater than the sum of its two (or more!) parts. Sexuality is sacred to Pagans because it honors and celebrates life and love, and in doing so, serves the life force.” ~Thuri Calafia

and

“Family covens should look around and in nature seek the reassurance of the God and Goddess. If together through their sacred marriage the Divine Couple can provide enough for the entire planet at this time of year, then surely the representations of the God and Goddess in a family coven can find a way to provide for their own charges.” ~ Lydia M. Crabtree

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