The evergreen fir tree has traditionally been used
to celebrate winter festivals (pagan and Christian) for thousands of years.
Pagans used branches of it to decorate their homes
during the winter solstice, as it made them think of the spring to come.
The Romans used Fir Trees to decorate their temples
at the festival of Saturnalia. Christians use it as a sign of everlasting life
with God.
Nobody is really sure when Fir trees were first used
as Christmas trees. It probably began about 1000 years ago in Northern Europe.
Many early Christmas Trees seem to have been hung
upside down from the ceiling using chains (hung from chandeliers/lighting
hooks).
Other early Christmas Trees, across many parts of
northern Europe, were cherry or hawthorn plants (or a branch of the plant) that
were put into pots and brought inside so they would hopefully flower at
Christmas time.
If you could not afford a real plant, people made
pyramids of woods and they were decorated to look like a tree with paper,
apples and candles. Sometimes they were carried around from house to house,
rather than being displayed in a home.
It is possible that the wooden pyramid trees were
meant to be like Paradise Trees.
These were used in medieval German Mystery or
Miracle Plays that were acted out in front of Churches on Christmas Eve.
In early church calendars of saints, 24th December
was Adam and Eve's day. The Paradise Tree represented the Garden of Eden. It
was often paraded around the town before the play started, as a way of
advertising the play. The plays told Bible stories to people who could not
read.
The first documented use of a tree at Christmas and
New Year celebrations is argued between the cities of Tallinn in Estonia and
Riga in Latvia! Both claim that they had the first trees; Tallinn in 1441
and Riga in 1510.
Both trees were put up by the “Brotherhood of
Blackheads” which was an association of local unmarried merchants, ship owners,
and foreigners in Livonia (what is now Estonia and Latvia).
Little is known about either tree apart from that
they were put in the town square, were dance around by the Brotherhood of
Blackheads and were then set on fire. This is like the custom of the Yule
Log.
The word used for the “tree” could also mean a mast
or pole, tree might have been like a “Paradise Tree” or a tree-shaped wooden
candelabra rather than a “real” tree.
In the town square of Riga, the capital of Latvia,
there is a plaque which is engraved with "The First New Year's Tree in
Riga in 1510," in eight languages. You can find out more about the Riga Tree from this
website:www.firstchristmastree.com
In 1584, the historian Balthasar Russow wrote about
a tradition, in Riga, of a decorated fir tree in the market square where the
young men “went with a flock of maidens
and women, first sang and danced there and then set the tree aflame.”
There is a record of a small tree in Breman, Germany
from 1570. It is described as a tree decorated with "apples, nuts, dates, pretzels and paper flowers." It was displayed in a 'guild-house' (the
meeting place for a society of business men in the city).
The first person to bring a Christmas Tree into a
house, in the way we know it today, may have been the 16th century German
preacher Martin Luther.
A story is told that, one night before Christmas, he
was walking through the forest and looked up to see the stars shining through
the tree branches.
It was so beautiful, that he went home and told his
children that it reminded him of Jesus, who left the stars of heaven to come to
earth at Christmas. Some people say this is the same tree as the “Riga” tree,
but it isn't! The Riga tree originally took place a few decades earlier.
The custom of having Christmas trees could well have
travelled along the Baltic sea, from Latvia to Germany.
In the 1400’s and 1500’s, the countries which are
now Germany and Latvia were them part of two larger empires which were
neighbors.
Another story says that St. Boniface of Crediton (a
village in Devon, UK) left England and traveled to Germany to preach to the
pagan German tribes and convert them to Christianity.
He is said to have come across a group of pagans
about to sacrifice a young boy while worshipping an oak tree.
In anger, and to stop the sacrifice,
St. Boniface is said to have cut down the oak tree and, to his amazement,
a young fir tree sprang up from the roots of the oak tree.
St. Boniface took this as a sign of the
Christian faith and his followers decorated the tree with candles so that
St. Boniface could preach to the pagans at night.
There is another legend, from Germany, about how the
Christmas Tree came into being. It goes:
“Once
on a cold Christmas Eve night, a forester and his family were in their cottage
gathered round the fire to keep warm. Suddenly there was a knock on the door.
“When
the forester opened the door, he found a poor little boy standing on the door
step, lost and alone. The forester welcomed him into his house and the family
fed and washed him and put him to bed in the youngest sons own bed (he had to share
with his brother that night!)
“The
next morning, Christmas Morning, the family were woken up by a choir of angels,
and the poor little boy had turned into Jesus, the Christ Child.
“The
Christ Child went into the front garden of the cottage and broke a branch off a
Fir tree and gave it to the family as a present to say thank you for looking
after him. So ever since them, people have remembered that night by bringing a
Christmas Tree into their homes!”
In
Germany, the first Christmas Trees were decorated with edible things, such as
gingerbread and gold covered apples. Then glass makers made special small
ornaments similar to some of the decorations used today.
In 1605 an unknown German wrote: "At Christmas they set up fir trees in
the parlours of Strasbourg and hang thereon roses cut out of many-colored
paper, apples, wafers, gold foil, sweets, etc."
At first, a figure of the Baby Jesus was put on the
top of the tree. Over time it changed to an angel/fairy that told the shepherds
about Jesus, or a star like the Wise Men saw.
The first Christmas Trees came to Britain sometime
in the 1830’s. They became very popular in 1841, when Prince Albert
(Queen Victoria's German husband) had a Christmas Tree set up in Windsor
Castle.
In 1848, drawing of "The Queen's Christmas tree
at Windsor Castle" was published in the Illustrated London News. The
drawing was republished in Godey's Lady's Book, Philadelphia in December 1850
(but they removed the Queen's crown and Prince Albert's moustache to make it
look “American”!).
The publication of the drawing helped Christmas
Trees become popular in the UK and USA.
In Victorian times, the tree would have been
decorated with candles to represent stars. In many parts of Europe, candles are
still used to decorate Christmas trees.
Tinsel and The Legend of the Christmas SpiderTinsel
was also created in Germany, were it was originally made from thin strips of
beaten silver. But when plastic/man-made tinsel was invented, it became very
popular as it was much cheaper than real silver and also lighter to go on the
tree!
There are also folk stories about how tinsel was
created - by The Christmas Spider!
These tales seem to have started in Eastern Germany
or Ukraine but are also told in parts of Finland and Scandinavia. The
stories are now also popular in other countries such as the USA; although I
live in the UK and most people in my country have never heard of the
story/legend!
All the versions of the story involve a poor family
who can't afford to decorate a Tree for Christmas (in some versions the tree
grew from a pine cone in their house, in others the family have bought a tree
into the house).
When the children go to sleep on Christmas Eve a
spider covers the tree in cobwebs. Then on Christmas morning the cobwebs are
magically turned into silver and gold strands which decorate the tree!
Some versions of the story say that it's the light
of the sun which changed the cobwebs into silver and gold but other versions
say it's St Nicholas / Santa Claus / Father Christmas / das Christkind which
made the magic happen.
In parts of Germany, Poland, and Ukraine it is meant
to be good luck to find a spider or a spider's web on your Christmas Tree.
Spider's web Christmas Tree decorations are also
popular in Ukraine. They're called “pavuchky” (which means “little spider”) and
the decorations are normally made of paper and silver wire. You might even put
an artificial spider's web on your tree!
Christmas Tree Lights
Because of the danger of fire, in 1895 Ralph Morris,
an American telephonist, invented the first electric Christmas lights, similar
to the ones we use today.
In 1885 a hospital in Chicago burned down because of
candles on a Christmas Tree!
And in 1908 insurance companies in the USA tried to
get a law made that would ban candles from being used on Christmas Trees
because of the many fires they had caused! So we have to say a big thank you to
Ralph Morris for making Christmas safer!
The most lights lit at the same time on a Christmas
tree is 194,672 and was done by Kiwanis Malmedy / Haute Fagnes Belgium in
Malmedy, Belgium, on 10 December 2010!
Many towns and villages have their own Christmas
Trees. One of the most famous is the tree in Trafalgar Square in London,
England, which is given to the UK by Norway every year as a
“thank you” present for the help the UK gave Norway in World War II.
The White House in the USA has had a big
tree on the front lawn since the 1920s.
The record for the most Christmas trees chopped down
in two minutes is 27 and belongs to Erin Lavoie from the USA. She set the
record on 19th December 2008 on the set of Guinness World Records: Die GroBten
Weltrekorde in Germany.
Artificial Christmas Trees really started becoming
popular in the early 20th century.
In the Edwardian period Christmas Trees made from
colored ostrich feathers were popular at “fashionable” parties.
Around 1900 there was even a short fashion for white
trees - so if you thought colored trees are a new invention they're not! Over
the years artificial trees have been made from feathers, papier mâché, metal,
glass, and many different types of plastic (I've got a couple of inflatable
trees!).
The tallest artificial Christmas tree was 52m
(170.6ft) high and was covered in green PVC leaves!. It was called the “Peace
Tree” and was designed by Grupo Sonae Distribuição Brasil and was displayed in
Moinhos de Vento Park, Porto Alegre, Brazil from 1st December 2001 until 6th
January 2002.
In many countries, different trees are used as
Christmas trees. In New Zealand a tree called the 'Pohutakawa' that has red
flowers is sometimes used and in India, Banana or Mango trees are
sometimes decorated.
RELATED POSTS:
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http://puricarefiles.blogspot.com/2017/01/christmas-trees-we-see-nothing-wrong.html
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http://puricarefiles.blogspot.com/2016/12/christmas-candles-candles-were-used.html
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The Tradition of
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http://www.whychristmas.com/customs/trees.shtml
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