Holiday Traditions


Little Christmas In Ireland

Christmas in Ireland lasts from Christmas Eve to the feast of the Epiphany on January 6, which is referred to Little Christmas. Ireland's Christmas is more a time for religious celebration rather than revelry. A manger scene, or nativity, is displayed in most homes and there are few Christmas trees.

Lighted candles are placed in windows on Christmas Eve, in order to guide Mary and Joseph to safe shelter. The candles are usually red in color and decorated with sprigs of holly. During the British occupation of all of Ireland during World War II, three candles were placed in the window at Christmas for the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. Fellow Catholics passing by would know that the house was a Catholic home, and that all friends were welcome there to celebrate Christmas. The candles were also an invitation to priests to enter the home, say the Christmas Mass, eat dinner, and spend the night with the family.

Irish women bake a seed cake for each person in the house. They also make three puddings, one for each day of the Epiphany such as Christmas, New Year's Day and the Twelfth Night. After the Christmas evening meal, bread and milk are left out and the door unlatched as a symbol of hospitality.

Children often put out Christmas sacks instead of stockings. It is tradition to leave mince pies and a bottle of Guinness out as a snack for Santa.
After the evening meal, the table is set with bread and milk and the door left unlatched as a symbol of the hospitality that the family is offering to Mary and Joseph and the little one to come.

St Stephen's Day, the day after Christmas, is almost as important, with football matches and meetings going on. Young men in extravagant dress, sometimes wearing masks, parade noisily through the streets in the Wren Boys' Procession. They carry long poles with a holly bush atop it. The bush supposedly contains a captured wren, and for whose sake the young men beg for money.

 

 

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Holiday Traditions

 

 

 

Holiday Traditions


Hang Your Stocking By The Chimney With Care

... quickly and from then on, families would hang their stockings on the mantle each Christmas Eve hoping for the same fortune from St. Nicholas, who later became to be known as Santa Claus. Originally, children simply used one of their everyday socks, but eventually families began creating their own special ... 

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Here Comes Sinter Klaas Down The Lane To Holland

... the children believe Sinterklaas to be from Spain, it could be because Holland was famous for its navigation and possibly came into contact with many Spanish sailors who told of St. Nicholas, the patron saint of sailors, and his feats of saving boats and sailors from the angry Spanish seas. Christmas ... 

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Candy Canes For Christmas

... with the idea of striping candy canes, but it s known that Christmas cards prior to the year 1900 showed only all-white candy canes, where Christmas cards after 1900 showed illustrations of striped candy canes. It s about that same time that candy makers began adding peppermint and wintergreen flavors ... 

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Celebrate Christmas And Three Kings Day In Germany

... often set aside special evenings for baking spiced cakes and cookies, and making gifts and decorations. Little dolls of fruit are traditional Christmas toys. Children leave letters on their windowsills for Christkind; a winged figure dressed in white robes and a golden crown and is the Christ Child s ... 

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The Tradition Of The Christmas Wreath

... charge of an orphanage. The children of the orphanage made a wooden ring and affixed red and white candles on one side of it. During each service of daily prayer a child would light one candle, until on Christmas Eve all of them would be illuminated. It is thought that children liked this ring so much ... 

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