May Queen
The May Queen or Queen of May is a word which has two different but related meanings. It can refer to either a mythical figure or to a holiday personification.
Mythology
changeThe May Queen is also known as The Maiden, the goddess of spring, flower bride, queen of the faeries, and the lady of the flowers. The May Queen is a symbol of the stillness of nature around which everything revolves. She stands for purity, strength and the potential for growth, as the plants grow in May. She is one of many personifications of the energy of the earth.
She was once also known as Maid Marian in the medieval plays of Robin Hood and of the May Games - she is the young village girl, crowned with blossom, attended by children with garlands and white dresses. Some folklorists have drawn parallels between her and Maia, the Roman Goddess of Springtime, of Growth and Increase whose very name may be the root of "May".
Festivals
changeThe May Queen is a girl (usually a teenage girl from a specific school year) who is selected to ride or walk at the front of a parade for May Day celebrations. She wears a white gown to symbolise purity and usually a tiara or crown. Her duty is to begin the May Day celebrations. She is generally crowned by flowers and makes a speech before the dancing begins. Certain age groups dance round a May pole celebrating youth and the spring time.
An Elizabethan account
changeIn 1557, a diarist called Henry Machyn wrote:
"The xxx day of May was a goly May-gam in Fanch-chyrchestrett with drumes and gunes and pykes, and ix wordes dyd ryd; and thay had speches evere man, and the morris dansse and the sauden, and a elevant with the castyll, and the sauden and yonge morens with targattes and darttes, and the lord and the lade of the Maye".
Translation: On the 30th May was a jolly May-game in Fenchurch Street (London) with drums and guns and pikes, The Nine Worthies did ride; and they all had speeches, and the morris dance and sultan and a elephant with a castle (saddle in the shape of a castle) and the sultan and young moors with shields and arrows, and the lord and lady of the May".[1]
Maintaining the tradition
changeMany areas keep this tradition alive today, most notably the Brentham Garden Suburb, England which hosts it annually. This has the record of the oldest unbroken tradition although the May Queen of All London Festival at Hayes Common in Bromley has also been going a long time. A May queen is selected from a group of 13 upwards girls by the young dancers. She returns the next year to crown the new May Queen and stays in the procession.
A May Day celebration held annually in New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada isthe longest running May Day celebration of its kind in the British Commonwealth. This May Day celebration began in 1870. Archival film footage of New Westminster's May Day celebrations from 1932-1962 can be seen online at Quest for the Queens Archived 2007-03-19 at the Wayback Machine
Cultural references to the May Queen
change- A May Queen is mentioned in the Led Zeppelin song "Stairway to Heaven".
- May Queen is the name of a ketch-rigged trading vessel built in 1867 at Franklin, Tasmania. She had a 106-year working life and is the oldest boat of her type afloat in the world. She is on the International Register of Significant Ships.
- "May Queen" is the title of a song song on singer-songwriter Liz Phair's second album Whip-Smart.
- "May Queen" is the title of a song by Inkubus Sukkubus.
- "The May Queen" is the title of an anthology Archived 2007-08-14 at the Wayback Machine of women's writings about being in their thirties edited by Andrea N. Richesin (Tarcher/2006).
- The naming of a "Queen of May," including the idea that she would die at the end of the festivities, is a plot device in an episode of BBC's Doctor Who (Series 21) titled "The Awakening" (1984).
- May Queen is a Richard Thompson song on the Still album.
Related pages
changeReferences
change- ↑ Nichols, J.G. (Ed). (1848). The Diary of Henry Machyn: Citizen and Merchant-Taylor of London (1550-1563) Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved February 11, 2007.