Online Encyclopedia

MAY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 931 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MAY  , the fifth

month of our
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modern
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year, the third of the old
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Roman
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calendar . The origin of the name is disputed; the derivation from
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Maia, the
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mother of Mercury, to whom the Romans were accustomed to sacrifice on the first day of this month, is usually accepted . The ancient Romans used on May Day to go in procession to the grotto of
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Egeria . From the 28th of
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April to the 2nd of May was kept the festival in honour of
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Flora, goddess of flowers . By the Romans the month was regarded as unlucky for marriages, owing to the celebration on the 9th, nth and 13th of the Lemuria, the festival of the unhappy dead . This superstition has survived to the
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present day . In
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medieval and Tudor England, May Day was a
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great public
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holiday . All classes of the
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people, young and old alike, were up with the dawn, and went "a-Maying" in the woods . Branches of trees and flowers were borne back in triumph to the towns and villages, the centre of the procession being occupied by those who shouldered the maypole, glorious with
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ribbons and wreaths . The maypole was usually of birch, and set up for the day only; but in
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London and the larger towns the poles were of durable wood and permanently erected . They were
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special eyesores to the Puritans . John Stubbes in his Anatomy of Abuses (1583) speaks of them as those " stinckyng idols," about which the people " leape and daunce, as the
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heathen did." Maypoles were forbidden by the parliament in 1644, but came once more into favour at the Restoration; the last to be erected in London being that set up in 1661 .

This

pole, which was of cedar, 134 ft. high, was set up by twelve
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British sailors under the
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personal supervision of James II., then duke of York and lord high
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admiral, in the Strand on or about the site of the present church of St Mary's-in-the-Strand . Taken down in 1717, it was conveyed to
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Wanstead Park in Essex, where it was fixed by
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Sir Isaac Newton as
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part of the support of a large
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telescope, presented to the Royal Society by a French astronomer . For an account of the May Day survivals in rural England see P . H . Ditchfield, Old
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English Customs extant at Present Times (1897) .

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