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Does anyone know of what sorts of traditions and ceremonies were part of this event? I've heard that the winter solstice (maybe more than the summer solstice, the longest day) was perhaps the biggest celebration for pagans in the year, as the winter solstice was the start of days getting longer and more all important sun. Is this true? Also, is there a coincidence that Christmas is near this day?

2006-12-20 22:42:05 · 7 answers · asked by Jason D 1 in Society & Culture Holidays Other - Holidays

7 answers

You may have heard of apple wassailing, the medieval winter festival custom of blessing the apple trees with songs, dances, decorations and a drink of cider to ensure their fertility. Here's another, more obscure tradition that most certainly predates Christmas, and was probably once a solstice ritual, because it is so linked to the themes of nature's rebirth and fertility. In Romania, there's a traditional Christmas confection called a turta. It is made of many layers of pastry dough, filled with melted sugar or honey, ground walnuts, or hemp seed.
In this tradition, with the making of the cake families enact a lovely little ceremony to assure the fruitfulness of their orchard come spring. When the wife is in the midst of kneading the dough, she follows her husband into the wintry garden. The man goes from barren tree to tree, threatening to cut each one down. Each time, the wife urges that he spare the tree by saying:
"Oh no, I am sure that this tree will be as heavy with fruit next spring as my fingers are with dough this day."

2006-12-20 23:10:15 · answer #1 · answered by Willy Wonka 3 · 0 0

It is no coincidence. Christmas was a christian plot to get rid of the pagan celebrations, just like they used to burn down holy groves and build churches on the same spots.

Winter Solstice has many traditions, all connected by food. It was the time when you ate well compared to the rest of the year when you had to eat very little in order to preserve food. Traditional christmas dishes here in Finland are dishes that would be done out of foodstuffs preserved from the summer as well as the ham, of course. Vegetables would be made into casseroles, and fruits would be made into a fruitsauce to have with porridge.

Also, some believed that evil spirits roamed the lightless day, which of course meant that you had to stay inside and eat yourself into a stupor.

2006-12-20 22:51:42 · answer #2 · answered by dane 4 · 1 0

Not every body else. Some folks truthfully do have a good time the wintry weather solstice as aspect in their non-Christian religions. And I recognise rather a couple of atheists that remember wintry weather solstice as a non-devout vacation; despite the fact that they do not feel in a deity there may be not anything mistaken with them staring at the seasonal alterations.

2016-09-03 15:51:40 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It is the same way they celebrate Christmas today. Trees, Logs, Gift-Giving, Christmas Lights all have symbolical pagan religious meanings. It is different for every pagans of different countries.

Christmas was purposedly made on this date to coincide with the pagan tradition so that many pagan will convert to christianity so to speak. Howerve, we may look at it as Christianity being paganized. There's no way Jesus could be born in December....the snow would be freezing cold for the sheep and sheperds out at night.

Jesus started his ministry at the age of 33 and died 3 1/2 years later. Counting back, if he died at age 33 1/2 on Nisan 14 which falls on our calendar in the last week of March or First week of April....Jesus was born on the last week of September or !st week of October which was described in the bible as a cold night...(fall season not winter)

2006-12-20 22:50:15 · answer #4 · answered by Tomoyo K 4 · 0 1

xmas was originally a pagan celebration, which was stolen by christianity. it's tradidional to make a solstice cake, which is absolutely delicious!!!
happy yule!!!

2006-12-20 23:20:31 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

All fruits are fruit and vegetables. A "vegetable" is a plant, any part of which is employed for food.

2017-03-11 17:24:28 · answer #6 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

In the superstore, fruits are usually chosen much too soon. Some are rocks, many are wrong. Some of the fruit and vegetables are typical right (zucchini, onions, garlic, lettuce, greens, and a few others) so I'd have to go with vegetables.

2017-02-18 13:17:38 · answer #7 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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