DP Holidays: Lughnasadh
November 24th, 2009
LUGHNSASADH
The origins of Lughnasadh come to us from Ireland, in a town called Tailtiue or modernly “Telltown”. Lughnasadh is the festival of funeral games celebrated for the God Lugh’s foster mother, Tailtiue, who passed away sometime after the first battle of Magh Tuireadh. Lugh learned all of his divine skills and general amazingness from his foster mother, and he regarded her very highly. Upon her death (which cause is never reported), Lugh announced that there would be funerary games held each year in the town that bears her name.
Lughnasadh became a time of celebration for many tribes, who were not allowed to bring their weapons or ill-feelings into the games. The games were strictly a competition of the best warriors and inter-tribal interactions. In a sense, it reminds one of the modern Irish ‘wake’ following a death, in which one celebrates the life of the fallen.
Lughnasadh is strictly an Irish holiday, but the season also had pan-Celtic celebrations as it is also the beginning of the first harvest of summer grains and berries. In later times, it also became Lammas, or loaf mass in the Christian tradition. Lammas was then adopted by Wiccans from pre-Christian and post-Christian customs.
In our modern Druidry, we celebrate Lughnasadh in our Grove as a Warrior’s holiday. In my Irish tradition, I believe that Lugh gave us the first demonstration of how to worship and regard our ancestors. We prepare early harvest foods and play games of a physical nature.
Hutton, Ronald Stations of the Sun, Oxford University Press , 1996
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