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ourHistory
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THE
MAY POLE
Called Beltane by
the Celts, Walpurgis by the Teutons, and Floralia by the Romans, May
festivals were a time of "wearing of the green." Throughout the Northern
Hemisphere, the month of May is a time to celebrate renewal of life.
May is named for Maia, grandmother, the Goddess of death and fertility.
(BTW, Maia scorns marriage, so it is a good idea to put weddings off
until June.) Although less stern goddesses now oversee May festivities,
wreaths and buskets of Hawthorn are still used in some May festivals
in Maia's honor.
The May Pole is the most familiar feature of May festivities, but it
has three distinct interpretations. In some cultures, the May Pole represented
the world center, or alternately, the hub of the Wheel of heaven. In
ancient times, the intricate dance of weaving cords around the pole
was a magical attempt to direct Nature, which had become topsy-turvy
over the course of time, back in order. Today the dance is performed
by any who wish to participate in weaving the magic.
In other cultures, the May Pole was the Tree of Life, or a symbol of
it. And this tree, to borrow a phrase from Billy Holiday, bore strange
fruit. This is where the Savior was sacrificed in order to cleanse the
earth. Holy Communion, eating his flesh and drinking his blood was possibly
restricted to the priest class, but symbolic May Wine was liberally
imbibed by the whole community. Hundreds of years later, the Christian
lunar festival of Easter would replace the ancient solar festival as
the time of renewal and rebirth.
The third meaning of the May Pole most clearly remains today. It is
the phallus, the male principle of fertilization. Female principles
are represented by baskets and wreaths used in the dances around the
pole. In past times, the hand-fasting movements of the dances would
give young couples license to 'go into the green' together. In some
regions, a merlin, or renegade friar, would preside over the mock marriages.
Even today, unwed couples consummate the mock marriages performed around
the May Pole. Merry- begats, as they were called in England, were usually
not acknowledged by their fathers. These babies were said to have been
fathered by god.
In northwest Germany, May Poles are tall trees, cut down and stripped
of bottom branches. The upper branches are decorated, then the pole
is hoisted, often with the help of a crane, onto a tall post high above
the villages. In southern Germany, the May Pole is a stylized structure
that will stand for the entire year. On each of its branches is a symbol
of each trade or vocation that the villagers pursue.
Traditional May Day is a solar festival, celebrated on May fifth, halfway
between spring equinox and summer solstice. In England, Queen of the
May, Maid Marian, mounted on a white horse is the central figure in
the May Day mumming. In ancient times, she would pair off with Merddin
as her consort. Nowadays, Merddin is the bearded old wizard, Merlin,
and Marian's consort is Robin Hood. Robert Graves identifies Maid Marian
as the sea Goddess Marian, a virgin dressed in a blue robe, wearing
a string of pearls. Occasionally referred to as Merrymaid, but more
commonly known as Mermaid, she was worshipped by merriners, (now spelled
mariners) who would sacrifice to her. "Mer" meaning sea, is the origin
of the epithet Merry England, --Rose in the Sea. Like the Goddess, Maid
Marian is surrounded with Merry men. Little John, Will Scarlet, Friar
Tuck, Robin Hood, and others form a band of thirteen.
Morris Men, who perform a stylized folk dance are commonly believed
to have been imported from the near east, Moors who danced a Moorish
dance. However, a more ancient spelling indicates that these may have
been Mari's men. Mari, the Mother Goddess, fruitful, and compassionate,
is usually portrayed holding an apple from the Tree of Life. She turns
the Wheel of heaven, and is the mother of the Archer of Love. Iris is
also known as the mother of Love. She was the Goddess of the rainbow,
which was the bridge between heaven and earth. In Greek mythology, she
lured mourning Demeter, the grain Goddess, out of her cave so that the
land would become fruitful again. In Genesis, angered by Yahweh's Flood,
she removed the bridge from earth to heaven so he could not receive
his sacrifices. When he promised to never flood the earth again, Iris
replaced the rainbow. In Japan, Iris's rainbow bridge is called the
road of the gods. May is Iris month, with Boy's Doll Day celebrated
on May fifth. Young men drink Iris tea and bath in an Iris infusion
to promote health and fertility. Because of the sword shaped leaf and
the blossom that resembles female genitalia, the Iris is the symbol
of the male and female principles united. Celebrated for thousands of
years throughout diverse cultures, Mayday could be the most ancient
religious festival in the Northern Hemisphere. Ritual human sacrifice
to a death/fertility goddess was certainly practiced until the 1st Century
BCE. As nature became less fearsome, and more cultivated, the nature
goddess became less powerful and bloodthirsty. Today, we still celebrate
the remnants of an ancient religion, Nature turning on the Wheel of
Heaven.
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