Maypole Dancing: History & How-To
BY NICOLE LAU
The Magic of the Maypole
Maypole dancing is perhaps the most iconic and joyful tradition of Beltane and May Day celebrations. The sight of colorful ribbons weaving intricate patterns around a tall pole while dancers circle in celebration has captivated people for centuries. But the maypole is more than just a festive activity—it's a profound symbol of fertility, the union of masculine and feminine energies, and the weaving of the web of life itself. When you dance the maypole, you're participating in an ancient ritual that celebrates creation, community, and the sacred marriage of earth and sky.
The maypole tradition combines symbolism, movement, music, and community in a single joyful practice. The pole itself represents the masculine principle reaching toward the heavens, while the ribbons represent the feminine principle flowing and weaving. As dancers move in and out, over and under, they create a beautiful braided pattern that symbolizes the interconnection of all life and the creative power of union. The dance is both prayer and celebration, both ritual and play.
This guide explores the history of maypole dancing, its deep symbolism, and complete instructions for dancing the maypole—whether you're joining a community celebration or creating your own solo practice.
History of the Maypole
Ancient Origins
While the exact origins are debated, maypole-like traditions appear across cultures:
Possible ancient roots:
- Germanic tribes honored sacred trees and poles
- Celtic peoples celebrated with decorated trees
- Roman festivals included pole or tree worship
- Phallic symbols in fertility rites across cultures
- Sacred marriage ceremonies with symbolic poles
Tree worship:
- Trees seen as connection between earth and sky
- Sacred groves and individual sacred trees
- Decorating trees for festivals
- Dancing around trees in celebration
- Trees as fertility symbols
Medieval and Renaissance Europe
Maypole dancing became widespread in medieval Europe:
Traditional practices:
- Villages erected maypoles on May Day
- Tall poles (20-100 feet) in village centers
- Decorated with flowers, ribbons, and greenery
- Community gathered to dance
- Celebration of spring and fertility
- Courtship and matchmaking opportunities
May Day celebrations:
- "A-Maying" - gathering flowers at dawn
- Crowning May Queen and choosing May King
- Maypole as centerpiece of celebration
- Music, dancing, feasting
- Community bonding and joy
Suppression and Revival
Puritan suppression (1600s):
- Seen as pagan and immoral
- Maypoles banned in some areas
- Particularly in Puritan England and colonies
- Tradition continued in secret or rural areas
Victorian revival (1800s):
- Romanticization of "Merrie England"
- Maypole dancing taught in schools
- Sanitized, child-friendly version
- Lost some sexual/fertility symbolism
- Became quaint folk tradition
Modern revival (1900s-present):
- Neopagans reclaimed maypole tradition
- Restored fertility and sexual symbolism
- Community Beltane celebrations
- Both traditional and innovative approaches
- Continues to evolve
Symbolism of the Maypole
The Pole Itself
Masculine principle:
- Phallic symbol (explicitly fertility-related)
- Upright, strong, reaching skyward
- The God in his virile youth
- Yang energy - active, penetrating
- Connection from earth to heaven
- Axis mundi (world axis)
The World Tree:
- Roots in earth, branches in sky
- Connection between realms
- Center of the world
- Life force flowing through
The Ribbons
Feminine principle:
- Flowing, flexible, weaving
- The Goddess in her fertile aspect
- Yin energy - receptive, flowing
- Streams of life force
- Connection and relationship
Ribbon colors and meanings:
- Red: Passion, blood, life force, fire
- White: Purity, milk, the Goddess, air
- Green: Growth, nature, fertility, earth
- Yellow: Sun, joy, celebration, fire
- Blue: Water, emotions, flow, sky
- Purple: Spirituality, magic, transformation
- Pink: Love, romance, gentle energy
- Orange: Creativity, vitality, enthusiasm
The Dance and Weaving
Union of opposites:
- Masculine pole and feminine ribbons unite
- Dancers weave in and out (penetration and reception)
- Creates something new (the woven pattern)
- Symbolic of sexual union
- Sacred marriage made visible
Web of life:
- Woven pattern shows interconnection
- Each dancer contributes to whole
- Individual and community in balance
- Life woven from many threads
- Beauty created through cooperation
Spiral and circle:
- Dancers move in circle (sacred geometry)
- Ribbons create spiral pattern
- Spiral = growth, evolution, life force
- Circle = wholeness, community, cycles
How to Dance the Maypole
Setting Up Your Maypole
The pole:
- Height: 6-12 feet for small groups, 15-30 feet for large gatherings
- Material: Wood pole, PVC pipe, or sturdy post
- Stability: Must be firmly anchored in ground or weighted base
- Top: Needs attachment point for ribbons (hook, wheel, or drilled holes)
The ribbons:
- Number: Even number (8, 12, 16, or more)
- Length: 1.5-2 times the height of pole
- Width: 1-2 inches wide
- Material: Satin, grosgrain, or sturdy fabric ribbon
- Colors: Traditional Beltane colors or rainbow
- Attachment: Securely tied or attached to top of pole
Decorations:
- Flower garlands around top
- Greenery woven through ribbons
- Flowers at base of pole
- May Queen's crown hung on pole
Basic Maypole Dance (Barber Pole Pattern)
The simplest and most common pattern.
Setup:
- Even number of dancers (minimum 8, ideal 12-16)
- Each dancer takes one ribbon
- Alternate dancers face clockwise and counterclockwise
- Stand in circle around pole, ribbons taut
The dance:
- Music begins (traditional May Day songs or lively folk music)
- All dancers begin walking in their designated direction
- When you meet someone coming toward you:
- If you're on the outside, raise your ribbon and pass over them
- If you're on the inside, lower your ribbon and pass under them - Continue alternating over-under-over-under
- Keep ribbons taut but not too tight
- Maintain steady pace
- Watch the pattern form on the pole
- Continue until ribbons are woven down to about 3-4 feet from ground
- Tie off ribbons or reverse direction to unweave
Tips for success:
- Start slowly until everyone gets the rhythm
- Call out "over" and "under" to help dancers
- Keep ribbons taut to create clean pattern
- Maintain consistent spacing between dancers
- Smile and enjoy - it's meant to be joyful!
Advanced Patterns
Spider's Web:
- More complex weaving pattern
- Creates intricate web design
- Requires experienced dancers
- Beautiful final result
Gypsy Tent:
- Creates tent-like structure
- Ribbons form canopy
- Requires specific weaving sequence
- Impressive visual effect
Double Weave:
- Two layers of weaving
- Very complex
- For experienced groups
- Stunning pattern
Unweaving the Maypole
Two options:
Option 1: Reverse the dance
- All dancers turn around
- Walk in opposite direction
- Reverse the over-under pattern
- Ribbons unweave back to top
- Symbolizes the cycle continuing
Option 2: Leave it woven
- Tie off ribbons at bottom
- Leave maypole standing
- Display through Beltane season
- Eventually untie and store ribbons
Solo Maypole Practice
You don't need a group to enjoy maypole magic!
Ribbon Wand
What you'll need:
- Stick or dowel (12-18 inches)
- Multiple ribbons (3-8 ribbons, 3-6 feet long)
- Attach ribbons to one end of stick
How to use:
- Hold stick and dance
- Ribbons flow and weave as you move
- Create your own patterns
- Meditative and joyful
- Honors maypole symbolism solo
Miniature Maypole
What you'll need:
- Small pole (6-12 inches) in weighted base
- Ribbons attached to top
- Place on altar or table
How to use:
- Weave ribbons with your hands
- Meditative practice
- Altar decoration
- Symbolic maypole work
Visualization Practice
- Close eyes and visualize maypole
- See yourself dancing
- Feel the joy and connection
- Imagine the pattern forming
- Energy work without physical pole
Music for Maypole Dancing
Traditional May Day Songs
- "Greensleeves"
- "Sumer Is Icumen In"
- "The Maypole Song"
- "Hal-an-Tow"
- "Padstow May Song"
- Traditional English folk tunes
Modern Options
- Celtic folk music
- Renaissance faire music
- Pagan folk songs
- Upbeat instrumental music
- Anything with steady, danceable rhythm
Tempo Considerations
- Start slower for beginners
- Moderate pace for most dances
- Faster for experienced dancers
- Music should be joyful and celebratory
Maypole Ritual Elements
Blessing the Maypole
Before dancing, bless the pole:
"Maypole tall, standing proud and strong,
Around you we dance, around you we throng.
Masculine power reaching to sky,
Feminine ribbons flowing high.
As we weave, we create the web of life,
Union of opposites, ending all strife.
Blessed be this maypole bright,
May our dance bring joy and delight."
Crowning the May Queen
Traditional accompaniment to maypole:
- Choose or elect May Queen (and sometimes May King)
- Crown with flowers
- She leads the maypole dance
- Represents the Goddess
- Honored throughout celebration
Intentions While Dancing
As you dance, focus on:
- Union and connection
- Community and cooperation
- Fertility and creation
- Joy and celebration
- Weaving your intentions into the pattern
- Sacred marriage of Goddess and God
Troubleshooting Common Issues
Ribbons Getting Tangled
Causes:
- Dancers not maintaining consistent over-under pattern
- Ribbons too loose
- Dancers moving at different speeds
Solutions:
- Have a caller remind dancers "over" and "under"
- Keep ribbons taut
- Maintain steady, consistent pace
- Practice with experienced leader
Pole Falling or Unstable
Prevention:
- Ensure pole is deeply anchored
- Use heavy, stable base
- Guy wires if needed for tall poles
- Test stability before dancing
Not Enough Dancers
Solutions:
- Minimum 6 dancers can work
- Use fewer ribbons
- Solo ribbon wand practice
- Invite more people!
Modern Adaptations
Indoor Maypole
- Shorter pole (6-8 feet)
- Weighted base
- Fewer dancers
- Shorter ribbons
- Works for small groups
Children's Maypole
- Lower pole height
- Simpler patterns
- Bright, cheerful ribbons
- Fun, playful approach
- Educational about tradition
Virtual Maypole
- Each person has ribbon wand
- Dance together on video call
- Synchronized movement
- Community despite distance
Final Thoughts: Dancing the Web of Life
Maypole dancing is more than a quaint folk tradition—it's a living ritual that celebrates the sacred union of masculine and feminine, the weaving of community, and the creative power of cooperation. When you dance the maypole, you're not just creating a pretty pattern; you're participating in an ancient rite that honors fertility, celebrates life, and weaves the web that connects us all.
The pole stands firm, the ribbons flow, the dancers weave in and out, and something beautiful emerges from the union. This is the magic of Beltane made visible—the creative power of opposites coming together, the joy of community celebration, and the eternal dance of life creating more life.
Whether you dance with a large community around a towering pole or alone with a ribbon wand, you're honoring an ancient tradition and celebrating the sacred marriage that ensures the continuation of all life. The maypole stands ready. The ribbons await. The dance calls.
May your maypole dance be joyful, your weaving be beautiful, and your Beltane be blessed. 🎀🔥💚✨