Monday, April 21, 2025

Cross-Quarter Days

The post about Quarter Days promised an explanation for Cross-Quarter Days, and here it is. Just as the Quarter Days are the solstices and equinoxes, Cross-Quarter Days are the midpoints between those. They are 2 February, 1 May, 1 August, and 1 November.

A modern audience might recognize 1 May and 1 November as May Day and All Saints Day, respectively. The other two dates also had their own names: 1 or 2 February was Candlemas and 1 August was Lammas. But what was the significance of those dates?

Prior to the Christianization of Celtic Britain, their names in chronological order were Imbolc, Beltane, Lughnasadh, and Samhain. Imbolc marked the beginning of spring, Beltane marked the beginning of summer, Lughnasadh marked the beginning of the harvest season, and Samhain marked the end of the harvest season and the start of the "dark half" of the year. Christianity matched these events with Christian significance.

Imbolc may be recognized in North America as Groundhog Day, based on a Pennsylvania Dutch superstition that a groundhog will wake up from hibernation, see its shadow, and flee back into its burrow for six more weeks of sleep (an extended winter). Older European tradition ascribed this behavior to a hibernating bear, but as hunting over the centuries made them scarce, the Dutch brought the idea of a smaller animal to the New World.

In Scotland, these cross-quarter days were the "Old Scottish Term Days" and were slightly different. Candlemas and Lammas were the same, but instead of May Day they celebrate(d) Whitsunday on 15 May and Martinmas on 11 November. Whitsunday was supposed to be Pentecost, the 7th Sunday after Easter, which of course was a "floating" holy day and could take place over a several-week period, but it was legislatively established as 15 March for convenience.

Candlemas had its own history, which I'll talk about next time.

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