Ideas for Tonight's Solstice
This year June 20th is the longest day and the shortest night. Midsummer, or the summer solstice, has many names and is the second most popular date in human history after the winter solstice.
This means throughout all human history, solstices are the most popular day of celebration for the longest period of time. Only in our modern era have religious holidays like Christmas, Ramadan, and Vesak taken the lead.
As the co-founder of a restored ancient religion, I am learning all I can about how to show gratitude for the Sun on this special day. Here are several of the things done in the past by almost all the ancient people.
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Pagan and European Traditions
1. Celtic and Druidic (British Isles)
Rituals at Stone Circles: Stonehenge aligns with the solstice sunrise, and thousands still gather there today. Ancient Druids likely celebrated the power of the sun, fertility, and the union of Earth and Sky.
Bonfires and Feasting: Fires were lit on hilltops to mimic the sun and harness its strength. People jumped over flames for luck and purification.
2. Germanic and Norse Tribes
Midsummer Blót: A sacrificial festival honoring Freyr, god of fertility and sunshine. Animals, mead, and food were offered.
Wild Celebrations: Included maypole dancing, fertility rituals, and sometimes ritualistic sex in fields to encourage a good harvest.
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Slavic Traditions
Kupala Night (Ivan Kupala Day)
Celebrated near the solstice, this festival involves:
Fire-jumping for purification and love.
Water rituals, where young women floated flower wreaths to divine future relationships.
Search for the magical “fern flower” at midnight — a symbol of spiritual enlightenment and secret knowledge.
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Ancient Mediterranean
Ancient Greece
The solstice marked the start of the new year in some city-states.
Just before it, they celebrated Kronia, honoring Cronus, the god of the Golden Age — a brief return to egalitarianism: slaves and masters ate together.
Ancient Rome
Summer solstice rituals merged into festivals like Vestalia, honoring Vesta, goddess of the hearth and home. Women were central to this celebration.
The solstice was a time to purify temples and homes, seeking domestic harmony.
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Indigenous North American Traditions
Plains Tribes (Lakota, Sioux, etc.)
Held Sun Dance ceremonies, often around the solstice. These intense rituals included:
Dancing, fasting, piercing, and enduring pain to gain visions or blessings for the community.
It centered on sacrifice, renewal, and cosmic alignment.
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Mesoamerican Civilizations
Maya and Aztecs
Their temples (e.g., at Chichen Itza) are aligned to solar events.
Solstices were associated with agricultural calendars, divine kingship, and cosmic order.
Ceremonies included offerings, dances, and sometimes blood sacrifice to honor the sun god (e.g., Huitzilopochtli for the Aztecs).
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Hindu and Buddhist Traditions
India
While not tied directly to the solstice in the same calendrical sense, summer festivals like Ratha Yatra (chariot festival of Jagannath) occur around this time.
The modern International Day of Yoga (June 21) is inspired by ancient traditions of sun salutation (Surya Namaskar), recognizing the sun as a source of spiritual energy.
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Ancient Egypt
Solstice marked the approach of the Nile’s annual flooding, essential for agriculture.
Celebrated as part of the renewal cycle associated with Ra, the Sun god.
It also aligned with the heliacal rising of Sirius, which heralded the new year.
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Common Themes Around the World
Sun Worship: Many rituals honored solar deities — Ra, Helios, Amaterasu, Inti, etc.
Fertility and Agriculture: With crops ripening, the solstice was a midpoint check-in on the growing season.
Fire and Water Rituals: Fire = sun’s energy. Water = fertility, life. Many festivals used both.
Connection to the Divine: The solstice was seen as a thin place — a time when the human and spirit worlds were closer.
I am going to try to do a few of these each year. Tonights going to be lots of fires, and maybe we jump a few of them. Not sure what thethe sex rituals are about, but I plan to practice those too.
Happy Solstice and 4:20
Scott X