How the Tudors and Victorians celebrated Christmas

Blackleaf

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[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]Did you know that Christmas was banned in England during the 1650s when the nation was a Republic (The Commonwealth of England) under the rule of a Puritan known as Oliver Cromwell? Christmas carols were also banned and didn't re-appear in England until the Victorian era.[/FONT]


The English Christmas tradition, which is still practised in several cathedrals throughout the country today, of dressing a choirboy in a bishop's clothing and allowing him to conduct the church service dates back hundreds of years. Even though it's still a Christmas tradition in certain English cathedrals - such as Hereford - Henry VIII actually abolished it.

The Englishman Sir Henry Cole invented the Christmas card and a thousand copies of it were printed for the Christmas of 1843. In 1840, Britain also gave us the world's first postage stamp, and it was that that gave Cole the idea for the Christmas card. A few years later, in 1846, the British also invented the Christmas cracker.


[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]A Tudor Christmas[/FONT]

Long before the birth of Christ, midwinter had always been a time for merry making by the masses. The root of the midwinter rituals was the winter solstice - the shortest day - which falls on 21st December. After this date the days lengthened and the return of spring, the season of life, was eagerly anticipated. It was therefore a time to celebrate both the end of the autumn sowing and the fact that the 'life giving' sun had not deserted them. Bonfires were lit to help strengthen the 'Unconquered Sun'.

For Christians the world over this period celebrates the story of the birth of Jesus, in a manger, in Bethlehem. The scriptures however make no mention as to the time of year yet alone the actual date of the nativity. Even our current calendar which supposedly calculates the years from the birth of Christ, was drawn up in the sixth century by Dionysius, an 'innumerate' Italian monk to correspond with a Roman Festival.

Until the 4th century Christmas could be celebrated throughout Europe anywhere between early January through to late September. It was Pope Julius I who happened upon the bright idea of adopting 25th December as the actual date of the Nativity. The choice appears both logical and shrewd - blurring religion with existing feast days and celebrations. Any merrymaking could now be attributed to the birth of Christ rather than any ancient pagan ritual.

One such blurring may involve the Feast of Fools, presided over by the Lord of Misrule. The feast was an unruly event, involving much drinking, revelry and role reversal. The Lord of Misrule, normally a commoner with a reputation of knowing how to enjoy himself, was selected to direct the entertainment. The festival is thought to have originated from the benevolent Roman masters who allowed their servants to be the boss for a while.



The Church entered the act by allowing a choirboy, elected by his peers, to be a Bishop during the period starting with St. Nicholas Day (6th December) until Holy Innocents Day (28th December). Within the period the chosen boy, symbolising the lowliest authority, would dress in full Bishop's regalia and conduct the Church services. Many of the great cathedrals adopted this custom including York, Winchester, Salisbury Canterbury and Westminster. Henry VIII abolished Boy Bishops. However a few churches, including Hereford Cathedral, still continue the practice even today.

The burning of the Yule Log is thought to derive from the midwinter ritual of the early Viking invaders, who built enormous bonfires to celebrate their festival of light. The word 'Yule' has existed in the English language for many centuries as an alternative term for Christmas.



Traditionally, a large log would be selected in the forest on Christmas Eve, decorated with ribbons, dragged home and laid upon the hearth. After lighting it was kept burning throughout the twelve days of Christmas. It was considered lucky to keep some of the charred remains to kindle the log of the following year.

Whether the word carol comes from the Latin caraula or the French carole, its original meaning is the same - a dance with a song. The dance element appears to have disappeared over the centuries but the song was used to convey stories, normally that of the Nativity. The earliest recorded published collection of carols is in 1521, by Wynken de Worde which includes the Boars Head Carol.

Carols flourished throughout Tudor times as a way to celebrate Christmas and to spread the story of the nativity.

Celebrations came to an abrupt end however in the seventeenth century when the Puritans
banned all festivities including Christmas. Surprisingly carols remained virtually extinct until the Victorians reinstated the concept of an 'Olde English Christmas' which included traditional gems such as While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks By Night and The Holly and the Ivy as well as introducing a plethora of new hits - Away in a Manger, O Little Town of Bethlehem - to mention but a few.

The twelve days of Christmas would have been a most welcome break for the workers on the land, which in Tudor times would have been the majority of the people. All work, except for looking after the animals, would stop, restarting again on Plough Monday, the first Monday after Twelfth Night.

The 'Twelfths' had strict rules, one of which banned spinning, the prime occupation for women. Flowers were ceremonially placed upon and around the wheels to prevent their use.

During the Twelve Days, people would visit their neighbours sharing and enjoying the traditional 'minced pye'. The pyes would have included thirteen ingredients, representing Christ and his apostles, typically dried fruits, spices and of course a little chopped mutton - in remembrance of the shepherds.

Serious feasting would have been the reserve of Royalty and the Gentry. Turkey was first introduced into Britain in about 1523 with Henry VIII being one of the first people to eat it as part of the Christmas feast.

The popularity of the bird grew quickly, and soon, each year, large flocks of turkeys could be seen walking to London from Norfolk, Suffolk and Cambridgeshire on foot; a journey which they may have started as early as August.



A Tudor Christmas Pie was indeed a sight to behold but not one to be enjoyed by a vegetarian. The contents of this dish consisted of a Turkey stuffed with a goose stuffed with a chicken stuffed with a partridge stuffed with a pigeon.

All of this was put in a pastry case, called a coffin, and was served surrounded by jointed hare, small game birds and wild fowl.


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Blackleaf

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[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]A Victorian Christmas [/FONT]

This image is of the world’s first commercial Christmas card. It was commissioned by Englishman Henry Cole in 1843, the same year Charles Dickens wrote A Christmas Carol. Just 3 years earlier, Britain also invented the world's first postage stamp, and it was from that that the idea of the Christmas card came about



[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]For thousands of years people around the world have enjoyed midwinter festivals. With the arrival of Christianity, pagan festivals became mixed with Christmas celebrations. One of the leftovers from these pagan days is the custom of bedecking houses and churches with evergreen plants like mistletoe, holly and ivy. Apparently, as well as their magical connection in protecting us from evil spirits, they also encourage the return of spring. [/FONT]

[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]No era in history, however, has influenced the way in which we celebrate Christmas quite as much as the Victorians. [/FONT]

[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]Before Victoria's reign started in 1837 nobody in Britain had heard of Santa Claus or Christmas Crackers. No Christmas cards were sent and most people did not have holidays from work (British working conditions in those days were horrific). The wealth and technologies generated by the industrial revolution of the Victorian era changed the face of Christmas forever. Sentimental do-gooders like Charles Dickens wrote books like "A Christmas Carol", published in 1843, which actually encouraged rich Victorians to redistribute their wealth by giving money and gifts to the poor - Humbug! These radical middle class ideals eventually spread to the not-quite-so-poor as well. [/FONT]



[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]The holidays - The wealth generated by the new factories and industries of the Victorian age allowed middle class families in England and Wales to take time off work and celebrate over two days, Christmas Day and Boxing Day. Boxing Day (which only the British and some Commonwealth countries celebrate), December 26th, earned its name as the day servants and working people opened the boxes in which they had collected gifts of money from the "rich folk". Those new fangled inventions - the railways - allowed the country folk who had moved into the towns and cities in search of work to return home for a family Christmas. [/FONT]

[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]The Scots have always preferred to postpone the celebrations for a few days to welcome in the New Year, in the style that is Hogmanay. Christmas Day itself did not become a holiday in Scotland until many years after Victoria's reign and it has only been within the last 20-30 years that this has been extended to include Boxing Day. [/FONT]

[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]The Gifts - At the start of Victoria's reign, children's toys tended to be handmade and hence expensive, generally restricting availability to those "rich folk" again. With factories, however, came mass production, which brought with it games, dolls, books and clockwork toys all at a more affordable price. Affordable that is to "middle class" children. In a "poor child's" Christmas stocking, which first became popular from around 1870, only an apple, orange and a few nuts could be found. [/FONT]



[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]Father Christmas (if you're British) / Santa Claus (if you're American or British) - Normally associated with the bringer of the above gifts, is Father Christmas or Santa Claus. The two are in fact two entirely separate stories. Father Christmas was originally part of an old English midwinter festival, normally dressed in green, a sign of the returning spring. The stories of St. Nicholas (Sinter Klaas in Holland) came via Dutch settlers to America in the 17th Century. From the 1870's Sinter Klass became known in Britain as Santa Claus and with him came his unique gift and toy distribution system - reindeer and sleigh. [/FONT]

[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]Turkey Time - Turkeys had been brought to Britain from America hundreds of years before Victorian times. When Victoria first came to the throne however, both chicken and turkey were too expensive for most people to enjoy. In northern England roast beef was the traditional fayre for Christmas dinner while in London and the south, goose was favourite. [/FONT]

[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]Many poor people made do with rabbit. On the other hand, the Christmas Day menu for Queen Victoria and family in 1840 included both beef and of course a royal roast swan or two. By the end of the century most people feasted on turkey for their Christmas dinner. The great journey to London started for the turkey sometime in October. Feet clad in fashionable but hardwearing leather the unsuspecting birds would have set out on the 80-mile hike from the Norfolk farms. [/FONT]

[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]Arriving obviously a little tired and on the scrawny side they must have thought London hospitality unbeatable as they feasted and fattened on the last few weeks before Christmas! [/FONT]



[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]Christmas Cards - The "Penny Post" was first introduced in Britain in 1840 by Rowland Hill. The idea was simple, a penny stamp paid for the postage of a letter or card to anywhere in Britain. This simple idea paved the way for the sending of the first Christmas cards. Sir Henry Cole tested the water in 1843 by printing a thousand cards for sale in his art shop in London at one shilling each. The popularity of sending cards was helped along when in 1870 a halfpenny postage rate was introduced as a result of the efficiencies brought about by those new fangled railways. [/FONT]




[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]The Tree - Queen Victoria's German husband Prince Albert helped to make the Christmas tree as popular in Britain as they where in his native Germany, when he brought one to Windsor Castle in the 1840's. [/FONT]

[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]The Crackers - Invented by Tom Smith, a London sweet maker in 1846. The original idea was to wrap his sweets in a twist of fancy coloured paper, but this developed and sold much better when he added love notes (motto's), paper hats, small toys and made them go off BANG! [/FONT]

[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]Carol Singers - Carol Singers and Musicians "The Waits" visited houses singing and playing the new popular carols; [/FONT]

[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]1843 - O Come all ye Faithful [/FONT]

[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]1848 - Once in Royal David's City [/FONT]

[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]1851 - See Amid the Winters Snow [/FONT]

[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]1868 - O Little Town of Bethlehem [/FONT]

[FONT=arial,helvetica,arial,lucida sans]1883 - Away in a Manger [/FONT]

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