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Christmas traditions
Christmas
From old English Cristes maesse (Christ s Mass), older still, Yule, from
the Germanic root geol. In some languages:
English: Christmas, Yule, Noel
German: Weihnachten
Finnish: Joulu
Swedish: Jul
Italian: Il Natale
Spanish: La Natividad
French: Noel
The traditional Christmas is not a single day but a prolonged period,
normally from 24th December to 6th January. This included the New Year,
thus increasing the festival value of Christmas.
Magi
From old Persian language, a priest of Zarathustra (Zoroaster). The
Bible gives us the direction, East and the legend states that the wise
men were from Persia (Iran) - Balthasar, Melchior, Caspar - thus being
priests of Zarathustra religion, the mages. Obviously the pilgrimage had
some religious significance for these men, otherwise they would not have
taken the trouble and risk of travelling so far. But what was it? An
astrological phenomenon, the Star? This is just about all we know about
it.
Christmas card
The practice of sending Christmas greeting cards to friends was
initiated by Sir Henry Cole in England. The year was 1843 and the first
card was designed by J.C.Horsley. It was commercial - 1000 copies were
sold in London. An English artist, William Egley, produced a popular
card in 1849. From the beginning the themes have been as varied as the
Christmas customs worldwide.
Star
The astrological/astronomical phenomenon which triggered the travel of
the Magi to give presents to child Jesus. Variously described as a
supernova or a conjunction of planets it supposedly happened around the
year 7 BC - the most probable true birth year of Christ. Star is often
put to the top of the Christmas tree.
Christmas Day
The traditional date for the appearance of Santa Claus, obviously from
the birthdate of Jesus (the word Christmas is from old English, meaning
Christ s mass). This date is near the shortest day of the year, from old
times an important agricultural and solar feasting period in Europe. The
actual birthday of Jesus is not known and thus the early Church Fathers
in the 4th century fixed the day as was most convenient. The best fit
seemed to be around the old Roman Saturnalia festival (17 - 21
December), a traditional pagan festivity with tumultuous and unruly
celebrations. Moreover, in 273 Emperor Aurelianus had invented a new
pagan religion, the cult of Sol Invictus (invincible sun, the same as
the Iranian god Mithra), the birthday of this god being 25th December
(natalis sol invicti). The Christian priests obviously saw this choice
as doubly meritorious: using the old customary and popular feasting date
but changing the rough pagan ways into a more civilized commemoration.
The first mention of the birthday of Jesus is from the year 354.
Gradually all Christian churches, except Armenians (celebrating 6th
January which date is for others the baptismal day of Jesus and the day
of the three Magi), accepted the day. In American/English tradition the
Christmas Day itself is the day for Santa, in German/Scandinavian
tradition the Christmas Eve is reserved for presents.
Christmas symbolics
Candles,fires: Summer, warmth, paradise, end of darkness, Jewish
Hanukkah
Tree: Eternal life, Paradise tree, pagan symbol
Apples: Apple of Paradise
Reindeer: A prop
Santa Claus: St Nicholas, pagan deity
Gifts: Customary (Romans, pagans everywhere), Magi
Mistletoe: Peace, kisses
Holly: Christ s crown of thorns
Gnomes: Pagan entirely
Straw: Stable & crib, pagan, handy material for deco
Sock: A prop (as chimney etc)
Christmas Crib
Jesus was born in a stable in Bethlehem. In Catholic countries this fact
is brought to mind with miniature replicas of the nativity scene. The
manger, animals, miniatures of Jesus, Joseph, Maria, the shepherds and
the Three Magi are part of this very popular symbol. It was started
(says the legend) by St Franciscus of Assisi. The Pope has his own in
Rome but nowadays the custom is followed in Protestant countries, too.
Mistletoe
Sacred to ancient druids and a symbol of eternal life the same way as
Christmas tree. The Romans valued it as a symbol of peace and this lead
eventually its acceptance among Christmas props. Kissing under mistletoe
was a Roman custom, too.
Decorations
Anything goes nowadays. In old times they were simple, wood, paper,
straw and often very intricate. Themes follow the general taste of each
time but national traditions can be discerned even now.
Christmas gifts
There are many roots of this custom. There is St.Nicholas the anonymous
benefactor, there is the tradition of Magi giving precious gifts to
Jesus, there is the Roman custom of giving gifts of good luck to
children during Saturnalia. The day of gift giving varies greatly in
different Christian cultures and times:
6th December - in memory of St. Nicholas
24th December - Christmas Eve
25th December - Birthday of Jesus
1st of January - the New year
6th of January - The Epiphany, day of the Three Wise men, the Magi
The giver of the presents are many: Jesus himself, Old Father Christmas,
Santa Claus, a Goat, Befana (the female Santa in Italy), the three Magi,
Christmas gnomes, various Saints, the Kolyada (in Russia), the
Joulupukki (in Finland). The oldest Finnish tradition did not
necessarily involve a giver of the presents at all: an unseen person
threw the gifts in from the door and quickly disappeared.
Christmas carols
The Catholic Church valued music greatly and it is no wonder that the
early Christmas songs date from 4th century (the earliest known is Jesus
refulsit omnium by St.Hilary of Poitiers). The Mediaeval Christmas music
followed the Gregorian tradition. In Renaissance Italy there emerged a
lighter and more joyous kind of Christmas songs, more like the true
carols (from the French word caroler, meaning to dance in a ring). These
songs continued to be religious and in Latin, though. In Protestant
countries the tradition, as everything Christmas-related, intensified.
Luther wrote and composed his song "From Heaven above I come to You".
Music by Handel and Mendelssohn was adapted and used as Christmas
carols. The old Finnish/Swedish collection Piae Cantiones was translated
and published in English in mid - 19th century. The most famous of all,
Silent Night (Stille Nacht, heilige Nacht) was written by the Austrian
parish priest Joseph Mohr and composed by Franz Gruber, church organist,
in 1818. In 19th century and later many popular songs were written by
composers (e.g. Adam, Sibelius). The themes of songs surpassed religion
and the totality of Christmas paraphernalia found its way to carol
music.
Christmas plays
Religious plays were part of the Medieval Christian tradition and many
of them were connected with Christmas. The plays were often communal
with pageants and general participation. A popular theme was the coming
of the Magi (the Three Kings), because the plot allowed lots of pomp and
decorative props to please the audience. These plays live on in many
places, for instance in Finland in the form of the traditional Star Boys
drama.
Food
Christmas means eating in most parts of the Christian world. In old
societies hunger was the supreme king and eating was the highest
contrast, the supreme way to nirvana. Meat of some kind was the most
important dish (was this connected with the words of Jesus, "this is my
flesh"?), often pork, ham,goose, (later turkey), fish (carp, salmon). An
innumerable variety of cakes and pastries, often very intricate and only
baked for Christmas were and are known throughout the world. Cakes could
be hung from the Christmas tree, too.
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