SEARCH FOR
samhain
DEFINITIONS
Samhain: October 31
Expect the unexpected if you celebrate Samhain—the Celtic New Year—on All Hallows Eve...
source: Llewellyn's Witches' Datebook 2004, K.D. Spitzer
Samhain: October 31. Also called Hallowee, Hallowe'en, and All Hallows Eve. This holiday is widely celebrated by people of all faiths with costume parties and trick-or-treating. But this night also marks the Wiccan new year. In the wheel of the year, Samhain is the night when the God dies and leaves the Goddess alone until Yule, when he is born again. Halloween/Samhain is a time when the doors between the words are said to open, stirring up much ghostly and otherworldly activity.
source: Llewellyn
Also See: Hallowmas
ARTICLES
8 ARTICLES ON SAMHAIN
1. Samhain Ritual:
relevance: 30%
2. Happy New Year!:
relevance: 12%
3. Time:
relevance: 5%
4. Beltane Ritual:
relevance: 3%
5. Who Were the Druids?:
relevance: 2%
6. Festivals:
relevance: 2%
7. The Fairy Ring Oracle Review:
relevance: 2%
8. The Sabbats:
relevance: 2%
|
|