#37 – “Eggs”

First of all let me start off by saying sorry. I haven’t been able to find the time to post any articles for a few weeks now, for fairly obvious reasons. I will 100% do my best to get back on top of this but, with three kids at home, and deadlines looming, I will probably miss more over the next few weeks. So, apologies in advance. 

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Rabbits don’t lay eggs. But Hares do. At least, you might be forgiven for thinking they do. Hares make overground nests to raise their young in. Lapwings nest on the ground at the same time and [in] the same areas. A nest of eggs one day, a nest of leverets the next.  

As the Easter  weekend draws close, children and adults alike anticipating a chocolate  egg binge, the internet is alive with articles on the “true” origins of  Easter.

Over the last seven or so years the author, journalist and self described “pagan sceptic” Adrian Bott  has written a series of detailed pieces discussing the myths and  misconceptions surrounding the links between the pagan Eostre/Eostur and  Christian Easter (this year’s is actually entitled The case for Eostre, part 1: The Eostur Sacrifice). There’s an interview with Adrian on the subject recently posted on patheos.com that’s well worth a read and includes links to many of his previous Easter/Eostre pieces.

While I am by no means any kind of an expert in the writings of Bede  or the religious festivals and beliefs of pre-Christian Britain, I feel  there may be some tiny thing I can contribute here. There is one aspect  of this whole debate that, so far as I can see, seems to have been  largely overlooked (perhaps wilfully so on account of there being a fair  bit of conjecture involved). That is that rabbits, or rather hares  (which probably don’t have any provable connection to Eostre) do lay  eggs. Or at least, according to some, they were once believed to do so.

Hares  do not raise their leverets below ground as rabbits do their kittens,  rather they build little shallow nests for them among the grass. These  nests are called forms and look remarkably like the nest of lapwings and  other ground level nesting birds. In the spring (around the time of  Easter) in certain parts of Britain, it is possible to find forms filled  with tiny baby hares pretty much directly alongside nests containing  beautifully speckled and patterned bird’s eggs.

So, there’s a theory that someone long ago – some say it was European  invaders who had never seen hares before – saw a hare tending its young  in a form having previously seen eggs in a very similar looking nest in  more or less the same location and came to the conclusion that hares  (or rabbits as they might have thought them to be) do, in fact, lay  eggs.

That kind of makes sense. Where’s the proof though? Well, beyond the  fact that it does sort of make sense, there doesn’t seem to be very  much. There are a couple of blogs on BBC Wales from seven years or so ago that mention the idea, there’s a post on docudharma.com  from around the same time talking about Eostre/Easter and dropping in  the hare’s egg idea. And that, so far as my somewhat hasty searching has  found, seems to be about it.

So, am I merely muddying the waters of the already seemingly overly  complex issue of the “true” origins of Easter and its associated myths?  Quite possibly, yeah. It’s all good fun though, eh? Pass the Cadbury’s  Mini Eggs, please.