Difference between revisions of "Midsummer"

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The festival is primarily a new Celtic fire festivity, [http://midsummerr.co.uk midsummer] representing the centre of summer, along with the shortening of the days on their own gradual goal to winter months. Midsummer is usually celebrated in either the particular 23rd or even 24th associated with June, although longest day actually falls on the Twenty-first of July. The importance of your day to our ancestors can be followed back multitudes of decades, and many gemstone circles as well as other ancient monuments are aligned on the sunrise about Midsummer's Day. By far the most famous positioning is that with Stonehenge, where the sun rises within the heel rock, framed from the giant trilithons upon Midsummer morning.
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The festival is primarily a new Celtic fire festival, [http://midsummerr.co.uk Midsummer] representing the center of summer, and also the shortening from the days on their own gradual goal to winter months. Midsummer is typically celebrated about either the 23rd or perhaps 24th regarding June, although the longest day time actually falls on the 21st of June. The importance of the afternoon to our ancestors can be followed back many thousands of a long time, and many gemstone circles and also other ancient monuments tend to be aligned to the sunrise on Midsummer's Day. By far the most famous position is that at Stonehenge, where the sun rises over the heel natural stone, framed by the giant trilithons upon Midsummer morning.

Latest revision as of 09:44, 2 August 2013

The festival is primarily a new Celtic fire festival, Midsummer representing the center of summer, and also the shortening from the days on their own gradual goal to winter months. Midsummer is typically celebrated about either the 23rd or perhaps 24th regarding June, although the longest day time actually falls on the 21st of June. The importance of the afternoon to our ancestors can be followed back many thousands of a long time, and many gemstone circles and also other ancient monuments tend to be aligned to the sunrise on Midsummer's Day. By far the most famous position is that at Stonehenge, where the sun rises over the heel natural stone, framed by the giant trilithons upon Midsummer morning.