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Easter the Irish way - some traditional tips for the Spring holiday

The old customs of one of Ireland's most important holidays


Easter the Irish way
Easter the Irish way
Photo by LittleShamrocks.com

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Apart from Christmas and St. Patrick's Day, Easter is the most important religious holiday in Ireland's calendar.

Preparation for Easter Sunday starts at the beginning of Lent and culminates with a gathering of family and friends and everyone's favorite food, usually chocolates or whatever other vice was given up for the Lenten period, is eaten.

Although many of the older traditions remain in place, some of them have not. Here are some of the ancient Irish Easter traditions.

Before Easter

Clean house thoroughly inside and out - whitewash applied.

Get new clothes.

On Good Friday

Fast - this is the most serious day of fasting from the Lenten calendar. Some devoutly Catholic will not eat until midday and even then will only have a piece of bread and three sips of water, honoring the Holy Trinity.

Cut your hair to prevent headaches during the year and trim your fingers and toe nails.

Take off your shoes when entering a church.

Remain quiet from noon until 3pm.

Visit holy wells and graveyards. All water from holy wells have curative properties on Good Friday.

Plant a small amount of crop seeds to bring a blessing on all your crops.

A child born on Good Friday and baptized on Easter Sunday will have the gift of healing. It was thought that boys born and baptized on these days should enter the ministry. Those who die on Good Friday go straight to heaven.                   

Chicken's eggs laid on Good Friday are marked with a cross. Each member of the household eats one Easter Sunday. And chicks hatched on Good Friday will be healthy.

Easter Saturday

Have holy water blessed. Drink three sips for good luck and sprinkle everything for good luck.

Bring the cinders from the fire to be blessed.

During Lent Catholics would abstain from any red meat eating only fish. On Easter Saturday a tradition developed of having a mock funeral for a herring.

Easter Sunday

Gather your family and go to a hilltop to see the sunrise. Catholics believed that this is the Savior rising from his grave.

Alternatively, view the reflection of the sun in a bucket of water and then move it so the sun appears to dance.

Celebrate with eggs as a signifier of life. Either color them or give them as gifts.

Have a Cludog / Cluideog. This is a ritual where children collect the eggs and cook them with other food in a structure at the edge of the farm. Essentially it's roasted eggs.

Merrymakers dressed in brightly colored rags would go from place to place singing and dancing and  demanding the eggs of Easter.

Have a feast with your family. Traditionally, leek soup and roast lamb was served.

Have a cake dance. The best dancer gets the prize of a cake.


See more: Irish Roots , Irish Traditions
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9 Comments

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I do some of them .....
jasersagain----- Well said, a BIG AMEN !!
Easter Sunday is when every Irish man who gave up Guiness for lent, goes to local to catch up. The Pubs order extra barrels.
@ borefield, Easter Monday is not called Irish Independence Day, though it was on Easter Monday morning, 24th April in 1916 that Irish Patriots proclaimed Independence for the whole of Ireland. Easter Monday is a Bank Holiday – banks, schools and most businesses and industries stay shut that day - not to be confused with a Public Holiday. Bank Holidays occur on St. Patrick’s Day, Easter Monday, 1st Monday in August, Christmas Day and St. Stephen’s Day – four of which were introduced by the British Banking Industry around 1835 while Britain still ruled Ireland. St. Patrick’s Day only became a Bank Holiday specifically in Ireland in 1903. Public Holidays occur on New Year’s Day Jan 1st, on the 1st Mondays in May and June (replacing the moveable Whit Monday)and the last Monday in October – these were introduced by the Irish Govt only about 18 yrs ago. Good Friday is neither a Bank Holiday nor a Public Holiday but most businesses shut down that day too. In Ireland in years gone by, industry worked until 12 noon on Good Friday (the hour being the start of Christ’s Agony on the Cross) and shut down for the rest of the day. Shops used to close between 12 noon and 3pm (the hour of Christ’s death on the Cross) to allow workers to attend the Stations of the Cross in their parish churches and opened again after 3pm. Irish Pubs are shut only on 2 days of the year – Christmas Day and Good Friday. There’ll be many a thirsty man and woman around Ireland tomorrow!
I am definitely a Jackeen, a real true blue Dubliner... I never in my life ever heard of any of these traditions at Easter, so they must be culchie ones or pagan ones that luxefaire would indulge in. Bernie Malone is way off track writing “Apart from Christmas and St. Patrick’s Day, Easter is the most important religious holiday”. Wrong, wrong, wrong… Easter is THE most important religious feast day, not holiday, in Ireland and indeed throughout the whole Christian world. We celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead… the single most momentous event that showed he was the Son of God and why we should all be followers of Him, even blaspemous pagans like luxefaire and our oul regular Portia777 should wake up to that.
Ishtar, Astarte, Ostarre, Esther, Easter. Goddess Bless America. Perhaps some day the cult of the crucified jew and its ugly violent superstitious symbolism will be replaced with adherence to ways nurturing and healing and productive and full of goodness, versus war and all its stinking corpses. All male deities are the ba'al, in one form or another. Honor the Mother on her day, and toss all the bloodshed and hate to the wayside.
Bythebay, I disagree with you. Just spoke to some of my relatives in Ireland this morning, many are participating in Holy Thursday services tonight, like the washing of the feet. True, religion is not as devout as it once was but, that is true all over, not just in Ireland. As for St. Patrick's day celebrations, not all of it is a drink fest. You seem to be a very unhappy, cynical and miserable person. Look at the glass have full, not half empty as you seem to be. Hope life gets better for you.,
BytheBay, Many Irish in America, at any rate, dis used to clean house for Easter and did serve lamb on Easter day (along with ham and turkey if it's big family get-together). Some still go to church. The parents normally bought a big Easter basket of candy and chocolate eggs and chocolate and candy bunnies for the kids. There was often a chocolate cross in the basket too, decorated with sugar lilies and other flowers. The lamb was definitely the big hit with the adults, the chocolate and painted eggs with the kids.
Is Easter Monday still the official Irish Independence Day holiday, or has that changed?
 




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