Beltane Fire Festival

Annual participatory arts event and ritual in Edinburgh

Beltane Fire Festival Red Men

Beltane Fire Festival is an annual participatory arts event and ritual, held on 30 April on Calton Hill in Edinburgh.

Historical background

The modern Beltane Fire Festival is inspired by the ancient Gaelic festival of Beltane which began on the evening before 1 May and marked the beginning of summer.[1][2][3] The modern festival was started in 1988 by a small group of enthusiasts including the musical collective Test Dept, with academic support from the School of Scottish Studies at the University of Edinburgh. Since then the festival has grown, and now involves over 300 voluntary collaborators and performers with available tickets often selling out.

While the festival draws on a variety of historical, mythological and literary influences, the organisers do not claim it to be anything other than a modern celebration of Beltane, evolving with its participants.[4]

Modern festival

Fire festival dancers, 2006

The current Beltane was started in 1988 by a small group of enthusiasts including Angus Farquhar of the musical collective Test Dept., choreographer Lindsay John, and dancers from Laban, as well as the Gaelic ethnologist Margaret Bennett (writer) and other academics from the School of Scottish Studies at the University of Edinburgh. The event was intended as a celebration of traditional rituals as a local manifestation of an international spirit. Originally intended to take place on Arthur's Seat, the home of earlier Edinburgh Beltane celebrations, for practical reasons the location was moved to Calton Hill. Choreography, iconography and performance were moulded by the originators' research into historical accounts of Beltane and their own influences (e.g. Test Department's drumming, Trinidadian carnival, and ritual dance and performance).

The Beltane Fire Society, a registered charity which runs the festival, is managed by a democratically elected voluntary committee, and all the performers are volunteers who either join by word of mouth or by attending one of the advertised open meetings held early in the year. Senior performers and artists in the society help others through workshops with aspects of event production, prop construction, character performance techniques, team building, percussion skills and the health and safety considerations involved. The society has also held fundraising art and music events and has held a 'mini-Beltane' at a local AIDS Hospice, Milestone House.

As a community event, each year the performance has evolved as new people bring their own influences and directions. The core narrative remains by and large the same though additional elements have been added over time for theatrical, ritual, and practical reasons. Originally an event with a core of a dozen performers and a few hundred audience, the event has grown to several hundred performers and over ten thousand audience. Key characters within the performance are maintained, though reinterpreted by their performers, and additional participants incorporated each year.

Originally, the festival was free and only lightly stewarded; however, as the event has grown in popularity, due to the capacity of the hill, funding requirements, and Edinburgh Council requests, the festival has in recent years[when?] moved to being a ticketed event.

Gallery of Beltane photographs

  • The need-fire is created, and from it the torches lit
    The need-fire is created, and from it the torches lit
  • The May Queen enters with her handmaidens
    The May Queen enters with her handmaidens
  • The procession passes under Fire Arch
    The procession passes under Fire Arch
  • The May Queen leads the procession
    The May Queen leads the procession
  • The White Women march on through the crowds
    The White Women march on through the crowds
  • The burning Phoenix and fire-twirling sprites
    The burning Phoenix and fire-twirling sprites
  • The Reds
    The Reds
  • The Bonfire lit to welcome the Beltane morning with a ritual dancer
    The Bonfire lit to welcome the Beltane morning with a ritual dancer

References

  1. ^ MacKillop, James (1998) A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology. Oxford, Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-280120-1 pp. 39, 400-402, 421
  2. ^ Dames, Michael (1992) Mythic Ireland. London, Thames & Hudson ISBN 0-500-27872-5. pp. 206-10
  3. ^ McNeill, F. Marian (1959) The Silver Bough, Vol. 2. William MacLellan, Glasgow ISBN 0-85335-162-7 pp. 56
  4. ^ Beltane Fire Society - Official event website

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edinburgh Beltane Festival.
  • Beltane Fire Society - The official BFS website and blog
  • Introduction to Beltane and interview with Festival "Scribe" Tanya
  • Azure Feast - A musical suite inspired by the Beltane Fire
  • The Beltane Festival revealed - bbc.co.uk
  • Behind the pomp of Beltane Festival - bbc.co.uk
  • Edinburgh Festival Guide Beltane Fire Festival Listing