Pagan Holidays - Lughnasadh
Ranked #13,263 in Culture & Society, #264,594 overall
Celebrate First Harvest
Later, it was adopted into Christian tradition as Lammas, which means loaf mass referring to bread baked from the harvest's first grains. It marked the beginning of autumn in the agricultural year.
The God of Light

Different traditions hold that this holiday was to commemorate Lugh's foster mother, Tailtiu, with funeral games or possibly Lugh's marriage. Handfastings are indeed popular at this time much like they are at Beltane.
In Wiccan tradition, this is the time of the aging or waning god. Rituals are enacted that celebrate the first harvest and to give thanks for the abundance of the season. All this is with the knowledge that the dying god will soon make the ultimate sacrifice of his death at Samhain only to be born again at Yule.
Picture is Lugh Spear Millar from Wikimedia Commons and depicts the great magical spear of Lugh. To learn more about Lugh, visit Alexei Kondratiev's article Lugus: The Many-Gifted Lord.
Traditional Themes

The themes of this holiday can be easily adapted to your own practice. It's a perfect family holiday as outdoor games of physical skill can be brought into ritual or as an addition to rites honoring the religious theme. Arts and crafts can be specifically dedicated to the deities of your path in gratitude for the harvest. This along with the first products from the harvest in your part of the world are ideal offerings to make. What fruits, vegetables, and flowers are at their peak where you live?
How to Honor Lughnasadh in Your Own Way
- Do you have skills that you have let lie dormant? Try your hand at one of them again. Visit one of the many arts and crafts festivals that occur this time of year.
- What do you have to be thankful for? Even if you feel that your personal harvest whether it be physical, mental or emotional has been lacking this year, try to reevaluate it in the sense of lessons you have learned. Now is the time to acknowledge what you have sown and are now reaping. Meditate on the things you have to be grateful for, great and small, and acknowledge the part you have to play in the cycles of your own life and of those around you.
- Challenge yourself by introducing a new physical or mental skill into your life. Is there a craft you have always wanted to try but told yourself you never had the time? Now is the time to try it.
O'er richer stores than gems of gold;
Once more with harvest song and shout,
Is nature's boldest triumph told."
- J. G. Whittier, Harvest Hymn.
See How Lughnasadh is Celebrated
Lugh, Pagan Crafts and More
Learn More About Pagan Holidays
Sources consulted:
Ellis, Peter Berresford. Dictionary of Celtic Mythology. Oxford University Press, 1992.
Ellison, Robert Lee. The Solitary Druid: Walking the Path of Wisdom and Spirit. Citadel Press, 2005.
Farrar, Janet and Stewart Farrar. A Witches' Bible: The Complete Witches' Handbook. Phoenix Publishing Inc., 1981.
by PJ_Deneen
Hello, I'm P.J. (Trish) Deneen. I work at home doing medical transcription and freelance writing.
Click here to create a lens and earn cash writing about...
more »
- 100 featured lenses
- Winner of 15 trophies!
- Top lens » Medical Abbreviations
Explore related pages
- Pagan Calendars, Planners, Date books and Engagement planners 2012 Pagan Calendars, Planners, Date books and Engagement planners 2012
- Celtic Calendars and Planners 2011, 2012 Celtic Calendars and Planners 2011, 2012
- Imbolc: Festival of Brighid Imbolc: Festival of Brighid
- Yoga Christmas Tree Ornaments and Decorations Yoga Christmas Tree Ornaments and Decorations
- Wheel Of the Year: Imbolc Wheel Of the Year: Imbolc
- Non-Traditional Holiday Shopping Gifts Non-Traditional Holiday Shopping Gifts