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The Lammas Fair, or as Mr. John
McAuley wrote in his famous song ‘ the Oul' Lammas Fair’,
takes place on the last Monday and Tuesday in August. The town
also had a vibrant weekly market day which was founded in 1612,
though it is
virtually non existent today. The Lammas Fair is
famed for having an 'unbroken history', having taken place
annually for the past 300 years but it origins go back to
the legends and myths of Ireland.
The
name of Lammas originated from the 'Feast of Lughnasadh'
or Lugh (Lu) and comes from one of the legends of Ireland -
one interpretation and there are as many as there are ways of
spelling the name, is as follows:-
Lugh was in legend a Sun God who had a mortal foster mother
called Tailtiu, who in turn was a queen or princess in the
firbolgs. The firbolgs (Meaning of the word is
‘Men of Bags’)
were early inhabitants of Ireland and are said to have come from
Greece or Spain - after settling in that country they were put
into servitude and forced to carry soil from the fertile plains
to the higher ground. To do this they devised leather bags and
became known as the ‘men of bags’ (firbolgs), eventually they
became tired of this servitude and made coracles or boats from
their leather bags and set sail -
arriving in Ireland.
They lived here until
invaded and ruled by the people of Dana (Tuatha de Danna). The
Dana forced Tailtiu to clear a large area of woodland for the
planting of grain and she died of exhaustion in the process. She
was buried under a great mound which was called the ‘Hill of
Tailtiu’ and Lugh instructed that each year a festival be held
to commemorate his foster mother’s death, where there should be
games and the feasting on the first fruits of the harvest. We
find references in Ireland to the ‘Tailthiu Games’ and the
‘Games of Lugh’. Perhaps we can surmise that the Gillaspach or
Gallaspick,
son of Colla MacDonnell (who resided at Kenbane Castle during the
fourteenth century)and who was
killed fighting a
bull in ‘games’ in Ballycastle may have been taking part in the
Lammas Fair. For the celebration of ‘Lu’
became known for games of athletic abilities too.
It is believed
that the tradition of the festival of Lugh expanded into events
and celebration through many cultures, we find the Lammas in
Saxon times, in the West Indies and today we can find
Lammas Fairs being celebrated throughout the world. With the
arrival of Christianity to Ireland and its dominance as a faith,
we find the festival of Lugh changing and adopting more
Christian symbolisms, loaves of bread baked from the first harvest
grain are placed on the church altar. The ‘Christianised’ name
for the festival of Lugh becomes
Lammas which means ‘loaf mass’.
In medieval times we find references to the Lammastide, when
craft fairs and pageants would be held. It is also thought to
have been the time when Saint Catherine was celebrated, who gave
rise to the term‘ The Catherine Wheel’. This came from Pagan
worship when a
wagon wheel would be tarred, taken to the top of a hill, set on
fire and rolled down, symbolizing the
decline of the Sun God ( Autumn Equinox). It is well known that
the Catholic Church were never too comfortable with Saint
Catherine. Feeling that she bordered too much on the side of
myth, mystics and the old beliefs, they changed
her day of celebration frequently and also at one point tried to
de–saint her.
Today’s Lammas is a time of stalls,
buying and selling, traditional music and horse trading, a
local tradition exists of eating yellow candy called ‘Yellow
Man’ and eating ‘Dulse’, a reddish sea weed of the variety
‘Palmaria palmata’ which has been eaten and used in medicine for
centuries in Ireland. The ‘Oul Lammas Fair’ attracts people in
their thousands from all over the world and is well worth a
visit if your in the vicinity.
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