(January 12, 2025) Image from: http://hullvalley.blogspot.com/2013/04/so-thats-who-it-is-goddess-of-beauty.html. Numbers added by Olmsted.
This Anglo-Saxon themed mosaic came from the largest room in a Roman villa built during the late 300's CE near Rudston in East Yorkshire, England. The intact mosaic with its oblong side-panels would have measured 4.67m x 3.2m. http://museumcollections.hullcc.gov.uk/collections/subtheme.php?irn=419
At the center of this image is the earth realm with its sky shell surrounding a middle aged goddess Ayu representing dry land and a merman representing the sea. Ayu is shown being tickled by the merman holding some wheat stalks causing her to drop her mirror. Her other hand is holding a rattle or something meant to represent the circle of life. Compare this image of Ayu with the one on the coin below.
Surrounding the earth realm are 12 symbols representing the Druid zodiac houses/months as mentioned by Bede (below). The better known Greek zodiac seems to derive from this Druid Zodiac traditions as this Druid tradition contains the snow leopard which no longer existed in Europe during historic times. A festival honoring a zodiac houses is called a Blot in Norse lands.
Notice that solstices and equinoxes are symbolized by animals.
Anglo-Saxon Name: Giuli (Other Latin copy: Giuli)
Akkadian Phrase: G.IW.U.LY meaning time when "Energy is redirected by the layout (of fate)" This redirection of energy is done by the celestial light goddess Selene
Norse Name: unknown
Zodiac Image: Woman having a radiant head representing Selu/Selene.
Greek Constellation: Pisces
Anglo-Saxon Name: Sol (Other Latin copy: Sol)
Akkadian Phrase: S'.L meaning time when the "Inhibition (of-life-powers) is being reduced"
Norse Name: unknown
Zodiac Image: White Eurasian Collared Dove tossing a flower over its back indicating the end of the wintery fallow part of they year. This Dove's cooing call represents sadness and loss from the past winter.
Greek Constellation: Ares
Anglo-Saxon Name: Hreth (Other Latin copy Rhed seems shows one word has a simple transposition error between HR and RH, The Latinized Anglo-Saxon ð can be either /th/ or /d/)
Akkadian Phrase: RḪ.ED meaning time of "Anointing movement" (using the Latin source which makes more sense)
Norse Name: unknown
Zodiac Image: Bull (represents the chaotic rainstorm bringing form of Hu)
Greek Constellation: Taurus
Anglo-Saxon Name: Eostur (Other Latin copy: Eostur)
Akkadian Phrase: E.AŠ.T.U.R meaning time of "Disabling the spewing-forth of astrology-magic and eagle-vultures" (anti-life powers declining)
Norse Name: unknown
Zodiac Image: Turtle Dove looking at a flower indicating the beginning of a new part of the year (the life part). Turtle doves are the symbol for fidelity and love due to mating for life. They also migrate departing in the mid-late summer and return the following spring.
Greek Constellation: Gemini
Anglo-Saxon Name: Thrimilchi (Other Latin copy: Thrimylchi)
Akkadian Phrase: ṬR.IM.IL.ŠY meaning time when "Impressions emotionally-triggering the high-power's strength"
Norse Name: unknown
Zodiac Image: An animal driver (man with a rope) indicating the increasing motion of life
Greek Constellation: Cancer
Anglo-Saxon Name: Litha (Other Latin copy: Lida. The Latinized Anglo-Saxon ð can be either /th/ or /d/)
Akkadian Phrase: LY.D.A meaning time when the "Layout (of fate) results in life-manifestations" (The other Latin version makes more sense)
Norse Name: unknown
Zodiac Image: Lion (represents the orderly, healing sun god Hu)
Greek Constellation: Leo
Anglo-Saxon Name: Litha (Other Latin copy: Lida. The Latinized Anglo-Saxon ð can be either /th/ or /d/)
Akkadian Phrase: LY.D.A meaning time when the "Layout (of fate) results in life-manifestations" (The other Latin version makes more sense)
Norse Name: unknown
Zodiac Image: (missing)
Greek Constellation: Virgo
Anglo-Saxon Name: Weod (Other Latin copy: Vueod has a doubling up of the first letter which is an error)
Akkadian Phrase: W.E.AD meaning time when a "Curse disables the Instigator" (who is the motion source god Su, not much movement during hot August days)
Norse Name: unknown
Zodiac Image: Turtle Dove tossing a flower over its back indicating the end of growth. Turtle doves are the symbol for fidelity and love due to mating for life. They also migrate departing in the mid-late summer and return the following spring.
Greek Constellation: Libra
Anglo-Saxon Name: Haleg (Other Latin copy: Haleg)
Akkadian Phrase: Ḫ.AL.EG meaning time when "Hu and Alu are neglected (by the powers of fate)"
Norse Name: unknown
Zodiac Image: Elk Stag horns. The Classical world saw this as the claw of Scorpio.
Greek Constellation: Ophiucus
Anglo-Saxon Name: Winterfilleth (Other Latin copy, Vuinter-fylleth, has a doubling up of the first letter which is an error but they hyphen seems correct)
Akkadian Phrase: W.IN.T.ER - E.IL.EṬ meaning time when "Curses on the Moon-Eye (Su) harbor astrology-magic - which disables the high-power's movement"
Norse Name: unknown
Zodiac Image: White Eurasian Collared Dove looking at a flower indicating the start of a new part of the year (the wintery fallow part). This Dove's coong call represents sadness and loss and foreshadows tough times ahead.
Greek Constellation: Sagittarius
Anglo-Saxon Name: Blod (Other Latin copy: Blod)
Akkadian Phrase: B.L.AD meaning time when "Nourishments are lacking for the Instigator (Su)." Su provides the power which pushes the life powers through the life network. The letter "O" is the Akkadian letter ayin which is dual use either being ' or A.
Norse Name: Distings (from Akkadian D.IS.T.IN.GS meaning "Manifestations becoming scarce from astrology-magic's moon-eye (Su) blessings"
Zodiac Image: Woman with staff (darker than others so this is the goddess Kate/Hekate representing the growing darkness. She is also holding a staff of authority)
Greek Constellation: Capricorn
Anglo-Saxon Name: Giuli (Other Latin copy: Giuli)
Akkadian Phrase: G.IW.LY meaning time when "Energy is redirected by the layout (of fate)." This redirection of energy is done by the celestial light goddess Selene. Thus the snow leopard is her animal form.
Norse Name: Yuli/Yule (from Akkadian IW.LY meaning "Redirection from the layout (of-fate)"
Zodiac Image: Snow Leopard
Greek Constellation: Aquarius with head of Pisces
Bede The Reckoning of Time - translated, with introduction, notes and commentary by FAITH WALLIS (1999). Online at: https://ia601403.us.archive.org/12/items/bede-the-reckoning-of-time-2012/Bede%20-%20The%20Reckoning%20of%20Time%20%282012%29.pdf
(December 13, 2024) The top part of the Celtic Ogham on this Swedish runestone lists the Pagan Nature festivals and provides the Viking interpretation of them.
The top part is a listing of the nature quarter festivals in Druid Akkadian (read from top to bottom). The first half of the year is a time of settling accounts while the second half is a time of feasting.
"Nature's rendering" references the successful growth of plant-life. It is nature giving-up the source of all food. In contrast "Breeding" reference the successful production of young animals for food.
(November 8, 2024) The rest of the nature festivals need to be inferred with some historical detective work. Subsequent investigations confirms these Pagan festivals were widely observed although called by different names. This was done by Aidan Kelly in 1974. He recalls his thought process in these blog entries:
The Fall equinox Mabon name comes from the Welsh Mabinogion version of the common Pagan myth in which the underworld god causes life on earth to sleep until his love is returned. In most Pagan myths his love is kidnapped (or rescued) in the fall.
The phrase "Mabon ap Modron" used above is actually the Akkadian phrase "Mu-A-Ba'u-Nu APu Ma'u-Du-Re'u-Mu." Mabon means: "The fertility-fluids resulting from the nest's revelations" in which "fertility-fluids" are the life powers which flow through the lift network to trigger life on earth. Thus this festival is celebrating the favorable divine attention to life on earth, on other words, Thanksgiving.
(November 8, 2024) The words which incorrectly became the quarter (or fire) festivals are Akkadian phrases in the Hibernica Minora. Many Akkadian phrases became Celtic words. The Druid Akkadian translation of the whole text is below: The Akkadian behind the quarter festival names is:
(November 8, 2024) The Hibernica Minora is found in the appendix (page 49) of a medieval Irish psalter commentary. The traditional translation of the poem is:
Notice Lammas Day actually has 2 different Gaelic spellings (in red) indicating they are different words. Yet in another example of the linguistic sloppiness of Gaelic linguists of the past, these 2 words are treated as the same word.
(July 3, 2022, updated December 14, 2024) Yule eve is the longest night of the year and thus it is a time for reflection on the past. Traditionally this connection to the past is represented by the Yule log which is piece of wood taken from last year’s fire and placed into this year's fire.
Yule was also a time of feasting, mostly on pig because the forest floor nuts which they ate were almost be gone now. Consequently, any pigs not destined for breeding had to be killed before they starved. After a Yule ceremony at Stonehenge such feasting commenced the next day at nearby Woodhenge where archaeologists found lots of yearling pig bones.
This festival is called Yalda in ancient Persian and Syriac suggesting it originated as an Indo-European word where it means "birth."
Yule has nothing to do with the final Roman harvest festival of Saturnalia which comes right after the olive harvest is done in early December. The planet Saturn, being the slowest planet, represented harvest time and the end of life. The following quote from a Roman text shows Saturnalia was not associated with the winter solstice:
When on the day of the solstice, which followed the festivals of the Saturnalia in which those banquets were celebrated, I was at home, empty of legal care and in a happier mood, when Eusebius came with a few of his followers ... The Saturnalia - page 2
The Romans were the ones who separated the winter soltice from the feasting celebrations surrounding the end of the old year (Saturnalia). Their solstice day was January 1 and called Aesculapio Vediovi (Aesculapius' is Seen) which celebrates the healing of the celestial light from the sun. Their final olive harvest celebration may simply have coopted the older winter solstice feasting.
The Old Norse word for Yule was jól, closely resembling the modern Scandinavian terms: Swedish, Danish, and Norwegian jul, as well as the Icelandic and Faroese jól. The word jól appears frequently in Norse texts and carries rich associations with midwinter celebrations and the gods themselves.
At this time the Christian church was using the Roman Julian calendar (no leap years) which is a few weeks different from the Gregorian calendar we use today (has leap years). Hence Bede reports that Christmas was celebrated on January 8. Yule (Latin Giuli where the /gi/ sounds like /y/) was the month of December.
(January 28, 2023) Imbolc/Imbolk is a festival of purification and focus on the essentials of one's life, qualities needed to persevere through the depths of winter. This focusing is represented by candles and hearth fires which naturally draw one's attention.
Imbolk is a Druid Akkadian phrase meaning "emotion's involvement with life-constraints" from IM.BL.K. This indicates that it is a pre-Christian festival. Yet this festival entered the Christian calendar as Candlemas after it was first associated with the next Pagan festival, the Spring budding festival (Ostara), then being celebrated around Jerusalem.
This happened during the late 300's CE when the Western pilgrim Etheria attended this celebration in Jerusalem which the local Christians had connected to Jesus by giving it a cover story that it was celebrating the legend that Jesus was presented to the temple shortly after he was born. It's date that year was on February 14.
At this time Jerusalem was no longer Jewish. After the final Jewish revolt against the Romans called the Bar Kokhba revolt (132-136) led by Simon bar Kokhba Jews were no longer allowed to enter Jerusalem, exempting only those Jews who wished to enter the city for Tisha B'Av (a day of remembrance for all the disasters which had befallen the Jewish people held in late July or early August).
She wrote about it in her travel book, the Peregrinatio Etheriae. It soon spread to other Eastern Roman cities. In 542 Justinian I decreed that its date should be moved to February 2 (40 days after Christmas and co-opting northern Pagan Imbolc). By the middle of the 5th century the custom of observing the festival with lighted candles was adopted and the name Candlemas developed from this custom.
The Pagan festival Etheria experienced in Jerusalem also became the Jewish holiday called the “15th of Shevat” which is its date on the Jewish calendar. This date ranges from January 25 to February 15. This festival is also known as “Tu Bishvat.” It celebrates the first budding of the trees in the Levant. The earliest Jewish mention of this festival is the Mishna (200-300 CE).
The word "Imbolc" is Gaelic from Ireland and it is pronounced "imbolg." (The introduction of the letter C into the alphabet was because K had developed a /g/ sound in some situations. The /c/ sound has remained rather fluid ever since). In Ireland this holiday became associated with Saint Brigid who would have died just before Justinian's proclamation.
Brigid was born, according to tradition, in Fochart, near Dundalk, County Louth, Ireland. She died around 525 in Kildare, Ireland. She was the abbess of Kildare and became one of the patron saints of Ireland alongside Saint Patrick. Irish traditions surrounding this holiday include making a straw doll and doing things around the home fire such as baking and singing poetry.
(January 28, 2023) Ostara is the name given to the Pagan budding festival although due to a complex history Valentine's Day is also mixed in with it. This is a time in the northern hemisphere when buds appear on trees and the grass starts to turn green and grow again. Eggs are the animal equivalent of tree buds.
The earliest historical record of this festival is found earlier and further south in Roman Judea where budding begins earlier. At this time Jerusalem was no longer Jewish. After the final Jewish revolt against the Romans called the Bar Kokhba revolt (132-136) led by Simon bar Kokhba Jews were no longer allowed to enter Jerusalem. The only exception was for the Jewish disaster remembrance day of Tisha B'Av (late July or early August).
In mid February during the ate 300's CE a western pilgrim named Etheria attended its celebration in Jerusalem which the local Christians had connected to Jesus by giving it a cover story that it was celebrating the legend that the new born Jesus was presented to the temple shortly at this time. This festival became the Jewish holiday called the “15th of Shevat” which is its date on the Jewish calendar. This date ranges from January 25 to February 15. This festival is also known as “Tu Bishvat.” It celebrates the first budding of the trees in the Levant. The earliest Jewish mention of this festival is the Mishna (200-300 CE). Tu Bishvat informally became the February 14th Christian Valentine's day during the medieval 1300's.
The word Ostara itself is the modern Pagan spelling of the goddess Eostre (Easter) who is mentioned by the Anglo-Saxon historian Bede (672-735 CE) as giving her name to the month which the English Christians were then trying to change to Paschal month. Here is the quote:
April - Eosturmonath: from Akkadian phrase Ea'u.ŠuTu meaning "Yahu's time month." Since life manifestations are normally associated with women giving birth this became the goddess Ostara which Bede mentioned in several places in his books.
("er" is an Indo-European ending.) The Indo-Europeans seem to have started their new year during the spring equinox which is still seen in the Persian New Year festival called Nowruz.
(updated May 1, 2024) Beltane is a celebration of Spring. This is the time when flowers appear and the buzz of summer begins releasing the feelings of new energy.
Beltane's main symbol today is the maypole which originally was a public pole on which were placed flower garlands. In the Nordic countries in which summer comes late, Maypoles are associated with the Midsummer festival and not with Beltane.
Colorful ribbons replaced garlands in some areas. The earliest picture of a maypole with ribbons dates to a private garden party held in 1759 at Ranelagh Garden in London. This was a for-profit public garden which charged an entrance fee. See it at: https://www.londonpicturearchive.org.uk/view-item?i=6819&WINID=1649681830068
Belltaine seems to be the Akkadian phrase B.LT.N (Bu.LeTu.Nu) meaning "Nourishing.the Splitter's.revelations" where "Splitter" is an epithet for the life connective crescent moon goddess Ayu who edits the life network which brings life powers to earth. She splits of the life network links/channels as needed to maintain the natural order. "Platonic" life forms so triggered by Ayu then need to be revealed/manifested on earth by the god Yahu.
Maypoles were not a phallic symbol. Historian Ronald Hutton who has studied historical Paganism extensively says this:
"There is no historical basis for his claim, and no sign that the people who used maypoles thought that they were phallic" and that "they were not carved to appear so." (Hutton 1996)Hutton, Ronald (1996). Stations of the Sun: A History of the Ritual Year in Britain. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198205708. pages 233-235
Niana Pottamkam (April 29, 2020; Updated April 26, 2024) Walpurgisnacht: The German Night of the Witches explained
(July 5, 2023) This holiday celebrates the power of light and passion which is at its maximum during the summer solstice. This energy is celebrated with community bonfires.
Midsummer is a time of openness and imagination. It is a time to dream as evidenced by Shakespeare's play “A Midsummer’s Night Dream.” This is a time to let the mind run free about life’s future possibilities before time runs out for now the light of day begins to shorten. Don't forget to live for today for the time of life on earth is limited so it should not be wasted.
(July 3, 2022) This is the first of three harvest holidays of the year. Because grains were the fastest growing this holiday typically focuses on the virtue of growth.
The word Lammas comes from the Old English word meaning “loaf mass.” This holiday is celebrated by baking a loaf out of the first grains of the season. Lammas is also celebrated as Lughnassadh after the Celtic god called Lugh.
(February 1, 2024) In the north this is the second of the three harvest holidays in which fruits and berries were harvested. In Italy is is the final harvest which adds summer vegetables to the fruits. The final harvest signals a month of plenty and leisure which is why this became the main market day in Italy. This month of plenty is represented by the cornucopia. Finally, this is also the Fall equinox in which night is balanced with day.
Fruits represent a life balance because trees and bushes must balance their need for survival versus their need to reproduce by committing energy to fruits. This holiday is a good time to focus on various spiritual balance practices.
(July 3, 2022) Samhain is the last of the three harvest holidays. Samhain focuses on the virtue of connection in general and specifically on the connection between life and death. Life cannot exist without death to make room for new living things.
This is the time of year when plants begin to go dormant in preparation for the winter. This was also the time when farm animals (except for free ranging pigs) not saved for breeding or farm work were killed and their meat preserved. This is why spiritually attuned people say that the veil between the living and the dead is thinnest at this time of year.
Samhain was also a time of giving thanks for the sacrifices of food animals as well as for the sacrifices made by one's own ancestors. Due to historical circumstances in the United States, Thanksgiving was shifted to the fourth Thursday of November in an attempt to ignore its religious origins. This artificial split left Halloween as the celebration part of the holiday.
The English word "Halloween" derives from the Akkadian phrase Hu'u-Liwa meaning "astrological-owl love." These owls were omens of change because they influence the flow rate of life-powers through the life network. This owl connection is seen in Middle English of the late 1300's in the word holowen meaning "to make hollow" because owls live in hollowed out tree trunks. The date of Oct. 31 is described as alle halwe eue or all hallow's eve by c. 1300 as in it was an omened day of change. "Hallow" became associated with "good omens" or "holy omens." Consequently the Christian church tried to co-opt Halloween by associating it with the honoring holy persons or saints. Hallow-day for "All-Saints Day" is from 1590s.