Imbolc has always lived in that quiet hinge between seasons—the moment when winter hasn’t fully let go, but the land has already begun its slow inhale toward spring. If you’ve ever stepped outside on ...
A performer dressed as the Green Man takes part in the biennial Imbolc Celtic fire festival, to celebrate the end of Winter and the coming of Spring, in Marsden, northern England on February 6, 2016.
New beginnings and the approach of spring feature in Imbolc, a traditional Gaelic festival. Marking the halfway point between the winter solstice and spring equinox, the annual celebration falls on ...
The days are starting to get a little longer again and that's good news for farmers. At the O'Brien Farm in St. John's over the weekend, people gathered to celebrate Imbolc — a Celtic holiday that ...
In the last centuries BC, the Celtic peoples were ruled by a priestly class: the Druids. The Druids are first mentioned in the writings of Julius Caesar, who around 50 BC wrote that Druidism ...
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. − Happy Imbolc! Never heard of this Gaelic holiday? Whether you're celebrating it for the first time this year or keeping up an old family tradition, here's more information on ...
Imbolc is celebrated by pagans to mark the end of winters and beginning of springs. The image shows performers taking part in the biennial Imbolc Celtic fire festival in Marsden, northern England, Feb ...
(RNS) — Brigid means many things to many people. To Catholics, she’s St. Brigid of Kildare, one of the patron saints of Ireland. To voudoun practitioners, she’s Maman Brigitte. To Wiccans and many ...
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