In recent years, there has been a resurgence of interest in the Festival of Lughnasa, with many festivals and events being organized across Ireland and beyond. These celebrations often incorporate traditional music, dance, and crafts, as well as modern interpretations of the festival's customs and rituals.

The first meal of the new crop was eaten communally, often involving a sacred offering to ensure continued fertility.

Today, many of these traditions have been Christianized as pilgrimages (like ) or survive as local "Garland Sunday" celebrations. MacNeill’s work, available through scholarly sources like Google Books or the Oxford University Press , remains the definitive guide to how these stories shaped the Irish social and sacred landscape. AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more

When searching for The Festival of Lughnasa in PDF format, users encounter a complex copyright situation. Because the book was published in Ireland by OUP, it remains under copyright in the European Union and the United States (due to the 1978 revision of copyright law, works published after 1923 with renewal are protected for 95 years from publication – i.e., until 2057).

She documented 195 sites across Ireland where festivals were held, often on mountains (like Croagh Patrick) or near water features.