

Samhain:
Season of Death and Renewal
by Alexei Kondratiev
Copyright © 1997 Alexei
Kondratiev
All Rights Reserved
May be reposted as long as
the above attribution and
copyright notice are retained
[Originally
published in An Tr?bh?s Mh?r:
The IMBAS Journal of Celtic
Reconstructionism, volume
2, issue 1/2, Samhain 1997/Iombolg
1998.]
As
the nights lengthen and the
leaves take on their autumn
colours, many of our cities
prepare for a seasonal festival
dominated by dark and frightening
imagery. Ghosts, skeletons,
hags, nocturnal creatures
such as cats and bats, and
grinning monster faces peer
out at us from shop windows.
Much of it is just commercialism,
yet there is no denying that
the atmosphere of the holiday
still has a profound effect
on the modern psyche -- as
we can see from the spontaneous
outrageousness of Hallowe'en
parades, the creative expressions
of death-related themes, and
the general surge in mischief-making.
All these customs, however,
are a diffuse reflection of
the beliefs and practices
of the Celtic populations
of Europe, for whom this feast
was a crucial turning-point
in the flow of time.
The
earliest record we have of
the festival of Samhain in
the Celtic world comes from
the Coligny Calendar, a native
Celtic lunar calendar inscribed
on bronze tablets and discovered
in eastern France a hundred
years ago. The calendar --
dated, through epigraphic
evidence, to the 1st century
CE -- is written in the Latin
alphabet and was found in
conjunction with a Roman-style
statue (identified by some
writers as Apollo, by others
as Mars), but the language
used is Gaulish and the dating
system itself bears little
resemblance to Roman models,
implying that it represents
the survival of an indigenous
tradition maintained by native
clergy. A detailed discussion
of the calendar lies outside
the scope of this article,
but for our purposes it will
be enough to point out that
its year consists of twelve
regularly recurring months
that fall naturally into two
groups, one headed by the
month that is labeled SAMON
(for Samonios) and the other
by the month GIAMON (for Giamonios),
and that the names of these
two months are clearly related
to the terms samos "summer"
and giamos "winter"
(cf. Gaelic samh(radh) "summer",
geamh(radh) "winter";
Welsh haf "summer",
gaeaf "winter").
The date of SAMON- xvii is
identified as TRINVX SAMO
SINDIV, which can be readily
interpreted as an abbreviation
of Trinouxtion Samonii sindiu
("The three-night-period
of Samonios [is] today").
This is one of the very few
dates in the calendar that
is given a specific name,
testifying to its importance
as a festival; and since Samoni-
is obviously the origin of
the modern name Samhain, it
is reasonable to equate the
Trinouxtion Samonii with the
feast that is still one of
the most important dates in
the Celtic ritual year.
We
should note, however, that
since the Coligny Calendar
gives no indication of how
its months relate to those
of the Roman calendar, we
have no conclusive evidence
that would allow us to fit
it into the framework of our
own year, and scholars are
still very much divided on
the issue. The most confusing
element, of course, is that
Samon- refers to summer, and
so would naturally lead one
to think that a month with
that name would head the summer
half of the year; and many
of the earlier interpretations
of the Coligny Calendar take
this for granted. In living
Celtic tradition, however,
the festival of Samhain, despite
its name, is definitely the
beginning of winter. Though
such evidence doesn't necessarily
exclude the possibility that
Continental Druids used a
completely different terminology,
many scholars now accept the
authority of the living tradition
and place the Samonios month
in October/November.
What
does the name of the festival
mean, however? Here, again,we
run into controversy. The
traditional interpretation
-- first put forward in the
Mediaeval glossaries and still
held to by native speakers
-- is that it means "summer's
end", being a combination
of samh "summer"
and fuin "ending, concealment".
This is obviously a folk etymology,
since we know that the earliest
form of the word (Samoni-)
had a different structure,
but its importance to the
living tradition should make
us wary of dismissing it too
lightly. Although philologists
have been unable to find a
plausible Indo-European explanation
for a suffix -oni- meaning
"end of" (the suffix,
by the way, occurs in at least
three of the other Coligny
months), this is not conclusive
in itself: there are quite
a few other derivational suffixes
attested in Old Celtic that
resist an easy Indo-European
etymology, although their
meanings are uncontroversial.
What should be kept in mind
is that in the ritual context
of the Celtic Year, Samhain
is strongly identified with
the "end" or "concealment"
of Summer, the Light Half
of the year. In the modern
Gaelic languages the festival
is called Samhain (Irish),
Samhuinn (Scots Gaelic), and
Sauin (Manx). The night on
which it begins (O?che Shamhna
in Irish, Oidhche Shamhna
in Scots Gaelic, Oie Houney
in Manx) is the primary focus
of the celebration. The Brythonic
languages call the feast by
a name meaning "first
of Winter", borrowing
the Latin term calenda which
designates the first day of
a month (Welsh Calan Gaeaf,
Breton Kala-Goa?v, Cornish
Kalann Gwav), but the beliefs
and practices associated with
it are consistent with what
we find in the Gaelic countries,
and will help us discover
a pan-Celtic theology of Samhain.
The
Coligny Calendar's division
of the year into two halves
associated with summer and
winter is still very strongly
reflected in Celtic folk practice,
where the yearly cycle consists
of a dark half beginning on
Samhain (November 1st), mirrored
by a light half beginning
on Bealtaine (May 1st). The
rituals surrounding Samhain
and Bealtaine are closely
related to each other and
make it clear that the two
festivals are linked, but
also that they deal with opposite
energies within the unfolding
of the year. What is explicit
and active in one is implicit
and dormant in the other,
and vice versa. This is often
expressed as the notion that
what disappears in our world
at once becomes present in
the Otherworld, and it has
even been suggested, on this
basis, that Samhain's "summery"
name was originally intended
to designate the beginning
of an Otherworld summer! Whether
this is plausible or not,
it remains certain that while
Samhain began one kind of
yearly cycle, Bealtaine began
another, and both could be
construed as a kind of "New
Year". In ancient Ireland
the High King inaugurated
the year on Samhain for his
household (and, symbolically,
for all the people of Ireland)
with the famous ritual of
Tara, but in nearby Uisneach,
the sacred centre held by
the druids in complementary
opposition to Tara, it was
on Bealtaine that the main
ritual cycle was begun. In
both cases sacred fires were
extinguished and re-lit, though
this happened at sunset on
Samhain and at dawn on Bealtaine.
Bealtaine was a time of opening
and expansion, Samhain a time
of gathering-in and shutting,
and for herd-owners like the
Celts this was expressed with
particular vividness by the
release of cattle into upland
pastures on Bealtaine and
their return to the safety
of the byres on Samhain.
Which
of these two dates, then,
should we think of primarily
as the "Celtic New Year"?
Although both deal with the
beginning of a cycle, Samhain
begins it in darkness, and
there is no doubt about the
pre-eminence of darkness in
Celtic tradition. In De Bello
Gallico Julius Caesar notes
that the Celts began their
daily cycle with sunset (spatia
omnis temporis non numero
dierum, sed noctium finiunt;
dies natales et mensum et
annorum initia sic obseruant,
ut noctem dies subsequatur
-- "they define all amounts
of time not by the number
of days, but by the number
of nights; they celebrate
birthdays and the beginnings
of months and years in such
a way that the day is made
to follow the night"),
and this is confirmed by later
Celtic practice. Darkness
comes before light, because
life appears in the darkness
of the womb, all things have
their beginning in the fertile
chaos that is hidden from
the rational mind. Thus the
year begins with its dark
half, holding the bright half
in gestation as the seeds
lie in apparent death underground,
although the forces of growth
are already at work in Otherworldly
invisibility. The moment of
death -- the passing into
the concealing darkness --
is itself the first step in
the renewal of life.
This
association of death with
fertility provided the theological
background for a great number
of end-of-harvest festivals
celebrated by many cultures
across Eurasia. Like Samhain,
these festivals (which, for
example, included the rituals
of the Dyedy ("Ancestors")
in the Slavic countries and
the Vetrarkv?ld festival in
Scandinavia) linked the successful
resumption of the agricultural
cycle (after a period of apparent
winter "death")
to the propitiation of the
human community's dead. The
dead have passed away from
the social concerns of this
world to the primordial chaos
of the Otherworld where all
fertility has its roots, but
they are still bound to the
living by ties of kinship.
It was hoped that, by strengthening
these ties precisely when
the natural cycle seemed to
be passing through its own
moment of death, the community
of the living would be better
able to profit from the energies
of increase that lead out
of death back to life. Dead
kin were the Tribe's allies
in the Otherworld, making
it certain that the creative
forces deep within the Land
were being directed to serve
the needs of the human community.
They were, in Celtic terms,
a "humanising" factor
within the Fomorian realm.
Whatever
the specific elements had
been that determined the proper
date of the end-of-harvest
honouring of the dead in various
places, by the ninth and tenth
centuries the unifying influence
of the Church had led to concentrating
the rituals on November 1st
and November 2nd. The first
date was All Hallows, when
the most spiritually powerful
of the Christian community's
dead (the Saints) were invoked
to strengthen the living community,
in a way quite consistent
with pre-Christian thought.
The second date, All Souls,
was added on (first as a Benedictine
practice, beginning ca. 988)
as an extension of this concept,
enlarging it to include the
dead of families and local
communities. Under the mantle
of the specifically Christian
observances, however, older
patterns of ancestor veneration
were preserved.
Most
traditional Celtic communities
maintain a year-round link
of some sort with their departed,
making them a part of all
significant occurrences in
the family, such as births,
weddings and funerals. In
areas of the Irish Gaeltacht
it is still not unusual for
a household to have a seomra
thiar ("western room"),
a section of the house (often
just a nook or alcove) dedicated
to the dead of the family.
Objects that bring individual
dead relatives to mind (old
photographs, pipes, jewelry,
etc) are placed on a shelf
or mantlepiece, and as one
contemplates them one faces
the setting sun and the vastness
of the Atlantic, the direction
the dead follow in their journey
to the Otherworld. The rituals
of Samhain, however, involved
a more intense bonding with
the dead, using the institution
which, in Celtic tradition,
was used to cement social
links in a sacred and durable
manner: the communal feast.
Sharing food in a solemn context
("in the sight of gods
and mortals") placed
common and mutual responsibilities
on all participants. Inviting
the dead to such a feast encouraged
the living to remember and
honour their ancestors, while
the dead in return were encouraged
to have an interest in the
welfare of their living kin.
On
Samhain, the moment of the
year's death, this world and
the Otherworld become equivalent
to each other, classificatory
boundaries are removed from
all categories, no barriers
exist between the dead and
the living, so both can authentically
come together in one place
to share a ritual feast. Individual
Celtic communities have preserved
a wealth of different customs
related to the way this feast
was actually celebrated: one
can still discern some distorted
elements of them in modern
urban practices, such as Hallowe'en
parties and trick-or-treating.
Most of the customs, however,
fall into two broad patterns.
According to the first, a
certain amount of food was
set aside for the exclusive
consumption of the dead. The
dead were believed to be present
as invisible entities; doors
and windows were left unlocked
to facilitate their coming
into the house. In some cases,
a specific type of food (usually
cakes of some kind) was made
solely for the dead; in others,
a portion of the same food
that the living would eat
was set aside for them. The
most classic example of this
pattern (which is also found
in Ireland and Scotland) is
the boued an Anaon ("food
of the hosts of the dead")
custom in Brittany. The Anaon
(the word appears to be the
same as Annwn, the Welsh Otherworld;
it is certainly a pre-Christian
term) are the massed hosts
of ancestral spirits, usually
portrayed as hungry for sustenance
from the world of the living.
A large amount of food was
set aside for their sole use,
and had to remain untouched
by any living hand for the
full duration of the ritual
period. Eating the food of
the dead (even if one was
desperately hungry) was considered
to be a dreadful sacrilege:
it condemned one to becoming
a hungry ghost after death,
barred from sharing the Samhain
feast along with the rest
of the Anaon. It was, in effect,
a particularly horrible form
of excommunication.
The
other pattern of Samhain custom,
on the contrary, encourages
the recycling of the offered
food into the community, thus
strengthening social bonds.
The most classic example of
this second pattern is the
Welsh cennad y meirw ("embassy
of the dead") custom,
although similar customs are
found elsewhere in the Celtic
and ex-Celtic world. Here,
while the wealthier members
of the community put together
lavish Samhain feasts for
their households, the poor
take on the collective identity
of the community's dead, and
go from door to door to receive
offerings in the name of the
ancestors. At each house they
are given a portion of the
food that has been set aside
for the dead. Originally the
cenhadon would have been masked
to abolish their mundane social
roles and allow them to represent
the dead more convincingly.
To refuse food to the cenhadon
for any reason at all was
an act of impiety and would
invite retaliation in the
form of destruction of property
-- retaliation that would
go unpunished because of the
holy nature of the ritual
period. We can here see one
of the origins of the "trick"
aspect of our modern Hallowe'en
customs, although nowadays
it has largely lost its moral
dimension.
A
communal feast, of course,
involves more than just food.
The dead would not only have
to be fed, they would have
to be entertained. Games and
pastimes associated with Samhain
feasting vary a great deal
from community to community,
but they have certain themes
in common. While the younger
people engage in the ritualised
games, the elders will be
gossiping, reviewing all the
notable events of the past
year for the benefit of the
dead, who will then be encouraged
to continue to take an interest
in the affairs of the living.
The games themselves, in many
cases, seem to have specific
links with the mythology of
death and the afterlife. Many
of them involve apples --
in part, of course, because
they are one of the last crops
to be brought in and are thus
easily available, but also
as a reflection of the role
apples play in beliefs about
death: in Irish tradition
the Otherworld place where
the dead gather at a feast
is called Eamhain Abhlach
("paradise of apples"),
and its Welsh equivalent is
Afallon. Some of the Scottish
games in this context make
use of parallel ordeals by
water and fire, the two main
elements out of which the
world is made. The water ordeal
is the familiar bobbing for
apples, while the fire ordeal
involves trying to take a
bite out of an apple attached
to a hanging stick which also
bears a lit candle. This seems
to be a reference to myths
about the ordeals faced by
the dead on their journey
to the Otherworld -- a body
of beliefs we unfortunately
know only through fragments,
although the basic concept
of the journey and the ordeals
is well established. Sharing
the experiences of the dead
was yet another way of affirming
the solidarity between the
dead and the living, and of
aligning the powers of renewal
in the Otherworld with this
world's needs.
While
the dead were brought closer
to the living by the formal
sharing of food, other offerings
had to be made to the Land-spirits
to reward them for their cooperation
during the Harvest period,
and to replenish their creative
energy as they prepared to
enter into a new cycle. With
Samhain, the period of "truce"
that had begun on L?nasa was
officially ended, and the
fruits of the soil (especially
wild crops) could no longer
be harvested with impunity.
Well within living memory,
children in Celtic communities
were warned not to eat the
late berries that might still
be ripening on roadside bushes,
because "the fairies"
or "the devil" had
made them dangerous to consume.
Having enabled the human community
to survive by making the crops
grow and by standing aside
to let the Harvest take place,
the powers of the Fomorian
realm were now entitled to
a gift of life-renewing blood;
and Samhain was the season
when the cattle that would
not be kept through the winter
were slaughtered. In historical
times the date of the slaughter
has specifically been Martinmas
(November 11), certainly in
part because the name of the
saint suggested the Gaelic
word mart ("cattle marked
for slaughter"). As late
as the 1830's, when Amhlaoibh
? S?illeabh?in discussed some
of these customs in his famous
diary, the occasion was understood
as a ritual "shedding
of blood", and other
sources show that during the
same period blood sacrifices
could even still be held indoors,
to protect a house from malignant
"fairy" influences
by sprinkling an offering
of blood at each corner.
Renewing
social links with the dead
and feeding the Land-spirits
were both ritual means of
ensuring a safe future. While
Samhain (and the phenomenon
of death which it celebrated)
was obviously the end of a
cycle, it was more importantly
the start of a new one. Because
all true novelty springs from
the chaotic freedom and vitality
of the Otherworld, a new cycle
could be inaugurated only
by dissolving all of the structures
of the old one -- just as
the moment of death dissolves
our identity in this world,
allowing the fresh energies
of the Otherworld to impel
us towards new life. This
meant that, as happens in
the feasts of renewal of many
different cultures, certain
types of social disorder were
actively encouraged during
the period of the festival,
because they promoted the
renewing influence of the
Otherworld at the point in
the yearly cycle where it
would be most beneficial.
Customs originating entirely
in the world of cultural values
-- such as those relating
to social rank or gender-appropriate
behaviour -- were the most
likely to be violated. Disrespect
could be shown to elders or
to members of the upper classes.
Cross-dressing was one of
the most widespread and popular
ways of expressing the dissolution
of social categories, and
in parts of Wales groups of
young men in female garb were
referred to as gwrachod ("hags"
or "witches") as
they wandered through the
countryside on Calan Gaeaf,
indulging in all kinds of
mischief.
But
the disorder, of course, was
only the prelude to the return
of order in a strengthened
form. The structures that
had been dissolved had to
be re-created in order to
channel the new energy from
the Otherworld in the desired
directions. While local communities
would have had their own diverse
methods of accomplishing this
ritually (often through the
extinguishing and re-kindling
of household fires), more
elaborate ceremonies were
conducted by religious specialists
at the sacred centres of a
territory, in the name of
the entire population. In
pre-Christian Ireland the
ritual of Tara, focusing on
the High King in his role
as linchpin of the social
order, was the means for re-creating
the world on Samhain. The
Middle Irish text entitled
Suidigud Tellaig Temra (The
Settling of the Household
of Tara) describes the essentials
of the ritual and relates
some of the mythology that
explains its symbolism (albeit
with a somewhat Christianised
background), while Geoffrey
Keating, the seventeenth-century
encyclopaedist of traditional
Irish lore, provides us with
additional explanations of
some of the elements. Since
the Land itself, as a ritual
entity, was conceived of as
a square, so was Tara, for
the purposes of this ceremony,
seen as a four-sided space.
Each of the directions was
associated with one of the
three functional classes of
society (and with the divinity
who was seen as the ruler
of that function), the South
being devoted specifically
to the power of the Land and
to the goddess who gave energy
to the exercise of the social
functions. The High King occupied
the centre of the ritual area,
while around him, strictly
ordered by social rank, were
representatives of the four
provinces. Thus, when the
New Year actually dawned,
the magical heart of Ireland
would contain a model of the
entire social order of the
country in miniature, engaged
in the solemn feasting whereby
all social links were strengthened,
and all parts of the country
would then benefit from the
influence of this ritual.
The actual inception of the
new cycle was signaled by
the lighting of a fire, not
at Tara but at Tlachtga, which
symbolically represented the
southern province of Munster
within the High King's central
realm. This was the place
where Tlachtga, the daughter
of the mythological Druid
Mug Ruith, died after being
raped by the "sons of
Simon Magus" (who wanted
to gain the knowledge and
talents she had inherited
from her father) and after
giving birth to three sons
from three different fathers.
This myth is obviously garbled
in its modern version, yet
one can still discern in it
the figure of the Land-goddess
and her three "functional"
consorts. The association
of the festival with the pre-eminently
"female" southern
quarter may explain why in
some Welsh and Scottish communities
it is specified by custom
that Samhain ritual (preparation
of the ceremonial food, etc.)
must be overseen by nine women
(in contrast to the nine men
who preside over Bealtaine).
What
of the role of the gods in
this crucial turning-point
of the ritual year? Since
virtually all our knowledge
of detailed ritual practices
among the Celts comes from
Christianised communities,
references to divinities who
were actually worshipped are,
as one would expect, rare
and indirect. However, some
of the stories preserved in
both folklore and mediaeval
literature seem relevant to
the theology of this feast.
Images such as that of the
hero Diarmait killed by a
boar after his romance with
Fionn Mac Cumhail's wife Gr?inne;
or that of wild Myrddin emerging
from the forest with a herd
of stags to kill his wife's
lover by piercing him with
a pair of antlers; or that
of Gwyn ap Nudd ("White
son of Mistmaker") fighting
with Gwythyr ap Greidawl ("Wrathful
son of Hot") every Calan
Mai (Bealtaine) "until
the day of Judgment"
for the hand of their common
love, Creiddylad; and the
notion of the Fianna living
off the wilderness from Bealtaine
to Samhain and indoors from
Samhain to Bealtaine all suggest
a myth of certain divinities
changing their status in relation
to the Land-goddess in response
to the change of seasons along
the Samhain-Bealtaine axis.
The common denominator of
these motifs seems to be the
figure of the antlered god
now conventionally referred
to as "Cernunnos",
whose mythology has definite
links to the stories of the
Fianna and whose attributes
symbolise seasonal change
as well as the interface between
nature and culture. Antlers
are a seasonal phenomenon:
they drop off in winter and
begin to reappear as velvet
at winter's end, returning
to full glory in the spring.
In Scots Gaelic terminology,
the month immediately preceding
Samhain is called an Damhar
(damh-ghar, "stag-rut"),
because it is when stags clash
with each other during the
mating season, shortly before
losing their antlers, as the
antlered god must undoubtedly
lose his (which is why some
"Cernunnos" statues
-- like the one from St. Germain
-- apparently had holes for
removable antlers). Our sense
of the seasonal importance
of this event in Celtic ritual
symbolism is reinforced by
the custom in southwestern
Brittany of baking appropriately
shaped cakes called kornigo?
("little horns")
to celebrate the coming of
winter. From the many versions
of the myth one can deduce
that the antlered god is separated
from his goddess-consort (who
takes another lover) during
the light half of the year,
when he must live as a renunciate
in the wilderness and wear
his horns; but that with the
coming of the dark season
his rival is eliminated and
he can return to his consort's
embrace in the Otherworld
-- abandoning, by the same
token, the "horns"
of his cuckoldry. It is unlikely
to be a coincidence that the
bonnag Samhna -- the Samhain
cake prepared specifically
for the ritual-- made by the
women who preside over the
Samhain feast in parts of
Gaelic Scotland is named after
a cuckold in the community.
And we find echoes of the
same motif (as we often do)
at the other end of the Indo-European
world, in the ritual calendar
of India, where on Divali
(Dip?vali), the Feast of Lights,
which is usually celebrated
very close to Samhain, Lakshmi,
the goddess of abundance and
well-being, leaves her usual
consort Vishnu (who falls
asleep at this time) to return
temporarily to her first husband,
Kubera, the fat god of material
riches.
The
Land-goddess, too, changes
her appearance at this time:
the fertile part of her retreats
to the Otherworld where she
can join with her consort
in beginning the creative
work of the new yearly cycle
(in their summer, which is
our winter, as it were), but
in our world only her "Fomorian"
aspect remains, making the
land barren and hostile to
human comfort. In the Scottish
Highlands this is the season
of the Cailleach Bheura, the
monstrous hag who wanders
in the hills bringing bad
weather, while in Wales we
hear of the Hwch Ddu Gwta
("tailless black sow")
who lurks menacingly in the
darkness. Yet these are all
aspects of the same being,
the multiform Provider on
whom we all depend, who must,
like all things, replenish
herself through alternating
periods of action and repose,
and who touches -- as we all
must -- darkness and death
to find the source of true
renewal.
SELECTED
BIBLIOGRAPHY
C?itinn, Seathr?n (Geoffrey
Keating), (ed. by Padraig
de Br?n) Foras Feasa ar ?irinn.
Dublin, 1982.
Danaher, Kevin, The Year in
Ireland. Cork, 1972.
MacNeill, Eoin, On the Notation
and Chronology of the Calendar
of Coligny, ?riu 10 (1926).
McNeill, F. Marian, The Silver
Branch. Glasgow, 1953-66.
Owen, Trefor M., Welsh Folk
Customs. Cardiff, 1959.
Rees, Alwyn & Brinley,
Celtic Heritage: Ancient Tradition
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