MAY DAY!

May 1st, often called May Day, just might have more holidays than any other day of the year. Typically thought of as a well-known distress call, May Day is a celebration of Spring. It's a day of political protests. It's a neopagan festival, a saint's feast day, and a day for organized labor. In many countries, it is a national holiday.

While not celebrated amongst the general public in the United States today, a Maypole Dance nearly identical to that celebrated in the United Kingdom is an important part of many high school dances as part of a May Day celebration. Often the Maypole dance will be accompanied by other dances as part of a presentation to the public.

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Maypole in Germany

The early colony of Merrymount, founded by Thomas Morton, outraged its Puritan neighbours by setting up a maypole. Communities with a large Swedish population often have Midsummer celebrations, such as Chicago, Minneapolis, and Lindsborg, Kansas.

May Day Holidays and More


BELTANE
Beltane was a Celtic calendar feast ushering in the start of summer. (It also went by a variety of other spellings and names in assorted dialects of Gaelic.) Bonfires, often created by rubbing sticks together, were common features of Beltane celebrations. Related rituals included driving cattle between two fires, dancing around the fires, and burning witches in effigy. Another tradition was Beltane cakes, which would be broken into several pieces, one of which was blackened. They would be drawn by celebrants at random; the person getting the unlucky blackened piece would face a mock execution. In recent years, Beltaine has been adopted or revived by neopagan groups as a major seasonal festival.

WALPURGISNACHT
St. Walburga (or Walpurgis), the abbess of the monastery of Heidenheim, helped St. Boniface bring Christianity to 8th Century Germany. She died on Feb. 25, 779. As her remains have been moved on multiple occasions, several days have been designated in her honor, one of which is the first of May.

This date coincided with a pre-existing pagan festival in Germany which included rites to protect one against witchcraft. This led to a hybrid legend developing in which witches were said to meet with the Devil on the eve of May 1, on the Brocken peak. The night of April 30th became known as "Walpurgisnacht," and the annual meeting was dramatized by Goethe in Faust.

FERTILITY FESTIVALS
Some cultures, such as those found in India and Egypt, had spring fertility festivals. The Roman festival celebrating Flora, goddess of fertility, flowers, and spring, was celebrated from April 28 through May 3.

BRINGING IN THE MAY
In medieval England, people would celebrate the start of spring by going out to the country or woods—"going a-maying"—and gathering greenery and flowers, or "bringing in the may." This was described in The Court of Love (often attributed to Chaucer, but not actually written by him) in 1561:
And furth goth all the Court, both most and lest,
To feche the floures fressh, and braunche and blome;
And namly, hawthorn brought both page and grome.
With fressh garlandes, partie blewe and whyte,
And thaim rejoysen in their greet delyt.

Another English tradition is the maypole. Some towns had permanent maypoles that would stay up all year; others put up a new one each May. In any event, the pole would be hung with greenery and ribbons, brightly painted, and otherwise decorated, and served as a central point for the festivities.

May Day was also a time for morris dancing and other dances, often around the maypole. In the 19th century, people began to braid the maypole with ribbons by weaving in and out in the course of a dance. Other later traditions include making garlands for children and the crowning of the May Queen.

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LABOR DAY
In many countries, May Day is also Labor Day. This originated with the United States labor movement in the late 19th Century. On May 1, 1886, unions across the country went on strike, demanding that the standard workday be shortened to eight hours. The organizers of these strikes included socialists, anarchists, and others in organized labor movements. Rioting in Chicago's Haymarket Square on May 4th included a bomb thrown by an anarchist and led to the deaths of a dozen people (including several police officers) and the injury of over 100 more.

The protests were not immediately successful, but they proved effective down the line, as eight-hour work days eventually did become the norm. Labor leaders, socialists, and anarchists around the world took the American strikes and their fallout as a rallying point, choosing May Day as a day for demonstrations, parades, and speeches. It was a major state holiday in the Soviet Union and other communist countries.

THE FAMOUS DISTRESS CALL
Oh, and about that distress call: Mayday is an emergency code word used internationally as a distress signal in voice procedure radio communications. It derives from the French venez m'aider, meaning "come to my aid" / "come [to] help me." It is used to signal a life-threatening emergency by many groups, such as the police, pilots, fire departments, and transportation organizations. The call is always given three times in a row: "Mayday Mayday Mayday" to prevent mistaking it for some similar-sounding phrase under noisy conditions, and to distinguish an actual mayday call from a message about a mayday call.

Now, wasn't that more than you ever wanted to know about May Day? ;-)

Thanks for reading.

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3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Happy May Day! Just stopped by to vote for you in Battle of the Blogs before taking a swing around the Maypole...

Roxy

May 01, 2008 9:01 AM
Anonymous said...

Back to vote. Really enjoyed all the May Day info.

Roxy

May 01, 2008 6:04 PM
Anonymous said...

Did you turn off your comments moderation? So I can just chat away, to my heart's content?

Roxy

P.S. -- My comments have stopped disappearing, too. But my Comcastic Internet still sucks.

May 01, 2008 6:06 PM

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