Christmas Eve has many of its own customs and traditions. The most widely practiced one that still exists today is going to a Midnight Mass Church Service. In many countries, especially Catholic ones such as Spain, Mexico, Poland and Italy this is the most important Church service of the Christmas season. People might fast during Christmas Eve (not eat any meat or fish usually) and then the main Christmas meal is often eaten after the Midnight Mass Service in these countries. In some other countries, such as Belgium ,Finland,Lithuania and Denmark the meal is eaten in the evening and you might go to a Midnight Service afterwards!
The
Midnight Mass Communion Service (or 'Christ-Mas') was a very special
one as it was the only one that was allowed to start after sunset
(and before sunrise the next day), so it was held at Midnight!
Christmas
Eve is also the day when people in some countries, like Germany,
Sweden and Portugal exchange their presents. I think Santa must have
those countries on his extra early list! Christmas Eve is also
Santa's busiest day of the year when he has to travel over 220
million miles (355 million km) to get to every house on earth!
In
many European countries including Germany, Serbia and Slovakia,
Christmas Eve is the day when the Christmas Tree is brought into the
house and decorated.
It
was also traditional to bring the Yule Log into the house and light
it on Christmas Eve. It was lit using a piece of the previous years
log and then would burnt non-stop until Twelfth Night (6th January).
Tradition also said that any greenery such as Holly Ivy and Mistletoe
should only be taken into the house on Christmas Eve.
It's
also the time that the wonderful book 'A Christmas Carol' by Charles
Dickens is set and that going out Carol singing was and still is very
popular. In the past, if you weren't carol singing, in parts of the
UK, you might go out wassailing or mumming.
There
were lots of superstitions in the UK that said girls could find out
the initials, or even have visions, of the person they would marry on
Christmas Eve! This was often done by cooking a special cake called a
'dumb cake'. You were supposed to make the cake in silence and prick
your initials into the top. When you went to bed, you left the cake
by the fire hearth and your true love was supposed to coming in at
midnight and prick his initials next to yours!
Other
Christmas Eve superstitions included that farm and wild animals would
kneel at midnight in honour of Jesus being born or that they could
even talk!
So many different traditions. Merry Christmas to you and your family..
ReplyDeleteThank you I hope you day is a wonderful one
DeleteAll good stuff! It's fascinating where some of our traditions come from. A very Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you!
ReplyDeleteYes I have found all these posts very interesting, hope you have a bloody great day
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