No, seriously. Go check em out!
All notes in red added by yours truly!
The common abbreviation for Christmas to Xmas is derived from the Greek alphabet. X is letter Chi, which is the first letter of Christ's name in the Greek alphabet. (so go ahead and use the X, you STILL ain't taking Christ out of the picture! HA!)
The common abbreviation for Christmas to Xmas is derived from the Greek alphabet. X is letter Chi, which is the first letter of Christ's name in the Greek alphabet. (so go ahead and use the X, you STILL ain't taking Christ out of the picture! HA!)
Oliver
Cromwell, in England banned Christmas Carols between 1649 and 1660. Cromwell
thought that Christmas should be a very solemn day so he banned carols and
parties. The only celebration was by a sermon and a prayer service.
In
1643, the British Parliament officially abolishes the celebration of Christmas.
The
Puritans in America tried to make Thanksgiving Day the most important annual
festival instead of Christmas.
Silent
Night was written in 1818, by an Austrian priest Joseph Mohr. He was told the
day before Christmas that the church organ was broken and would not be prepared
in time for Christmas Eve. He was saddened by this and could not think of
Christmas without music, so he wanted to write a carol that could be sung by
choir to guitar music. He sat down and wrote three stanzas. Later that night the
people in the little Austrian Church sang "Stille Nacht" for the
first time.
St
Francis of Assisi introduced Christmas Carols to formal church services.
Telesphorus,
the second Bishop of Rome (125-136 AD) declared that public Church services
should be held to celebrate "The Nativity of our Lord and Saviour."
In 320 AD, Pope Julius I and other religious leaders specified 25 December as
the official date of the birth of Jesus Christ.
26
December was traditionally known as St Stephen's Day, but is more commonly
known as Boxing Day. This expression came about because money was collected in
alms-boxes placed in churches during the festive season. This money was then
distributed during to the poor and needy after Christmas.
Melbourne,
Australia has a sporting Boxing Day tradition. The Melbourne Cricket Ground
hosts a Cricket test match. Sometimes this attracts 90,000 spectators. Cricket
is Australia's premier Summer sport.
The
first printed reference to Christmas trees appeared in Germany in 1531.
In
1836, Alabama is the first state in the USA to declare Christmas a legal
holiday.
In
1843, the first Christmas card was printed in England for Sir Henry Cole. He
was busy man who wanted to save time in his own Christmas letters, but was also
interested in encouraging the expansion of the postal system. 1000 copies of
the card were sold at one shilling each. It was not until the 1860s that the
production of cards accelerated, with cheaper printing methods. Then in 1870,
the Post Office introduced a half penny stamp for sending cards.
In
1856, President Franklin Pierce decorates the first White House Christmas tree.
In
1907, Oklahoma became the last USA state to declare Christmas a legal holiday. (figures!)
At
midnight on Christmas Eve 1914 firing from the German trenches suddenly
stopped. A German brass band began playing Christmas carols. Early, Christmas
morning, the German soldiers came out of their trenches, approaching the allied
lines, calling "Merry Christmas". At first the allied soldiers
thought it was a trick, but they soon climbed out of their trenches and shook
hands with the German soldiers. The truce lasted a few days, and the men
exchanged presents of cigarettes and plum puddings, sang carols and songs. They
even played a game of Soccer.
In
1937, the first postage stamp to commemorate Christmas was issued in Austria.
In
1974, the Australian city of Darwin is devastated late on Christmas Eve and in
the early hours of the morning by Cyclone Tracy.
In
1834, Queen Victoria's husband, Prince Albert brought the first Christmas tree
to Windsor Castle for the Royal family.
6
December is St Nicholas's Day - the first of the gift giving days,
especially in Holland and Belgium.
Some
priests in Australia advise you to say "Happy Christmas", not
"Merry Christmas", because Merry has connotations of getting drunk -
which brings its own problems. One should say "Happy" instead.
The
actual gift givers are different in various countries:
Spain
and South America: The Three Kings
Italy: La Befana (a kindly old witch)
England: Father Christmas
France: Pere Noel (Father Christmas)
Russia: In some parts - Babouschka (a grandmotherly figure)
Other parts it is Grandfather Frost.
Germany: Christkind (angelic messenger from Jesus)
She is a beautiful fair haired girl with a shining crown of candles.
Scandinavia: a variety of Christmas gnomes. One is called Julenisse
Holland: St Nicholas.
Italy: La Befana (a kindly old witch)
England: Father Christmas
France: Pere Noel (Father Christmas)
Russia: In some parts - Babouschka (a grandmotherly figure)
Other parts it is Grandfather Frost.
Germany: Christkind (angelic messenger from Jesus)
She is a beautiful fair haired girl with a shining crown of candles.
Scandinavia: a variety of Christmas gnomes. One is called Julenisse
Holland: St Nicholas.
Every
year since 1947 the people in Oslo have given a Christmas tree to the city of
Westminster. The gift is an expression of goodwill and gratitude for Britain's
help to Norway in the 1939-1945 war.
The
first American Christmas carol was written in 1649 by a minister named John de
Brebeur and is called "Jesus is Born".
Mexicans
call the poinsettia "Flower of the Holy Night" - the Holy Night is
the Mexican way of saying "Christmas Eve".
Tom Smith who owned a sweet shop in London was the originator
of the cracker. In the 1840s Tom found that people like sugar almonds, but
while he was in France he discovered a variety of sweets wrapped up in a twist
of paper. These bonbons were popular, so Tom decided to copy them. When Tom
noticed that young men were buying them to give to their sweethearts he began
to place "love mottoes" on small slips of paper inside the sweet
wrapping.
In 1846 Tom's thoughts turned towards Christmas - instead of sweets he thought he would place toys and novelties inside the twisted wrapping. He experimented with this and the idea of producing a wrapping that could be pulled apart - just like the cracker as we know it today.
In 1846 Tom's thoughts turned towards Christmas - instead of sweets he thought he would place toys and novelties inside the twisted wrapping. He experimented with this and the idea of producing a wrapping that could be pulled apart - just like the cracker as we know it today.
The word carol
is derived from the old French word caroller which derives from the
Latin choraula. This itself was derived from the Greek choraules.
Births on 25
December:
W C Field
(1946)
Alice Cooper (1945)
Princess Alexandra (1936)
Paul Borget (1935)
Charles Spencer Chaplin (1889)
Alice Cooper (1945)
Princess Alexandra (1936)
Paul Borget (1935)
Charles Spencer Chaplin (1889)
Deaths on 25
December:
Conrad Hilton
(1979)
Humphrey Bogart (1957)
Dorothy Wordsworth (1855)
Sir Isaac Newton (1727)
Humphrey Bogart (1957)
Dorothy Wordsworth (1855)
Sir Isaac Newton (1727)
The biggest
selling Christmas single of all time is Bing Crosby's White Christmas.
In Switzerland
during the Reformation, al instrumental and choral music was banned from
churches. In Germany, disapproval of carols resulted in some being converted
into hymns.
Tinsel on the
Christmas Tree is attributed to a woman whose husband died. She was left to
bring up a large family of children herself. She was left to do everything
working so hard and she was determined to make a happy time for them at
Christmas. She prepared a Christmas Tree to surprise them on Christmas Day.
Unfortunately spiders visited the tree, and crawled from branch to branch,
making webs all over it. The Christ Child saw the tree and knew she would be
devastated to find this on Christmas morning. He changed the spiders' webs to
shining silver.
The first
church the Dutch built in New York City was named in St Nicholas' honour -St
Nicholas Church.
Many Christmas
customs are carryovers from pre-Christian celebrations. Hanging gifts on trees
is supposed to stem from tree worship of the Druids, and the belief that the
tree was the giver of all good things. The Druids are also partly responsible for
the use of mistletoe at Christmastime. They regarded the mistletoe as sacred,
made certain that it never touched the ground, and dedicated it to the Goddess
of Love, which explains the kissing that goes on under it. Originally, when a
boy kissed a girl, he plucked a berry from the cluster and presented it to her.
When the berries were gone, so were the kisses.
In
Christmas tree decorations, angels are usually portrayed as wimpy blondes in
girl's blouses and sandals. In the Bible, however, angels are muscular bullies
who frequently goad humans into fistfights. Life isn't all harps and heavenly
choirs for angels; there's a strict career structure. The only angels mentioned
by name in the Bible are archangels, the eighth-ranking order of angels.
Visitors
to Bethlehem rarely exceed a few thousand at Christmas. In 1995, there were
rowdy celebrations of the first Christmas in a Palestinian-controlled
Bethlehem. The Christmas Eve service televised on 25 December is celebrated not
in the Church of the Nativity, which stands over the place where Jesus was said
to have been born, but in the nearby Franciscan Church of St. Catherine.
The
largest functional Christmas cracker was 45.72 metres long and 3.04 metres in
diameter. It was made by Australian international rugby player Ray Price in
Markson Sparks of New South Wales, Australia and was pulled in the car park of
the Westfield Shopping Town in Chatswood, Sydney, Australia on 9 November 1991.
A
goose was customary Christmas fare until Henry VIII took it upon himself to
tuck into a turkey. Mince pies were once shaped like mangers and are thought to
date back to the sweetmeats formerly presented to the Vatican on Christmas Eve.
The
freedom-fighter and religious activist thought to have been born between 6 BC
and 30 AD, by the name of Jesus Christ from the Greek christos, "the
anointed one". He was born in a stable in Bethlehem. He started out as a
carpenter, but became a missionary following his baptism by a cousin, John.
After proclaiming himself the Messiah, Jesus was betrayed by a disciple and
crucified. He is later said to have risen from the dead.
If
you're wondering why men may have not flocked to kiss you under the mistletoe,
the answer may be that it was said that it will only work if the person you are
kissing is a virgin. On the sixth day of the new moon, a Druid priest used to
cut mistletoe from an oak tree with a sacred sickle. A passing virgin was
called upon to catch the falling plant, which was not allowed to touch the
ground.
The
first commercial Christmas card, produced in 1846, featured a drawing of family
members happily toasting each other with glasses of wine - a shockingly
decadent portrait that was immediately condemned by temperance advocates. In
New South Wales, Australia, the average daily mailbag of six to seven million
items of mail can triple over Christmas. The heaviest day ever was on 23
December 1997, when a record 23 million items were delivered in this state in
Australia.
Santa's
Reindeers are Dasher, Dancer, Prancer, Vixen, Comet, Cupid, Donner and Blitzen.
Saint
Boniface is said to have substituted a fir tree for the pagan oak in the eighth
century as a symbol of faith. Martin Luther fostered the Christmas tree cult by
using a candlelit tree as a symbol of Christ's heavenly home, while trees
decorated with candles, fruit and paper flowers were introduced into Britain
soon after Queen Victoria's marriage.
The
Celts used to bring a large log indoors as a tribute to the sun god. In
Cornwall, revellers would chalk a symbol of a man on the log in a cheery
reference to the human sacrifices who used to be thrown on the bonfire.
Ancient
Roman observances of the Natalis solis invicti and the Saturnalia occurred
in December and involved much feasting, singing, parades and other forms of
celebrating. Not to be outdone, when the Church adopted Christmas it introduced
a major Christian celebration and feasting became a part of the festivities. As
the centuries wore on, depending upon the country, a Christmas goose, turkey or
other animal was adopted as the main course in the Christmas feast.
The
Christmas tree was first decorated with lights in the 16th century. It is
believed that Martin Luther, the Protestant reformer, was the first to add
lighted candles to the tree. He was so taken with the Christmas night sky that
he wished to bring "the lights of the stars" into the home of his
family. From this, decorating the tree with ornaments, messages and notes, and
small gifts emerged in later centuries leading to our customs today.
Hanging
the Christmas stocking on the hearth on Christmas Eve in the hope that it will
be filled with presents the next morning is a custom that goes back about 400
years. It derived from the custom in Holland of children placing wooden shoes
next to the hearth the night before the arrival of St. Nicholas. The children
would fill their shoes with straw and food for St Nicholas's for the donkey
that carried the gifts. In exchange he would leave them a small gift such as
small cakes, fruits and other gifts. Stockings were substituted for the shoes
in Britain, most of Europe and in North America.
A
wreath with holly, red berries and other decorations began from at least the
17th century. Holly, with its sharply pointed leaves, symbolised the thorns in
Christ's crown-of-thorns. Red berries symbolised the drops of Christ's blood. A
wreath at Christmas signified a home that celebrated to birth of Christ.
On
Christmas morning since medieval times, church bells have been rung to announce
to the world the coming of the saviour. It was customary from the 18th century
to wear clothes and carry a small bell to signify the birth of Christ. The
ringing of the bells was to signify the importance of the His Birth.
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