Please be Patient while this loads...


---- The History of Halloween----

Come In



More than you ever wanted to know about Halloween,
but interesting...??

Peeper
Buzzsaw

American Halloween Celebrating is a blend of Our many Cultures..

In 43 AD, the Roman Empire conquered the Celts.. Celts and Romans found themselves living in the same villages. The Celtic festival of Samhain was celebrated at the same time as Pomona, a Roman celebration of the harvest.
Their cultures began to merge and suddenly apples and harvests became part of the celebration.

In villages, You farmed and you raised cattle. On May first, you drove the cattle out into your field. On November first, you brought them back into the barn for the winter. [Hummmm Did they have BARNS then??] Your entire year was two seasons, growing season and winter.

Since November first was the start of the season of death, when plants all died.
The belief was that spirits who had died during that year also gathered that night. The spirits needed the help of their kin to cross over. Relatives would hollow out turnips and gourds and use them to carry the spirits to the proper location.

Holo

October 31st-- Halloween, Costumes and Jack O'Lanterns. Trick or Treat and bonfires. We generally see it as a harmless children's celebration. And it is, Now.

The history of Halloween dates back before Christianity and involves death and evil spirits and all sorts of fear. Not just good spirits were loose on Samhain - evil spirits, witches and goblins also roamed the earth. To protect your relative's spirit, you'd paint a scary face on the gourd to chase the evil away. Many would also disguise themselves by painting their faces with paints and donning a wild costume.

Faeries also ran free on this Eve. Faeries were good. They liked rewarding good deeds and did not like to be crossed. The faeries would disguise themselves as beggars and go door to door asking for handouts. Those who gave them food were rewarded. Those who slammed the door tended to experience some unpleasantness.

Bonfires were very popular part of the ceremony in the Celtic countries. In Ireland, A large bonfire was lit in the center of town and sacrifices were thrown in. From one bonfire in each town, all the hearths and fireplaces were re lit. The same ceremony took place in Scotland, but the Scots also believed that you could tell the future by staring into the bonfire.

Cauldron witch

Up until now the holiday called Halloween did not exist.
Over the next 500 years, the Catholic Church under Pope Gregory, converted most of Europe and the British Islands to Christianity. Pope Gregory's successor, Pope Boniface 4th, desperately wanted to eliminate pagan ceremonies. Pope Boniface felt that as long as the old festivals were still celebrated, the church's control wasn't complete. He also knew that if he banned the festivals, he'd have a full blown riot on his hands. So he decided to replace the old festival with a new festival and the church created All Saints' Day, a holy day to honor all the saints.

smilewitch

The problem with All Saints' Day was it was a holy day, not a festival. The people simply celebrated both of them.
Two hundred years later the church had still not succeeded in getting rid of the pagan holiday. Pope Gregory the 3rd, changed the rules so that All Saints' day always fell on the exact day as Samhain. And to celebrate All Saints' Day, young men were to go door to door begging for food for the town poor. Villagers were allowed to dress up in costume to represent a saint. Now, you dressed up to honor the saints.

For the next 700 years, the Church felt it had won the battle because the Celts celebrated All Saints' Day. The Celts, on the other hand, thought they had won because they still had their holiday with the original ceremonies. Neither realized that Samhain and All Saints' Day were blurring into one holiday. By the 1500's, you couldn't separate the two anymore. Of course, by this time, no one called it All Saints' Day. Now it was called All Hallows' Day. The night before All Hallows' Day was All Hallows' Eve, or in the slang of the villagers, Hallow Evening became simply Halloween.

This may have been the end of it except for one significant development. On Halloween, 1517, Martin Luthor began trying to reform the Catholic Church. His reformation ended up as the Protestant Church, the followers of which didn't believe in saints. No saints meant no All Hallows' Day. No All Hallows' Day meant no Halloween. The Celts have never given up a party without a fight, so the Halloween festivities were moved to November 5 - Guy Fawkes Day.
Guy Fawkes was a minor player in a Catholic plot to blow up the English Parliament, which was Protestant. So, although technically, the celebration was to commemorate the failure of the plot, it was Halloween. Bonfires were lit across the country. People made lanterns from carved out turnips and children went begging for money.

graveyard

Meanwhile, in the new world, the settlers were all Protestant and Halloween was technically a Catholic holiday. The original colonists in this country found ANY celebration immoral, never mind a Catholic one. In fact, celebrating Christmas in the Massachusetts colony was illegal, punishable by banishment or death.

After the American Revolution, Halloween still never really caught on in America. Most of the country was farmland, and the people too far spread out to share different celebrations from Europe. Their gatherings were mostly - barn raisings, quilting bees, taffy pulls. Eventually, a fall holiday called the Autumn Play Party developed. People would gather and tell ghost stories, dance and sing and feast and light bonfires. The children would stage a school pageant where they paraded in costumes.

Once we entered the Industrial revolution, the majority of Americans lived in cities .. By the end of the Civil War, only Episcopalians and Catholics celebrated All Saints' Day and Halloween, and the two religions combined made up less than 5% of the population. The two religions began an aggressive campaign to put those two holidays on all public calendars. The first year All Saints' Day and Halloween showed up on the calendars, the newspapers and magazines made a big deal about it. Suddenly, everyone knew about Halloween and began celebrating it by lighting bonfires and having masquerade parties.

The Gremlin

In the late 1800's, nearly 7.4 million immigrants came to America, bringing their European customs with them. Seven hundred thousand Irish came over during the seven-year potato famine alone. These immigrants brought their customs with them, but once they saw how plentiful pumpkins were in the New World, it didn't take them long to start hollowing out jack O'lanterns instead of turnips.

In 1921, Anoka, Minnesota celebrated the first official city wide observation of Halloween with a pumpkin bowl, a costumed square dance and two parades. After that, it didn't take Halloween long to go nationwide. New York started celebrating in 1923 and LA in 1925. By then, not only had Jack O'Lanterns replaced the hollowed out turnips, but the disguised fairies begging door to door had become trick or treat. Bonfires remained popular, but not for relighting fires and telling the future.

So if it appears on October 31 that the wind sounds a little too mournful as it whistles through the skeletal fingers of the bare trees, it's only your imagination. And if the nip in the air seems to bear the chilling touch of the grave on it, it's only fall foreshadowing the arrival of winter. It has nothing to do with the ghosts and goblins that once called this night their own. And as you peer out into the blackness of this night, if something should rustle through the dead leaves, just remember that the faeries dance no more in the realms of man. Or do they???

spider

It is only Halloween.   Be SAFE and Have FUN...

When the Wee ones ask, you will now have more than enough to tell them.

casper


Trick Or Treat JeNette Index
Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1