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Mystickal
Realms Wishes all Members, Staff and Friends who
celebrate the Sabbats
A Blessed and Happy Beltane!

History of Beltane
Beltane is also known as Walburge, Bealtaine, Bhealtainn and May Day. It is usually celebrated on May eve or the 1st of May. The actual translation of the word is debatable. Scholars agree that taine or teine means "fire" because the word is used to express fire today in both the Scottish and Irish Gaelic languages. The first syllable, Beal or Bel is not clearly defined. One theory is that the festival is named after the Celtic god Bel (also known as Beli, or Belinus). Therefore, Beltane would mean "Bel’s fire." Beal, the Gaelic word for "shining one" or "brilliant," gives Beltane the meaning of "brilliant fire."
On
the eve of Beltane all fires were extinguished
and relit with embers from the Beltane fire. The
Celts built two fires created from the nine sacred
woods (Rowan, Apple, Dogwood, Poplar, Juniper,
Cedar, Pine, Holly and Oak). The herds were ritually
driven between them to purify and protect them.
The fires celebrated the return of life and fruitfulness
to the earth and would protect, heal and purify
anything or one that passed by or jumped over.
Beltane
is the Sacred Marriage and union of the God and
Goddess. Beltane is also celebration of fertility,
fruitfulness and the coming of summer. It is a
time when the light half of the year is waxing
and everything is growing and coming into full
greenery and bloom. It is the last of the spring
fertility festivals, and is a time when all prepare
for the warm months ahead. Beltane celebrates
the height of Spring and the flowering of life.
The Goddess manifests as the May Queen and Flora.
The God emerges as the May King and Jack in the
Green. The danced Maypole represents Their unity,
with the pole itself being the God and the ribbons
that encompass it, the Goddess. Colors are the
Rainbow spectrum. Beltane is a festival of flowers,
fertility, sensuality, and delight.
An
old Swedish custom stated that the balefire had
to be lit by two people--a male and a female,
striking two flints together. This is symbolic
of the sexual union of the God and Goddess. In
Norway the balefires are called Balder’s Fires
in honor of their Sun God. Old brooms were often
thrown upon these fires and new ones, made during
the winter, were brought out and dedicated to
their intended purpose. Germanic and Dianic covens
celebrate Bealtaine as a Night of the Dead, where
ancestors are asked to join them at the warmth
of the fire in much the same way the Celts do
at Samhain.
Prepare a May basket by filling it with flowers and goodwill and then give it to someone in need of healing and caring, such as a shut-in or elderly friend. Form a wreath of freshly picked flowers, wear it in your hair, and feel yourself radiating joy and beauty. Dress in bright colors. Dance the Maypole and feel yourself balancing the Divine Female and Male within. On May Eve, bless your garden in the old way by making love with your lover in it. Make a wish as you jump a bonfire or candle flame for good luck. Welcome in the May at dawn with singing and dancing.
Some
Beltane Customs
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.

Correspondences
Tools, Symbols & Decorations
Maypole
& ribbons, flower crowns, fires, bowers, fields,
May baskets, white flowers and ribbons, daisy
chain, flower chaplet, white wine in clear crystal
glass, chalice, butterchurn, blackthorn & hawthorn
branches, seasonal fruit.
Colors
Red
& white (symbolizing God and Goddess), dark green,
dark yellow, rainbow spectrum, blue, pastels,
all colors.
Customs
maypole
erection, dancing around the maypole, bonfires,
jumping fire, mating, picking flowers, making
flower baskets, frolicking throughout the countryside,
archery tournaments, sword dances, feasting, drinking
and music, moving the herds to high pasture.
Animals/Mythical beings
The
white cow, goats, giants, rabbits, honey bees,
faeries, satyrs, pegasus.
Gemstones
Emerald,
orange carnelian, sapphire, rose quartz, lazuli,
sapphire, yellow agate, bloodstone.
Herbs
Almond,
angelica, damiana, hawthorn, hibiscus, saffron,
ash tree, bluebells, cinquefoil, daisy, frankincense,
hawthorn, ivy, lilac, marsh marigold, meadowsweet,
primrose, roses, satyrion root, woodruff, yellow
cowslip, yarrow.
Incense/Oil
Passion
flower, frankincense, tuberose, vanilla, lilac,
rose
Rituals/Magicks
The
Great Rite, love, romance & fertility magicks,
elf & faery power, offerings to elementals, crop
blessings, relighting sacred fires, divination,
building shrines, fire-calling, honoring house
guardians, snake dancing, bathing faces in the
morning dew of May to retain their youthful beauty.
Foods
Dairy,
honey, oats, red fruits, herbal salads, red/pink
wine punch, large round oatmeal/barley cakes,
sweets


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