
Spirits of Meath Halloween Festival 2011
Meath - Where Halloween Began!
Spirits of Meath Halloween Festival All around County Meath from
21st October - 6th November 2011
County Meath - uniquely where it all began - is bringing you Ireland's biggest and most electrifying Halloween Festival!!
Join us to celebrate the ancient festival of Samhain with over 40 events taking place over a ten day period.
Welcome to Meath, 'Home of Halloween' - Fun by Day, Frights by Night all over the County!
From Haunted Hills to Eerie Graveyards; Halloween Night Markets to Friendly Witches & Spooks and Spells; Pucas & Piseogs to Celtic Spirit Pageants - our Halloween Festival will delight & fright equally!
Download the Spirits of Meath Halloween Festival Brochure
More information on Spirits of Meath Halloween Festival 2011
Contact Details:
Meath Tourism T: +353 46 909 7060 E: info@meathtourism.ie W: www.meathtourism.ie
History of Halloween in Meath
Hill of Ward (Tlachtga), County Meath - The Birthplace of Halloween
Samhain, the ancient Celtic Festival that we now call Halloween, originated here in Co. Meath more than 2,000 years ago. Samhain marks the end of the old Celtic Year and the beginning of the New Year. The Celts believed that this was a time of transition, when the veil between our world and the next came down, and the spirits of all who had died since the last Oíche Shamhna (Night of Samhain) moved on to the next life.
One of the main spiritual centres of the ancient Celts was located on top of the hill of Tlachtga, now called the Hill of Ward, near Athboy, Co. Meath. The druids felt that this world and the otherworld were closest at Tlachtga and it was here that the festival of Samhain, or Halloween, was started. The old year’s fires were extinguished and, after sunset, the ceremonial New Year Samhain fire was lit here. Torches were lit from this sacred fire and carried to seven other hills around the county including Tara and Loughcrew, and then on to light up the whole countryside.
Today, the old Celtic ceremony at Tlachtga has been revived and we mix the ancient past and the twenty-first century with a re-enactment of the Celtic celebration starting with a torchlit procession from the Fair Green in Athboy, Co. Meath to the top of the Hill of Tlachtga, at 7pm on October 31st each year.
All offers & events are subject to change and availability. Please contact the event provider directly to book and quote Meath Tourism. Meath Tourism is a promotional company and does not accept responsibility for any of the events or offers.
