Facts About May Day That You May Not Know

May Day has had a long and diverse history. Much before it came to be associated with labour rights, 1 May was a day of celebration in Europe

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May Day has had a long and diverse history. Much before it came to be associated with labour rights, 1 May was a day of celebration in Europe

1. The Celts in the British Isles believed 1 May to be one of the most auspicious days. The May Day festival, also called Beltane, was celebrated to mark the beginning of summer. One of the mainstays of the festival was the fire that was lit to symbolize the return of life and fertility.

2. The Romans had their own five-day celebration called Floralia, worshipping the goddess of flowers, Flora. Generally held between 20 April and 2 May, the rituals were combined with the earlier Beltane celebrations, when they conquered the British Isles.

3. The maypole festivities, another celebration to mark the onset of summer, were also held in and around 1 May in some parts of Europe. The tradition, which can be traced back to the medieval period, involved setting up a tall wooden pole in a forested area. People, especially villagers from neighbouring areas, would gather around the pole, decked up in bright clothes and colourful streamers, and dance merrily.

A Maypole celebration in mid 19th century. (Image courtesy New York Public Library)

4. There’s no connection between May Day and “Mayday!” History has it that the distress call was coined by an airport radio officer who felt that the word resembled m’aider, a short form of the French term venez m’aider, which means ‘come and help me’.

5. May Day came to be associated with labour rights only in the 19th century in the USA when men, women and children started bearing the brunt of the reckless Industrial Revolution.

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