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What are the Cross Quarter Days?


Celtic Calendar: What Are Cross-Quarter & Quarter Days?

Some believe that the Celts divided the year into just four major sections: Samhain, Imbolc, Beltane, and Lughnasadh (what we call Cross-Quarter days).

The Little-Known Link between Holidays and Cross Quarter Days

The ancient Celts celebrated a Cross Quarter Day holiday around November 1 called Samhain (pronounced saw-win.) The word Samhain means “summer's end.”

Cross-Quarter Days and The Wheel of the Year - Mabon House

The other four seasonal celebrations (Samhain, Imbolc, Beltane and Lughnasadh) are midpoints within a season, also known as a cross-quarter day. These four days ...

Quarter days - Wikipedia

In British and Irish tradition, the quarter days were the four dates in each year on which servants were hired, school terms started, and rents were due.

Cross Quarter Days - Mabon House

The first Cross Quarter Day of the calendar year is Imbolc, which is celebrated on February 1st in the Northern Hemisphere and August 1st in the ...

Halloween is an astronomy holiday. It's a cross-quarter day - EarthSky

Halloween is an astronomy holiday. It's a day rooted in Earth's orbit around the sun. It's a cross-quarter day and a testament to our ancestors' deep ...

The Celts, the Cross-Quarter Days, and Candy - Astro Daily

They are February 2 nd , may 1 st , August 1 st and October 31 st . More commonly they are known as Groundhog Day, May Day, Lammas, and Halloween, respectively.

Hey Ray: Cross-Quarter Days and Groundhog Day - CBS News

A Cross Quarter Day is the midpoint between two seasons. According to Ohio State University's Astronomy Department, The Celtic Solar Calendar and traditional ...

Happy Cross-Quarter Day! Er…I mean Happy Halloween!

Well, like any two points in time, there is always a day halfway between any given solstice and the equinoxes. These are the cross-quarter days.

What are the Cross Quarter Days? - The Smart Happy Project

The cross quarter days are those that fall equally between a solstice and an equinox. Surprisingly for some these fall on days that we always seem to have ...

Cross-Quarter Celtic Festival Ceremonies - Sli An Chroi

These virtual ceremonies are powerful times to connect as a community and celebrate these sacred days.

Encyclopedia Term: Cross Quarter Days | Llewellyn Worldwide, Ltd.

Four of these are distinctly solar in nature: the two equinoxes, when the amount of daylight and night time are equal, and the solstices, the time of either the ...

Imbolc, Groundhog Day, and Brigantia All Celebrate the Coming ...

On the Gregorian civil calendar and solar calendars, Feb. 1 is a cross-quarter day, which marks the midpoint between a solstice and an equinox.

Imbolc (Imbolg) the Cross Quarter Day - Early February - Newgrange

The astronomically derived date is later than the traditional date of February 1st. Imbolc is often mistakingly said to be on February 1st, St. Brigid's Day.

Equinoxes, solstices and solar cross-quarter days - Hermetic Systems

About two weeks after the Earth reaches the summer solstice it begins to speed up in its 6‑month journey to perihelion. The mean sun method calculates that the ...

Cross-Quarter Celebration Suggestions - Novasutras

Cross-Quarter days happen around the beginning of February, May, August, and November. They mark the midpoints of the four seasons in temperate zones, and are ...

Further Notes on Cross-Quarter Days

The Celtic Solar Calendar and traditional Japanese Luni-Solar Calendars used the cross-quarter days to mark the start of the various seasons, unlike the current ...

Quarter Days and Pagan Fire Festivals - Learn Religions

Cross Quarter Day (or Fire) Festivals · Imbolc: This celebration takes place around February 2 in the Northern Hemisphere (August 2 in the ...

The Sabbats: Cross Quarter Days – Samhain and Beltane

This cross quarter day falls between the autumnal equinox and winter solstice. It is a fire festival and the gateway to the dark half of the year.

Halloween Traditionally Doubles Up As A Cross-Quarter Day

These holidays also happen to have roots in the Celtic solar calendar, which used cross-quarter days in order to mark the start of a new season.