Holidays
Christmas
St. Valentine’s
Day
Easter
St. David’s Day
May Day
Midsummer’s Day
Guy Fawkes’s Day
Halloween
Christmas
It is certain that Christmas is celebrated all over the world. Perhaps
no other holiday has developed a set of customs and symbols. This is
the day when many people are travelling home to be with their famillies
on Christmas Day, 25th December. The Christmas story comes from bible.
An angel appeared to shepherds and told them that a Savior had been
born to Mary and Joseph in a stable in Bethlehem. Three Wise Men from
the East followed a wondrous star which led them to the baby Jesus to
whome they paid homage and presented gifts of gold, frankicense and
myrrh. To people all over the world, Christmas is a season of giving
and receiving presents. In Scandinavian and other European countries,
Father Christmas, or Saint Nicholas, comes into house at night and
leaves gifts for the children. Saint Nicholas is represented as a fidly
man with a red cloak and long white beard. He visited house and left
giftes, dringing people happiness in the coldest months of the year.
Another character, the Norse God Odin, rode on a magical flying horse
across the ages to make the present day Santa Claus.
For most British families, this is the most important festival
of the year, it combines the Christian celebration or the birth of
Christ with the traditional festivities of winter. On the Sunday before
Christmas many churches hold a carol service where special hymns are
sung. Sometimes carol-singers can be heard on the streets as they
collect money for charity. Most families decorate their houses with
brightly-coloured paper or holly, and they usually have a Christmas
tree in the corner or the front foom, glittering with coloured lights
and decorations. The Christmas tree was popularized by Prince Albert,
husband of Queen Victoria, who introduced one to the Royal Household in
1840. Since 1947, the country of Norway has presented Britain annually
with a large Christmas tree which stands in Trafalgar Square in
commemoration of Anglo-Norwegian cooperation during the Second World
War.
There are a lot of traditions connected with Christmas but
perhaps the most important one is the giving of present. Familly
members wrap up their gifts and leave them bottom of the Christmas tree
to be found on Christmas morning. Children leave sock or stocking at
the end of their beds on Christmas Eve, 24th of December, hoping that
Father Christmas will come down the chimney during the night and bring
them small presents, fruit and nuts. They are usually not disappointe!
At some time on Christmas Day the familly will sit down to a big turkey
dinner followed by Christmas pudding. Christmas dinner consists
traditionally of a roast turkey, goose or chicken with stuffing and
roast potatoes. Mince pies and Christmas pudding flaming with brandy,
which might contain coins or lucky charms for children, follow this.
(The pudding is usually prepared weeks beforehand and is customarily
stirred by each member of the family as a wish is made.) Later in the
day, a Christmas cake may be served - a rich baked fruitcake with
marzipan, icing and sugar frosting.
The pulling of Christmas crackers often accompanies food on
Christmas Day. Invented by a London baker in 1846, a cracker is a
brightly colored paper tube, twisted at both ends, which contains a
party hat, riddle and toy or other trinket. When it is pulled by two
people it gives out a crack as its contents are dispersed.
26th December is also a public holiday, Boxing Day, which
takes its name from a former custom of giving a Christmas Box - a gift
of money or food inside a box - to the deliverymen and trades people
who called regularly during the year. This tradition survives in the
custom of tipping the milkman, postman, dustmen and other callers of
good service at Christmas time. This is the time to visit friends and
relatives or watch football.
At midnight on 31th December throughout Great Britain people
celebrate the coming of the New Year, by holding hands in a large
circle and singing the song:
Should auld acquaintance be forget,
And never brought to mind?
Should auld acquaintance be forget?
And auld lang syne?
For auld lang syne, my dear,
For auld lang syne,
We'll take a cup of kindness yet,
For auld lang syne!..
New Year's Eve is a more important festival in Scotland than
it is in England, and it even has a special name. It is not clear where
the word 'Hogmanay' comes from, but it is connected with the provision
of food and drink for all visitors to your home on 31th December. It
was believed that the first person to visit one's house on New Year's
Day could bring good or bad luck. Therefore, people tried to arrange
for the person or their own choice to be standing outside their houses
ready to be let in the moment midnight had come. Usually a
dark-complexioned man was chosen, and never a woman, for she would
bring bad luck. The first footer was required to carry three articles:
a piece of coal to wish warmth, a piece of bread to wish food, and a
silver coin to wish wealth.
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St.
Valentine’s Day
St. Valentine's Day roots in several different legends that have found
their way to us through the ages. One of the earliest popular symbols
of the day is Cupid, the Roman god of Love, Who is represented by the
image of a young boy with bow and arrow. Three hundred years after the
death of Jesus Christ, the Roman emperors still demanded that everyone
believe in the Roman gods. Valentine, a Christian priest, had been
thrown in prison for his teachings. On February 14, Valentine was
beheaded, not only because he was a Christian, but also because he had
performed a miracle. He supposedly cured the jailer's daughter of her
blindness. The night before he was executed, he wrote the jailer's
daughter a farewell letter, signing it, "from Your Valentine".
Another legend tells us that this same Valentine, well-loved
by all, wrote notes from his jail cell to children and friends who
missed him. Whatever the odd mixture of origins, St. Valentine's Day is
now a day for sweethearts. It is the day that you show your friend of
loved one that you care. You can send candy to someone you think is
special. Or you can send "valentines" a greeting card named after the
notes that St. Valentine wrote from jail. Valentines can be
sentimental, romantic, and heartfelt. They can be funny and friendly.
If the sender is shy, valentines can be anonymous. Americans of all
ages as other people in different countries love to send and receive
valentines. Handmade valentines, created by cutting hearts out of
coloured paper, show that a lot of thought was put into making them
personal. Valentines can be heart-shaped, or have hearts, the symbol of
love, on them. In elementary schools, children make valentines, they
have a small party with refreshments. You can right a short rhyme
inside the heart:
There are gold ships
And silver ships,
But no ships
Like friendship.
Valentine cards are usually decorated with symbols of love and
friendship. These symbols were devised many centuries ago. Lace
symbolises a net for catching one's heart. If you get a Valentine with
a piece of a lace you may understand that the person who sent it must
be crazy about you. A symbol should have several meanings, so some
experts maintain that lace stands for a bridal veil. A ribbon means
that the person is tired up, while hearts, which are the most common
romantic symbol, denote eternal love. Red roses are also often used as
a love emblem.
Valentine's Day grows more and more popular in many countries
of the world. Some people have already begun to celebrate it in Russia.
They try to imitate European Valentine customs and want to known more
about their origin. St. Valentine's Day is the day when boys and girls.
Friends and neighbours, husbands and wives, sweethearts and lovers
exchange greeting of love and affection. It is the day to share one's
loving feelings with friends and family, but it is young men and girls
who usually wait it with impatience. This day has become traditional
for many couples to become engaged. That makes young people acknowledge
St. Valentine's as the great friend and patron of lovers.
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Easter
Easter is a Christian spring festival that is usually celebrated in
March or April. The name for Easter comes from a pagan fertility
celebration. The word "Easter" is named after Eastre, the Anglo-Saxon
goddess of spring. Spring is a natural time for new life and hope when
animals have their young and plants begin to grow. Christian Easter may
have purposely been celebrated in the place of a pagan festival. It is
therefore not surprising that relics of doing and beliefs not belonging
th the Christian religious should cling even to this greatest day in
the Church's year. An old-fashioned custom still alive is to get up
early and climb a hill to see the sun rising. There are numerous
accounts of the wonderful spectacle of the sun whirling round and round
for joy at our Saviour's Resurrection.
So many people go outdoors on Easter morning hoping to see the
sun dance. There is also a custom of putting on something new to go to
church on Easter morning. People celebrate the holiday according to
their beliefs and their religious denominations. Christians commemorate
Good Friday as the day that Christ died and Easter Sunday as the day
that He was resurrected. Protestant settlers brought the custom of a
sunrise service, a religious gathering at dawn, to the United States.
Today on Easter Sunday, children wake up to find that the
Easter Bunny has left them baskets of candy. He has also hidden the
eggs that they decorated earlier that week. Children hunt for the eggs
all around the house. Neighborhoods and organizations hold Easter egg
hunts, and the child who first the most eggs wins a prize.
Americans celebrate the Easter bunny coming. They set out
Easter baskets for their children to anticipate the Easter bunnys
arrival whi leaves candy and other stuff. The Easter Bunny is a
rabbit-spirit. Long ago, he was called the "Easter Hare". Hares and
rabbits have frequent multiple births, so they became a symbol of
fertility.
Christians fast during the forty days before Easter. They
choose to eat and drink only enough to keep themselves alive.
The day preceding Lent is known as Shrove Tuesday, or Pancake
Day. Shrove Tuesday recalls the day when people went to Church ti
confess and be shriven before Lent. But now the day is more generally
connected with relics of the traditional feasting before the fast.
Shrove Tuesday is famous for pancake calebration. There is some
competition at Westminster School: the pancakes are tossed over a bar
by the cook and struggled for by a small group of selected boys. The
boy who manages to get the largest piece is given a present. This
tradition dates from 1445. In the morning the first church bell on
Orley is rung for the competitors to make pancakes. The second ring is
a signal for cooking them. The third bell set rung for the copetitors
to gather at the Market Square. Then the Pancake bell is sounded and
the ladies set off from the church porch, tossing their pancakes three
times as they run. Each woman must wear an apron and a hat or scarf
over her head. The winner is given a Prayer Book Dy the Vicar.
Mothering Sunday is the fourth Sunday in Lent. It is customary
to vasit one's mother on that day. Mother ought to be given a present -
tea, flowers or a simnel cake. It is possible to buy the cake, they are
sold in every confectionery. But it is preferrable to make it at home.
The way Mothering Sunday is celebrated has much in common with the
International Women's Day celebration in Russia.
Good Friday is the first Friday before Easter. It is the day
when all sorts of taboos on various works are in force. Also it is a
good day for shifting beers, for sowing potatoes, peas, beans, parsley,
and pruning rose trees. Good Friday brings the once sacred cakes, the
famous Hot Cross buns. These must be spiced and the dough marked with a
cross before baking.
Eggs, chickens, rabbits and flowers are all symbols of new
life. Chocolate and fruit cake covered with marzipan show that fasting
is over. Wherever Easter is celebrated, their Easter eggs are usually
to be found. In England, just as in Russia, Easter is a time for giving
and receiving of presents that traditionally take the form of an Easter
egg. Easter egg is a real hard-boiled egg dyed in bright colors or
decorated with some elaborate pattern. Coloring and decorating eggs for
Easter is a very ancient custom. Many people, however, avoid using
artificial dyes and prefer to boil eggs with the outer skin of an
onion, which makes the eggs shells yellow or brown. In fact, the color
depends on the amount of onion skin added. In ancient times they used
many different natural dyes fir the purpose. The dyes were obtained
mainly from leaves, flowers and bark.
At present Easter eggs are also made of chocolate, sugar,
metals, wood, ceramics and other materials at hand. They may differ in
size, ranging from enormous to tiny, no bigger than a robin's egg.
Easter Sunday is solemnly celebrated in London. Each year the capital
city of Britain greets the spring with a spectacular Easter Parade in
Battersea Park. The great procession, or parade, begins at 3 p.m. The
parade consists of many decorated floats, entered by various
organizations in and outside London. Some of the finest bands in the
country take part in the parade. At the rear of the parade is usually
the very beautiful float richly decorated with flowers. It is called
the Jersey one because the spring flowers bloom early on the Island of
Jersey.
In England, children rolled eggs down hills on Easter morning,
a game has been connected to the rolling away of the rock from Jesus
Christ's tomb then He was resurrected. British settlers brought this
custom to the New World. It consists of rolling coloured, hardboiled
egg down a slope until they are cracked and broken after whish they are
eaten by their owners. In some districts this is a competitive game,
the winner being the player whose egg remains longest undamaged, but
more usually, the fun consists simply of the rolling and eating.
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St.
David’s Day
March 1st is a very important day for Welsh people. It’s St.
David’s Day. He’s the “patron”
or national saint of Wales. On March 1st, the Welsh celebrate St.
Davids Day and wear daffodils in the buttonholes of their coats or
jackets.
May Day
May 1st was an important day in the Middle Ages. In the very early
morning, young girls went to the fields and washed their faces with
dew. They believed this made them very beautiful for a year affer that.
Also on May Day the young men of each village tried to win prizes with
their bows and arrows, and people danced round the maypole.
Many English-villages still have a maypole, and on May 1st,
the villagers dance round it.
Midsummer’s
Day
Midsummer’s Day, June 24th, is the longest day of the year.
On that day you can see a very old custom at Stonehenge, in Wiltshire,
England. Stonehenge is on of Europe’s biggest stone circles.
A lot of the stones are ten or twelve metres high. It is also very old.
The earliest part of Stonehenge is nearly 5,000 years old. But what was
Stonehenge? A holy place? A market? Or was it a kind of calendar? Many
people think that the Druids used it for a calendar. The Druids were
the priests in Britain 2,000 years ago. They used the sun and the
stones at Stonehenge to know the start of months and seasons. There are
Druids in Britain today, too. And every June 24th a lot of them go to
Stonehenge. On that morning the sun shines on one famous stone
– the Heel stone. For the Druids this is a very important
moment in the year. But for a lot of British people it is just a
strange old custom.
November, 5 is Guy Fawkes’s Day
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Guy
Fawkes’s Day
On the 5th of November in almost every town and village in
England one can see fire burning, fireworks, cracking and lighting up
the sky, small groups of children pulling round in a home made cart, a
figure that looks something like a man but consists of an old suit of
clothes, stuffed with straw. The children sing:" Remember, remember the
5th of November; Gun powder, treason and plot". And they ask passers-by
for "a penny for the Guy" But the children with "the Guy" are not
likely to know who or what day they are celebrating. They have done
this more or less every 5th of November since 1605. At that time James
the First was on the throne. He was hated with many people especially
the Roman Catholics against whom many sever laws had been passed. A
number of Catholics chief of whom was Robert Catesby determined to kill
the King and his ministers by blowing up the house of Parliament with
gunpowder. To help them in this they got Guy Fawker, a soldier of
fortune, who would do the actual work. The day fixed for attempt was
the 5th of November, the day on which the Parliament was to open. But
one of the conspirators had several friends in the parliament and he
didn't want them to die. So he wrote a letter to Lord Monteagle begging
him to make some excuse to be absent from parliament if he valued his
life. Lord Monteagle took the letter hurrily to the King. Guards were
sent at once to examine the cellars of the house of Parliament. And
there they found Guy Fawker about to fire a trail of gunpowder. He was
tortured and hanged, Catesby was killed, resisting arrest in his own
house. In memory of that day bonfires are still lighted, fireworks
shoot across the November sky and figures of Guy Fawker are burnt in
the streets.
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Halloween
The word itself, "Halloween," actually has its origins in the Catholic
Church. It comes from a contracted corruption of All Hallows Eve.
November 1, "All Hollows Day" (or "All Saints Day"), is a Catholic day
of observance in honor of saints. But, in the 5th century BC, in Celtic
Ireland, summer officially ended on October 31. The holiday was called
Samhain (sowen), the Celtic New year.
One story says that, on that day, the disembodied spirits of
all those who had died throughout the preceding year would come back in
search of living bodies to possess for the next year. It was believed
to be their only hope for the afterlife. The Celts believed all laws of
space and time were suspended during this time, allowing the spirit
world to intermingle with the living.
Naturally, the still-living did not want to be possessed. So
on the night of October 31, villagers would extinguish the fires in
their homes, to make them cold and undesirable. They would then dress
up in all manner of ghoulish costumes and noisily paraded around the
neighborhood, being as destructive as possible in order to frighten
away spirits looking for bodies to possess.
Probably a better explanation of why the Celts extinguished
their fires was not to discourage spirit possession, but so that all
the Celtic tribes could relight their fires from a common source, the
Druidic fire that was kept burning in the Middle of Ireland, at
Usinach.
Some accounts tell of how the Celts would burn someone at the
stake who was thought to have already been possessed, as sort of a
lesson to the spirits. Other accounts of Celtic history debunk these
stories as myth. The Romans adopted the Celtic practices as their own.
But in the first century AD, Samhain was assimilated into celebrations
of some of the other Roman traditions that took place in October, such
as their day to honor Pomona, the Roman goddess of fruit and trees. The
symbol of Pomona is the apple, which might explain the origin of our
modern tradition of bobbing for apples on Halloween. The thrust of the
practices also changed over time to become more ritualized. As belief
in spirit possession waned, the practice of dressing up like
hobgoblins, ghosts, and witches took on a more ceremonial role.
The custom of Halloween was brought to America in the 1840's
by Irish immigrants fleeing their country's potato famine. At that
time, the favorite pranks in New England included tipping over
outhouses and unhinging fence gates.
The custom of trick-or-treating is thought to have originated
not with the Irish Celts, but with a ninth-century European custom
called souling. On November 2, All Souls Day, early Christians would
walk from village to village begging for "soul cakes," made out of
square pieces of bread with currants. The more soul cakes the beggars
would receive, the more prayers they would promise to say on behalf of
the dead relatives of the donors. At the time, it was believed that the
dead remained in limbo for a time after death, and that prayer, even by
strangers, could expedite a soul's passage to heaven.
The Jack-o-lantern custom probably comes from Irish folklore.
As the tale is told, a man named Jack, who was notorious as a drunkard
and trickster, tricked Satan into climbing a tree. Jack then carved an
image of a cross in the tree's trunk, trapping the devil up the tree.
Jack made a deal with the devil that, if he would never tempt him
again, he would promise to let him down the tree. According to the folk
tale, after Jack died, he was denied entrance to Heaven because of his
evil ways, but he was also denied access to Hell because he had tricked
the devil. Instead, the devil gave him a single ember to light his way
through the frigid darkness. The ember was placed inside a hollowed-out
turnip to keep it glowing longer.
The Irish used turnips as their "Jack's lanterns" originally.
But when the immigrants came to America, they found that pumpkins were
far more plentiful than turnips. So the Jack-O-Lantern in America was a
hollowed-out pumpkin, lit with an ember.
So, although some pagan groups, cults, and Satanists may have
adopted Halloween as their favorite "holiday," the day itself did not
grow out of evil practices. It grew out of the rituals of Celts
celebrating a New Year, and out of medieval prayer rituals of
Europeans. And today, even many churches have Halloween parties or
pumpkin carving events for the kids. After all, the day itself is only
as evil as one cares to make it.
Fire has always played an important part in Halloween. Fire
was very important to the Celts as it was to all early people. In the
old days people lit bonfires to ward away evil spirits and in some
places they used to jump over the fire to bring good luck. Now we light
candles in pumpkin lanterns.
Halloween is also a good time to find out the future. Want to
find out who you will marry? Here are two ways you might try to find
out:
- Apple-bobbing - Float a number of apples in a bowl of water,
and try to catch one using only your teeth. When you have caught one,
peel it in one unbroken strip, and throw the strip of peel over your
left shoulder. The letter the peel forms is the initial of your future
husband or wife.
- Nut-cracking - Place two nuts (such as conkers) on a fire.
Give the nuts the names of two possible lovers and the one that cracks
first will be the one.
Holidays
Royal
traditions
Everyday
life
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