List of Neo-Pagan festivals and events
Events organized for, or largely attended by, members of Neopagan spiritual paths: often planned around the Wheel of the Year or coinciding with adjacent phases of the Moon.
Festivals
- Between The Worlds Conference, every several years since 1996 — official site
- CAW-Con, organized by Church of All Worlds
- Council of Magickal Arts
- Faerieworlds
- A Feast of Lights[1] — official site
- Fires Rising — official site
- Forestdance — official site
- Free Spirit Gathering
- Gathering of All Paths[1]
- Hawkfest Drum and Dance Gathering[1]
- Heartland Pagan Festival, ongoing since 1986
- Hekate's Sickle Festival, ongoing since 1989
- Horn and Honey — official site
- Kaleidoscope Gathering, ongoing since 1989 — official site
- Mėnuo Juodaragis,[2] ongoing since 1995
- PaganiCon[1] — official site
- Pagan Pride Day, held annually at many locations
- Pagan Spirit Gathering, ongoing since 1980
- PanGaia Festival[1] — official site
- Pan Pagan Festival, ongoing since 1976
- Phoenix Phyre,[1] ongoing since 1992 — official site
- Rites of Spring, ongoing since 1979 — official site
- Sacred Space Conference — official site
- Spring Mysteries Festival, ongoing since 1986
- St. Louis Pagan Picnic, ongoing since 1992 — official site
- Sirius Rising, ongoing since 1994 — official site
- SpiritFire[1] — official site
- Starwood Festival, ongoing since 1981
- Wellspring Gathering
Host locations and groups
- Brushwood Folklore Center in Sherman, New York
- Camp Midian in Springville, Indiana
- Earth Spirit organization in Williamsburg, Massachusetts
- Four Quarters Interfaith Sanctuary in Artemas, Pennsylvania
- Raven's Knoll near Eganville, Ontario
- Roxanna near Auburn, Alabama
- Turtle Hill Events in Darlington, Maryland
See also
- Pagan festivals in the United States
- Lists of festivals – list articles on Wikipedia
- List of modern Pagan temples
References
- "7 of the Very Best New Age Gatherings for America's Growing Pagan Community". The Vacation Times. 2018-08-08. Retrieved 2019-03-29.
- Bousfield, Jonathan (2004). The Rough Guide to the Baltic States. Rough Guides. p. 53. ISBN 978-18-582-8840-6.
Mėnuo Juodaragis ... weekend-long neo-pagan festival of folk, metal and electronica held in a different countryside location each year.
- "Reflections on the last PantheaCon". The Wild Hunt. 2020-02-21. Retrieved 2020-02-23.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.