Summer, Standing Stones and Stories of Old:
The Summer Solstice
By J.P. Reedman
Summer Solstice. The time of the year when the days reach their longest before declining towards wintry gloom again. Celebrated back in the deeps of time, in the Neolithic and probably long before, this time of the year is replete with folklore and symbolism and old traditions that have never entirely faded.
The solstice
itself falls on the 21st or 22nd of June, but to the
ancients the ceremonies that took place most likely lasted for about a week as
the sun really reaches its ‘stand still’ for several days. This timeframe would
encompass St John’s Eve, old Midsummer, a Christianised feast day but, with its
tales of fairies, bonfires and mayhem, seeming to bear traditions that may just
hark back to a time before Christianity reach the isles.
On Midsummer’s
Eve, for instance, you can pluck the fernseed, if you are lucky enough to find
some. This magical seed will lead you to a ‘seam of gold’ on a hill or
mountain, and will confer invisibility to its finder. Could the seam of gold
actually be a reference to the rising sun? Possibly. Many ancient burial mounds,
for example, have legends relating to burials in golden armour, golden boats or
golden thrones. Since many mounds are oriented towards the east, and male
skeletons of the Beaker era are positioned to gaze toward the rising sun, a
solar reference in these legends could be very possible.
The same solar
reference might be seen in the traditional pastime of cheese-rolling. This used
to take place at Midsummer, when a large wheel of cheese was sent rolling down
a steep hill with the locals chasing after it. A wheel is an ancient sun
symbol, and the cheese itself a large yellow ball resembling the solar disc.
Cheese-rolling still takes place in the Cotswolds although the date has now
been moved to May.
Cooper's Hill Cheese-Rolling and Wake |
There is also
lore about the Cuckoo, now sadly rare in Britain, as a bird connected with the
solstice and Midsummer. Cuckoos traditionally begin their migration around this
time and so their disappearance tallies with the gradual fading of the summer
light. It is interesting that there is a stone called the ‘Cuckoo Stone’ near
Woodhenge, although it seems to have no alignment. Cuckoos also feature in the
legend associated with the Callanish stone circle in the Hebrides, where the
‘Shining One’ is said to walk along one of its avenues heralded by the cuckoo’s
cry on Midsummer morning. While we can’t say how ancient this story is, the
‘Shining One’ is the epithet of the pan-Celtic God Lugh, who, with his long
spear, has solar attributes.
Aside from
folklore, in some places solstice and/or Midsummer, is still celebrated with
dancing and ceremony. While these ceremonies may have little to do with the
beliefs of our ancient ancestors, they must certainly hold at least a little of
the spirit of the people of ancient times.
In Cornwall,
the traditional Midsummer bonfires are lit in various parts of the county, and
there is dancing. The celebrations continue for the better part of a week. A
similar bonfire is lit on Hampstead Heath in London.
Of course, the
most famous place to celebrate the solstice is Stonehenge in Wiltshire. Up to
30,000 people have descended on the monument to see the sunrise on one of the
four days a year when the inner circle is open to all-comers. There is
drumming, people meditating or praying, and a huge burst of cheers when the sunlifts
its head beside the tip of the Heelstone. It is interesting that the main
alignment at Stonehenge seems to actually have been on the winter solstice
,when the sun was framed by the arches of the Great Trilithon, but the
Midsummer alignment is older—the henge monument (the bank and ditch) was open
to the north-east in the monument’s earliest phase, some centuries before the
large sarsen stones were hauled into position.
Stonehenge is
of course not the only prehistoric monument with a Midsummer alignment—others
include Callanish (recently confirmed),the Clava Cairns in Scotland, Gors Fawr,
the chamber tomb of Bryn Celli Dhu in Wales, and the enormous Grange Circle in
Ireland. There are likely many more, and some line up with the Midsummer
solstice sunset rather than sunrise, as at the timber circle of Woodhenge, in a
reverse alignment to nearby Stonehenge.
With a renewed
interest in prehistory and archaeology, as well growing study of folklore
independent of and inclusive in anthropology, hopefully the celebrations of our
ancestors, from whatever date they come, will continue on into the future. Man,
after all, is in many ways still a sun-worshipper (summer—hooray!), and just as
aware as his prehistoric forebears that the sun brings life to the world.
The Stonehenge Saga
THE
STONEHENGE SAGA takes place in 1900 BC, and blends the Arthurian myths with
actual archaeology, including recent finds in the Stonehenge landscape such as
the ‘sacred spring’ and ‘magical purple stones’ at Blick Mead.
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J.P. Reedman
J.P. Reedman is the author of historical fiction on Stonehenge, Robin Hood, Richard III and the Wars of the Roses and the lesser-known medieval Queens and Ladies.
You can find J.P Reedman on Twitter.
You can find J.P Reedman on Twitter.
I do love Midsummer's Day -- one of my favourites of the year, I think. Today is a sunny one, too :)
ReplyDeleteI think this a lovely post. I adore Midsummer.
ReplyDeleteI witnessed the Cheese Rolling a couple of years ago ( I didn't take part!!) It was totally mad! LOL
ReplyDeleteI was up at Stonehenge on the 21st...but after the solstice crowds had cleared. I'd love to see the Chesse Rolling some time, as well as the Abbots Bromley Horn Dance and the Haxey Hood Game (which I used , with a different name, in my Robin Hood novel THE HOOD GAME.)
ReplyDelete