Facts You Didn't Know About Christmas
1. Christmas
supposedly marks the birth of Jesus Christ on December 25. But there is no
mention of December 25 in the Bible and most historians actually believe he was
born in the spring.
2. December
25 was probably chosen because it coincided with the ancient pagan festival
Saturnalia, which celebrated the agricultural god Saturn with partying,
gambling, and gift-giving.
3. Many of
the popular Christmas traditions today found their roots in Saturnalia:
Branches from evergreen trees were used during winter solstice as a reminder of
the green plants that would grow in spring when the sun gods grew strong.
4. These
evergreen branches became the foundation of our Christmas tree. Germans are
thought to be the first to bring “Christmas trees” into their homes at the
holidays and decorate them with cookies and lights.
5. The
Christmas tree made its way to America in the 1830s but wasn’t popular until
1846, after Germany’s Prince Albert brought it to England when he married Queen
Victoria. The two were sketched in front of a Christmas tree and the tradition
instantly became popular. Royal fever was real even back then.
6. The
well-known reason we give presents at Christmas is to symbolize the gifts given
to baby Jesus by the three wise men. But it may also stem from the Saturnalia
tradition that required revelers to offer up rituals to the gods.
7. Because
of its roots in pagan festivals, Christmas was not immediately accepted by the
religious. In fact, from 1659 to 1681, it was illegal to celebrate Christmas in
Boston. You were fined if you were caught celebrating.
8. Santa
Claus comes from St. Nicholas, a Christian bishop living in (what is now)
Turkey in the fourth century AD. St. Nicholas had inherited a great deal of
wealth and was known for giving it away to help the needy. When sainted, he
became the protector of children.
9. After his
death, the legend of St. Nicholas spread. St. Nick’s name became Sint-Nicolaas
in Dutch, or Sinter Klaas for short. Which is only a hop, skip, and jump to
Santa Claus.
10. Santa
Claus delivering presents comes from Holland’s celebration of St. Nicholas’
feast day on December 6. Children would leave shoes out the night before and,
in the morning, would find little gifts that St. Nicholas would leave them.
11. And
stockings come from this story: A poor man with three daughters couldn’t afford
the dowry to have them married. One night, St. Nicholas dropped a bag of gold
down the man’s chimney so that his oldest daughter would be able to get
married, and the bag fell into a stocking that was drying by the fire.
12. One of
the reasons we leave milk and cookies for Santa is because Dutch kids would
leave food and drink for St. Nicholas on his feast day.
13. And we
leave carrots for Santa Claus’ reindeer because, in Norse mythology, people
left hay and treats for Odin’s eight-legged horse Sleipnir “in hopes the god
would stop by their home during his Yule hunting adventures.” Dutch children
adopted this tradition too, and would treats for St. Nick’s horse.
14. The look
of Santa Claus we have today was created at an 1804 meeting of the New York
Historical Society, where member John Pintard handed out wooden cutouts of
jolly old St. Nick in front of stockings filled with toys.
15. Though
Santa Claus has worn blue and white and green in the past, his traditional red
suit came from a 1930s ad by Coca Cola.
16. And the
image of him Santa Claus flying in a sleigh started in 1819...and was dreamt up
by the same author who created the Headless Horseman, Washington Irving.
17. Rudolph
was actually conceived by a department store, Montgomery Ward, as a marketing
gimmick to get kids to buy holiday coloring books.
18. Rudolph
almost didn’t have a red nose either: At the time, a red nose was a sign of
chronic alcoholism and Montgomery Ward thought he would look like a drunkard.
19. Rudolph
was almost named Rollo or Reginald. Reginald the Red-Nosed Reindeer doesn’t
quite have the same ring to it.
20. The poem
that introduced us to the other eight reindeer, “A Visit From St. Nicholas,”
actually named dropped Dasher, Dancer, Prancer, Vixen, Comet, Cupid, Duner and
Blixem. (Which, like Donner and Blitzen, come from the German words for thunder
and lightning.)
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