Lughnasa, one of the most well-known ancient Gaelic festivals, marks the beginning of the harvest season. Celebrated on August 1st, this festival is named after Lugh, the king of the Tuatha Dé Danann, and has deep roots in Ireland’s agricultural and cultural traditions. This ancient Gaelic festival is brought to life in Brian Friel’s play, DANCING AT LUGHNASA, now on in the Gate Theatre until September 21st. As the Mundy sisters dance in a fleeting moment of freedom, the play captures the enduring spirit of Lughnasa in Irish culture.
Lughnasa, meaning “the gathering of Lugh,” is one of the four major Gaelic seasonal festivals, alongside Samhain, Imbolc, and Beltane. It signifies the start of the Irish harvest season and the beginning of the month of Lúnasa. In some mythology, the festival was celebrated in honor of Lugh’s mother, the goddess of agriculture, who died after preparing the plains of Ireland for farming.
In the traditional festival, the Irish celebrated and honoured Lughnasa through many traditions. For example, they would cut the first of their corn, and offer the harvest to the deity, by burying it in a high place. The whole community would partake in a meal featuring new food and bilberries, and there would be a sacrifice of a sacred bull, followed by a feast and rituals involving the bull. Symbolic dances and battles, installations of carved stone heads, and theatrical performances depicting mythological stories were all a part of the festival. The celebrations typically spanned three days.
Today, Lughnasa’s legacy is visible in various events, festivals and stories. Several modern events trace their origins to Lughnasa, including the Puck Fair and the Croagh Patrick pilgrimage on Reek Sunday, some folklorists also suggest that many aspects of the Irish Patron Saint, Saint Patrick, legends may derive from folklore about Lugh. In County Clare, the Craggaunowen open-air museum hosts an annual Lughnasa Festival, where actors demonstrate elements of daily life in Gaelic Ireland, bringing the history to life for modern audiences.