Jo Hedesan is currently studying a MA in Western Esotericism at University of Exeter. She is a member of the European Society for the Study of Esotericism (ESSWE) and American Association for Study of Esotericism (ASE). She has published several journal articles and has presented papers at scholarly conferences on the topic of esotericism and history. She is writing a blog on esoteric topics and research at http://www.esotericoffeehouse.com
Celebrated at the beginning of November, the Celtic Festival of Samhain marked the coming of the winter months, with their dimming light and heightening darkness. The root of the word “Samhain” comes from “samhradh”, meaning “summer” in Irish Gaelic. While the exact etymology has not been confirmed by scholars, in Celtic tradition, “Samhain” corresponds to “end of summer” (a combination of samh “summer” and fuin “ending, concealment”). Samhain and Beltanne (May Day) stood in opposition as the beginning of the season of winter and summer, respectively, but Samhain was a much more prominent festival and may have marked the beginning of the Celtic New Year as Frazer has pointed out.
Samhain was, consequently, a festival of deepening darkness and budding light. It was a meeting place between two opposites – the winter and the summer, the dark and the light, death and life. As such, the festival contained both aspects of existence – although the darkness, increasing at this time, was more profuse and substantial.
In its ‘dark’ aspect, Samhain marked a period of destruction and chaos. Perhaps the most dramatic illustration of this was the ritual killing of the Irish kings of Tara. According to Dalton’s evidence and interpretation, the kings that had behaved unsuitably or unpiously in office would be killed on the day of Samhain. Ritual killing was also effected against animals: Samhain was the season when the cattle that would not be kept through the winter were slaughtered.
On Samhain, the forces of darkness or chaos returned to rule. According to Irish mythology, 1st of November marked the day that the demonic Fomorian race oppressed the people of Nemed. According to another legend, the divine Aillen the Burner puts everyone to sleep at Samhain and burns the palace of the Irish kings at Tara. During the festival, bands of men, women and children dressed in masks and costumes embodied the havoc-causing divinities and inflicted their own terror and chaos on the neighbourhood. As Dalton points out, the tyrannical Irish king Conn Cetcathach was killed by fifty warriors dressed as women. The habit of cross-dressing was popular in various parts of the Celtic world as expressions of the breakdown of rules on Samhain.
Samhain was also a time when the dead came back to roam the earth. This happened because the normal order no longer applied, and hence the boundaries of the otherworld were broken. Freed from the rules that clearly separate one world from the next, the dead returned to visit the living. They were welcomed at ritual feasts where, as Kondratiev has noted, they were “actually” present. It was this custom of honoring the dead that made the Catholic Church adopt the date of 1st and 2nd of November as the Day of the Saints and Day of the Departed.
If Samhain was a dreaded time when rules were broken and demons roamed the earth, it was also a time when light was re-born. Samhain, as Frazer has observed, was not a festival of the sun: the sun is in retreat in autumn. Instead, Samhain marked the birth of a mystical light – a light that may originate in the first ray of sun at dawn or the first lunar ray after the new moon. In Ireland, a bonfire was started on the royal hill of Tara accompanying, perhaps, the coronation of a new king after the killing of the old one. The custom of lighting fires on Samhain was also pervasive in Scotland and Wales. In line with this new light, Samhain was also a time when the forces of good eventually prevailed: the demon Fomorians were destroyed, Aillen the Burner was slain. Divination was also pervasive as a practical translation of the ‘light in the darkness’ motif: the diviner would try to shed a dim light into the dark future.
This combination of darkness and light, fear and hope, order and chaos gave Samhain its particular coloring of a merry time of misbehaving. It was a festival where rules were briefly abolished and tension – whether communal, social, political or even psychological – could be released. It was also a time when new order was born – hence the competitions and games of worth that were practiced during this period. Figures of power were abolished and others replaced them; rules were destroyed and recreated.
It is perhaps of interest to see what has remained of this festival time in today’s Halloween customs.
- The symbolic kindling of fires in the lit pumpkin;
- Games of worth in the popular ‘bobbing for apples’ – a water ordeal.
- The havoc wreaked by deities and the dead in modern movies like Halloween, Scream, Dracula and vampire stories, American Werewolf in London and other horror classics;
- The identification of the living with deities and the dead in Halloween trick-or-treating and costume-wearing
- The sacral fear surrounding the Samhain celebration survives in urban legends of ‘razors hidden in apples’ to harm children.
- The tradition of Samhain feasts in Halloween parties, trick-or-treating and Halloween candy;
- Mischief survives in the mild “tricks” played on those that do not propitiate the costumed revelers
- Abolition of traditional hierarchy is still present in the ascendance of children over adults during the Halloween season.
Perhaps more investigations should be carried out in this aspect, yet what is certain is that Samhain has evolved into Halloween in subtle, but yet powerful ways, maintaining in the process its fundamental character of an out-of-the-ordinary time when rules become more relaxed and identities more fluid behind the mask. It is unfortunate that its spiritual core has taken second place to ‘ordered chaos’, yet the enduring power of the Samhain is witnessed by its innovative ways to survive and adapt in the modern world.
- Kondratiev, A. (1997). Samhain: Season of Death and Renewal. Online. Accessed 29 October 2008.
- Frazer, J.G. (1922). The Golden Bough: A Study of Magic and Religion. London : Macmillan
- Dalton, G.F. (1970). The Ritual Killing of the Irish Kings. Folklore 81(1), pp.1-22
- Kondratiev, A. (1997). Samhain: Season of Death and Renewal. Online. Accessed 29 October 2008.
- Walsh, M.J. (1947). Notes on Fire-Lighting Ceremonies I. Folklore 58(2), pp. 277-284.
- Wikipedia. (2008). Samhain. Online. Accessed 30 October 2008
- Dalton, G.F. (1970). The Ritual Killing of the Irish Kings. Folklore 81(1), pp.1-22.
- Kondratiev, A. (1997). Samhain: Season of Death and Renewal. Online. Accessed 29 October 2008.
- Frazer, J.G. (1922). The Golden Bough: A Study of Magic and Religion. London : Macmillan.
- Kondratiev, A. (1997). Samhain: Season of Death and Renewal. Online. Accessed 29 October 2008.
- Best, J. & Horiuchi, G.T. The Razor Blade in the Apple: The Social Construction of Urban Legends. Social Problems, 32(5), pp. 488-499.
- Dell Clark, C. (2005). Tricks of Festival: Children, Enculturation and American Halloween. Ethos 33(2), pp.180-205.
- Related Articles
- Related Q&A
- The Origin of Halloween: Samhain, the Celtic Festival of Darkness and Mystical Light
- The History of Celtic Halloween
- 5 Great Australian Festivals
- Celtic Jewellery – Different Types of Celtic Jewellery
- Austin Area Festivals: Music and More
- Life and Death - the Celtic Perspective
- Canada's Best Summer Festivals
- Summer Festivals in Dublin




Christmas Gifts For Mothers: The Best Personalized Christmas Gifts For Mom
By: Giftlet Website | 28/11/2009Are you looking to find a Christmas gift your mother this Christmas and you can't find anything that you know your mother will love? What do you do when you need to buy a gift for Mom, and you just can't find anything that you want to give her as a gift this Christmas season? How do you find that perfect mothers gift for Christmas? Read this article to find out what the best personalized Christmas gifts for mothers are.
Branson’s Nantucket Produces Hybrid Deeded Share’s in Lakefront Resort
By: blaufraustein | 28/11/2009Branson’s Nantucket, Missouri’s leader in deluxe holiday properties delivers new modernized Deeded Vacation interest Shares for their Lakefront holiday resort
Branson’s Nantucket Announces New Deeded Vacation Shares
By: blaufraustein | 28/11/2009Branson’s Nantucket Branson’s Premier lakefront holiday resort will immediately be providing deeded holiday interests to they're patronage.
Branson's Nantucket announces support for Penny Gilley Show
By: blaufraustein | 28/11/2009Branson Nantucket, Missouri’s leading Lakefront resort, announces price reduction for Penny Gilley show tickets
New Christmas Gift Ideas To Buy Women – Best Xmas Gift List Of 24 Items To Give A Wife Or Girlfriend
By: Kacy Carr | 28/11/2009Unique Christmas Gift Ideas for your Wife or Girlfriend
Forgotten Things To Be Thankful For
By: happy pig | 28/11/2009Yesterday I have listed 15 things that we should thanks for, however, when I opened my eyes this morning, two more things occurred to me.
Christmas music and experience online
By: Rok | 27/11/2009Christmas is the time of spending time with your loved ones, listening to Christmas songs and music, singing Christmas carols and simply enjoying the Christmas spirit
Farmhouses rentals and the most luxury villas in Tuscany with Aristocratica Domus
By: monti78 | 27/11/2009Aristocratica Domus offers a wide selection of accommodation choices, of various types: farmhouse, villas, apartments, vacation homes and many other solutions
Tarot as the Book of Thoth: the Power of Fascination With Ancient Egypt
By: Jo Hedesan | 08/12/2008 | SpiritualityThe article addresses the birth of the 'modern' tarot from Court de Gebelin's belief that Tarot originated in Ancient Egypt. While this was not true historically, Tarot is shown to be born in an era when scholars were keen on 'hieroglyphs' and Egyptian religion.
2012, 1484 and Other Apocalypses: the Dynamics of Society
By: Jo Hedesan | 02/12/2008 | CultureThis article addresses the topic of apocalyptic - millennial movements from a historical perspective. It looks in particular at Renaissance apocalyptic thought and draws conclusions as to the impact prophecies and millennial perspectives have on society.
Barack Obama's Mythic Hero Image: an Appraisal
By: Jo Hedesan | 24/11/2008 | News & SocietyThis article investigates the image of Barack Obama as a mythical hero, in light of Joseph Campbell's famous Hero's Journey pattern. The article takes a look at Obama's life story and its reflection in popular culture and compares it with the Campbell's monomyth.
Ancient Egyptian Religion and the Mystery of the God Thoth
By: Jo Hedesan | 08/11/2008 | MysticismThis article investigates the mysterious figure of the Egyptian god Thoth and his subsequent incarnation Hermes Trismegistus. Thoth was a moon god of the night, magic, writing, divine law and the dead.