In some cultures, including ancient Irish and East Asian cultures, the cross-quarter days mark the beginning of each season (see traditional seasons). In others, including the modern United States', the cross-quarter days mark the middle of each season (see astronomical seasons).
- 5-10 November: Samhain, 立冬 (lìdōng)
- 2-7 February: Imbolc, 立春 (lìchūn)
- 4-10 May: Beltane, 立夏 (lìxià)
- 3-10 August: Lughnasadh, 立秋 (lìqiū)
Neo-paganism
Together with the solstices and equinoxes (Yule, Ostara, Midsummer, and Mabon), these form the eight solar holidays in the neopagan wheel of the year. They are often celebrated on the evening before the listed date, since traditionally the new day was considered to begin at sunset rather than at midnight.
| Festival name | Date | Sun's Position |
|---|---|---|
| Samhain | 1 Nov (alt. 5-10 Nov) | ≈ 15° ♏ |
| Imbolc | 2 Feb (alt. 2-7 Feb) | ≈ 15° ♒ |
| Beltane | 1 May (alt. 4-10 May) | ≈ 15° ♉ |
| Lughnasadh | 1 Aug (alt. 3-10 Aug) | ≈ 15° ♌ |
There are Christian and secular holidays that correspond roughly with each of these four, and some argue that historically they originated as adaptations of the pagan holidays, although the matter is not agreed upon. The corresponding holidays are:
- St.Brigids Day (1 Feb), Groundhog Day (2 Feb), and Candlemas (2 or 15 Feb)
- Walpurgis Night (30 Apr) and May Day (1 May)
- Lammas (1 Aug)
- Halloween (31 Oct), All Saints (1 Nov), and All Souls' Day (2 Nov)
Other Names
The cross quarter days are referred to by some as “The Quatcruses”.
For example:
Halloween is based on the tradition of celebrating the Autumn/Winter Quatcrus, which nowadays happens around the November 7th.
Beltane occurs on or very near the Spring/Summer Quatcrus.
These examples refer only to the northern hemisphere. A better usage could be: “The November Quatcrus” and “The May Quatcrus” respectively.
See also
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Last updated on Wednesday March 12, 2008 at 20:05:06 PDT (GMT -0700)
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