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The Golden Bough: A Study of Magic and Religion

Chapter 217: 1. The Fire-festivals in general
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A sweeping comparative study examines the origins and functions of magic, religion, and ritual through cross-cultural evidence, tracing theories about sympathetic and contagious magic and the magician's social role. It surveys practices intended to control weather and fertility, the fusion of royal and priestly offices, and the institution of temporary or sacrificial kings. The work analyzes tree veneration and the motif of a sacred branch, taboos affecting persons, objects and words, folk beliefs about souls, and rites marking death, seasonal renewal, and succession. Chapters interweave ethnographic examples, folklore, and classical sources to suggest continuities between primitive rites and historic religious institutions.

LXII. The Fire-Festivals of Europe

1. The Fire-festivals in general

ALL over Europe the peasants have been accustomed from time immemorial to kindle bonfires on certain days of the year, and to dance round or leap over them. Customs of this kind can be traced back on historical evidence to the Middle Ages, and their analogy to similar customs observed in antiquity goes with strong internal evidence to prove that their origin must be sought in a period long prior to the spread of Christianity. Indeed the earliest proof of their observance in Northern Europe is furnished by the attempts made by Christian synods in the eighth century to put them down as heathenish rites. Not uncommonly effigies are burned in these fires, or a pretence is made of burning a living person in them; and there are grounds for believing that anciently human beings were actually burned on these occasions. A brief view of the customs in question will bring out the traces of human sacrifice, and will serve at the same time to throw light on their meaning.

The seasons of the year when these bonfires are most commonly lit are spring and midsummer; but in some places they are kindled also at the end of autumn or during the course of the winter, particularly on Hallow E’en (the thirty-first of October), Christmas Day, and the Eve of Twelfth Day. Space forbids me to describe all these festivals at length; a few specimens must serve to illustrate their general character. We shall begin with the fire-festivals of spring, which usually fall on the first Sunday of Lent (Quadragesima or Invocavit), Easter Eve, and May Day.