Amoeblog

May 1st

There are a lot of holidays today, chief among them, May Day.



Also...
  • Ascension - Catholicism
  • Beltane - Celts/Gaels
  • Constitution Day - Latvia & the Marshall Islands
  • Feast of Saint Joseph the Worker
  • Festival of Bona Dea - Rome
  • Kazakh Peoples' Unity Day - Kazakhstan
  • Labor Day AKA Labour Day AKA Workers' Day - Worldwide
  • Law Day - USA
  • Lei Day - Hawaii
  • Loyalty Day - USA
  • Maharashtra Day (Maharashtra Divas) - Maharastra, India
  • National Day of Prayer - USA
  • National Love Day - Czech Republic
  • Save the Rhino Day - USA
  • Taco Truck Night - Los Angeles
  • Virgen de Chapi - Peru


May Day celebrations are rooted in the ancient Celtic/Gaelic practice of Beltane and the Anglo-Saxon/ Germanic observances of Walpurgisnacht.  These include crowing the Queen of the May, Morris Dancing, the giving of May Baskets, getting drunk, and the erection of a Maypole.



For a lot of the world, May Day has more to do with labor than olde tyme religion. After the 1886 Haymarket affair in Chicago, laborers around the world were inspired to express themselves on May Day. In response to this commie tomfoolery, the US designated the day "Loyalty Day" to fight international solidarity among workers and to promote, in its place, blind obedience. It is a legal holiday and one marked by parades in some communities although I've never heard of anyone observing it.



In parts of Cornwall, a there's a May Day 'Obby 'Oss (Cornish for "Hobby Horse") Festival in which teams of Cornish drunkards terrorise the streets from beneath their 'obby 'osses. Elsewhere in Cornwall, townies build a model of the ship, The Black Prince, and set it (covered in flowers) out to sea.

In St.  Andrews, Scotland, torchbearers run naked into the North Sea after amassing at the beach late the previous night.



In the US, May Day traditions have been downplayed ever since the days of the colonies when such obvious Pagan observances were banned. Today, May Baskets are still filled with flowers and left anonymously on doorsteps in parts of the country. I remember most years running to the door after the bell rang and finding an anonymously left basket of flowers. If culprit is caught, they have to give up a kiss. I never saw the guilty party, however. It was probably my neighbors. Strange...
Posted by Eric Brightwell on May 1, 2008 at 04:10pm | Comments (2)

Relevant Tags

Holidays, May Day, Anglo-saxons, Celts, Gaels, Cornwall, Maypole, May Queen, Morris Dancing, Obby Oss, May Baskets

Comments

wait, no riots from MacArthur Park? No Queens Day in Holland? Bahhhh

Posted by on May 1, 2008 at 04:17pm

I'm assuming that the above is an attempt at wit. Better luck next time!

Posted by eric on May 2, 2008 at 11:21am

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