{{cleanup-date|October 2005}}
Old_Irish '''Lughnasadh''' ({{IPA2|luːnəsə}}; also spelled '''Lughnasa'''; modern Irish '''Lúnasa'''; Modern Scots Gaelic, '''Lunasdal''') is a Gaelic Holiday celebrated on 1_August, during the time of the harvesting. Lugnasadh was one of the four main festivals of the mediaeval Irish calendar: Imbolc, Beltaine, Lughnasadh and Samhain. Lughnasadh means "Lugh's assembly", representing the last festival of the calendar, dedicated to Lugh, the Sun God of Celtic mythology. Lughnasadh festivals lasted from 15_July until 15_August. Aside from three days of religious rituals, the celebrations were a time for contests of strength and skill.
Some Irish people continue to celebrate the holiday with fires and dancing. Lughnasadh is also the modern Scottish Gaelic term for the month of August.
A festival corresponding to Lughnasadh may have been observed by the Gauls at least up to ca. the 1st_century (see Coligny_calendar); the same date was later adopted for the meeting of all the representatives of Gaul at the Condate Altar in Gallo-Roman times.
1 August as the national holiday of Switzerland, ancient homeland of the Iron Age Helvetii, with its traditional bonfires might trace to this ancient Celtic tradition.
There is a play by Brian_Friel entitled ''Dancing_at_Lughnasa'' which has also been made into a 1998 movie.
== Neopaganism ==
In Neopaganism, Lughnasadh is one of the eight sabbats or solar festivals in the Wheel_of_the_Year. It is the first of the three Autumn Harvest festivals, the other two being Mabon and Samhain. It commemorates the sacrifice and death of the Corn God; in its cycle of death, nurturing the people, and rebirth, the corn is
thought of as an aspect of the Sun God. Some Neopagans mark the holiday by baking a figure of the God in bread, and then symbolically sacrificing and eating it.
Neopagans also use the name Lammas, taken from an Anglo-Saxon and Christian holiday occurring at the same time, that is only as closely related to Lughnasadh as any two harvest festivals amongst agrarian peoples. As the name (from the Anglo-Saxon ''hlafmæsse'' "loaf-mass", "loaves festival") implies, it is a feast of thanksgiving for bread, symbolizing the first fruits of the harvest. Neopagan celebrations may have elements from either festival.
Lughnasadh is often defined as a Cross-quarter_day midway between the Summer_solstice and the Autumn_equinox, which is half way through Leo (in the northern hemisphere) or Aquarius (in the southern hemisphere). Lughnasadh in the northern hemisphere coincides with Imbolc in the southern hemisphere. As a sabbat it is preceded by Midsummer and followed by Mabon.
==See also==
*autumn equinox, Samhain, Yule, Imbolc, Ostara and Litha.
Category:Neopagan_holidays
De:Lughnasadh
It:Lughnasadh