I love the long days this time of year. The longest day of the year! While the day is, technically speaking, an astronomical occasion,
its historical and cultural significance extends far beyond the
relative length of the daylight. The word solstice itself comes from the
Latin, from sol (sun) and stare or sistere
(to stand or stop), and its celebration dates back to ancient
pre-Christian tradition. For the Greeks, it would, according to some
calendars, mark the start of the new year—and the month-long countdown
toward the Olympics. It was, too, often the annual occasion for the
festival of Kronia, to honor the god Cronus, the patron of agriculture.
The day was marked not only by the typical feasts and games, but by an
even more remarkable occurrence: for once, slaves could participate in
the festivities along with the freemen, joined in equality for a single
day.
For the Romans, the solstice was the occasion for another
unique exception to everyday life: on the first day of the festival of
Vestalia, married women could, for one day only, enter the temples of
the vestal virgins. There, they would be allowed to make offerings to
Vesta, the goddess of hearth and home.
Many Native American tribes
celebrated the longest day of the year with a Sun Dance, while the
Mayas and Aztecs used the day as a marker by which to build many of
their central structures, so that the buildings would align perfectly
with the shadows of the two solstices, summer and winter. In many
European pagan traditions, the solstice was called Litha, a day to
balance the elements of fire and water, while for the druids, it was,
simply, midsummer, a night and day with properties like no other.
According to tradition, certain plants—St. John’s wort, roses, rue,
verbena, and the like—acquired properties on the year’s shortest night
that they wouldn’t have if picked at any other time. And on this
evening, if you were very lucky, you might even catch a glimpse of
faeries, who favored midsummer to reveal themselves to the common folk.
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