The Athanor by Wynn Sigel

  • Home
  • Shop
    • Antique & Vintage
    • Apothecary Shop
    • Books
    • Clothing & Accessories
    • Crafted Items
    • Curiosities & Oddities
    • Fine Art
    • Home Deco
    • Jewellery
    • Le Boudoir
    • Macabre
    • Magnetism
    • Natural History
    • Pet Healing
    • Photography & Print
    • Place's Purification & Blessing
    • Religious & Sacred
    • Siberian Shamanism >
      • Going Further To Know A Little Bit More About Shamanism
    • Tarot Reading
    • The Witch's Corner
    • Tribal
  • Events
  • About
  • Take Part
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Shop
    • Antique & Vintage
    • Apothecary Shop
    • Books
    • Clothing & Accessories
    • Crafted Items
    • Curiosities & Oddities
    • Fine Art
    • Home Deco
    • Jewellery
    • Le Boudoir
    • Macabre
    • Magnetism
    • Natural History
    • Pet Healing
    • Photography & Print
    • Place's Purification & Blessing
    • Religious & Sacred
    • Siberian Shamanism >
      • Going Further To Know A Little Bit More About Shamanism
    • Tarot Reading
    • The Witch's Corner
    • Tribal
  • Events
  • About
  • Take Part
  • Blog
  • Contact
Image

Sabbats and Esbats

10/6/2021

0 Comments

 
Throughout the year, witches and sorcerers engage in celebrations, and some of them are more important than others. These celebrations, reputed to be conducive to the practice of rituals, bear the name of Sabbats, when the cult is dedicated to the Sun, and Esbats, when it is dedicated to the Moon.

Sabbats
There are eight of them. Four are called minors and mark the entry into the four seasons. They are related to astronomical events and the corresponding dates therefore vary slightly to one or two days, from one year to the next: Yule, winter solstice ; Ostara, spring equinox ; Litha, summer solstice and Mabon, autumn equinox.
The four called major Sabbats are not related to astronomical events and it is over time that tradition has linked them to calendar dates: Samhain, 1st November, date considered as the first day of the new year ; Imbolc, 1st February ; Beltane, 1st May and Lugnasad, 1st August.

Esbats
They are celebrated on the Full Moon nights and are therefore 12 or 13 a year. Here are some of their denominations:
  • November: snow, beaver, mourning, trees moon
  • December: oak, cold, long nights moon
  • January: wolf, winter moon
  • February: storm, death, invigorating moon
  • March: chaste, worm, seeds moon
  • April: egg, grass, winds moon
  • May: hare, flowers, plantations moon
  • June: pink, raspberry, honey, lovers moon
  • July: meadow, mead, blessings, luck, thunder, lightning moon
  • August: red, must, corn moon
  • September: harvest, barley, hunter moon
  • October: blood, fall of leaves moon
When there is a 13th moon, it means when a second Full Moon is in the same calendar month, it bears the name of Blue Moon, witches, ice or goals moon.

In future articles, I will return in more detail on each Sabbat and Esbat.
0 Comments

Your comment will be posted after it is approved.


Leave a Reply.

    Magic Making
    Since Immemorial Times

    ARCHIVES

    May 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021

    Categories

    All
    Astrology
    Core Shamanism
    Natural Health
    Paganism
    Personal Growth
    Poetry
    Shamanism
    Tarot And Oracles

    RSS Feed

Privacy Policy / Terms & Conditions
© 2017-2022  Wynn Sigel Ltd - © 2012-2022  strannikpps.com
All Rights Reserved - We are registered with the UK’s data protection regulator