by Sean Jobst
4 May 2022
We are now at one of the liminal times of the year, when the flow of energies is greater and barrier between different dimensions or realities are at their thinnest. Walpurgisnacht is on the night of April 30th, followed by the season known as Bealtaine in Gaelic lands. I wrote an article back in April 2020: "Walpurgisnacht - A Journey Across Time, Space, and Darkness" - about the folklore, meanings, and symbolisms of this day.
Seasonal because holidays in Celtic and Germanic lands being tied to lunisolar dates meant they weren't reduced to just one day. Despite the later creations of modern-day neo-"Paganisms" who embrace an ahistorical "Wheel of the Year" that cobbled together both cultures without regard to the authenticity of either, nor is Walpurgisnacht a "Witches' Sabbat" - the Hebrew notion of a "day of rest" (sabbath) was foreign to native European celebrations of life, fertility, and the cycles of Nature. The basis of our ancestral calendars were lunisolar, not fixed solar dates, although there was a reckoning of lunar cycles around solar events:
"If we browse the internet for holidays of the Germanic people, we mainly find pages presenting an octopartite year cycle, the so-called 'eight-spoked wheel of the year' based on the solstices, the equinoxes, and four moon feasts in between. This year cycle has absolutely no historical basis. Although it is very popular in neopagan circles, especially within Wicca and eclectic Asatru, there is no verified evidence for such a year circle as basis for the seasonal festivities. The same is true for the Celtic feasts within the year circle, because the Gauls too, used a lunisolar calendar as we know from the examples of Coligny and Villards d'Heria. If one has internalized such ideas, one should get rid of them immediately!"(1)
Painting by Der Meister von Meßkirch, 1535-1540 |
Christian or Heathen?
Walking along the Neckar, Bad Cannstatt, 9 July 2016 |
"Odin and the Völva" illustration by the German artist Carl Emil Doepler, from Nordisch-Germanische Götter und Heiden (1882) |
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