O Tannenbaum

403px-F_Krüger_VorweihnachtDuring the fourth century, the practice of bringing evergreen trees indoors during the dark days of winter spread across Europe. In medieval Germany, the increase in Christianity gave rise to a new tradition.  Germans began decorating the trees with apples to represent the garden of Eden. In addition, these “Paradise trees” were soon decorated with additional food items like nuts and sugar wafers.

Germans took their Christmas tree tradition with them and they immigrated to other parts of the world. in 1848, Queen Victoria encouraged her German husband, Prince Albert to decorate a tree, like those he had in his childhood. The Illustrated London News featured this Victorian tree, decorated with sweets, ornaments, and candles. Suddenly, people in England and the United States created increasingly elaborate trees in an attempt to outdo one another. German artisans began crafting delicate I glass ornaments. Also In 1882 Edward Johnson, an associate of Thomas Edison, created the first strand of Christmas tree lights. This year, over 100 million Christmas trees will be on display worldwide.  For more details see History of Christmas Trees – Christmas – HISTORY.com.

The music for “O Tannenbaum” is from a 16th-century German folk song.  There are multiple versions of lyrics with this tune. Although I do not speak German I prefer “O Tannenbaum” to the English language “Oh Christmas Tree”. The buttery smooth voice of Nat King Cole probably has something to do with that. Now when you hear this song or see a Christmas tree think of the Germans and Queen Victoria. And thank them for this centerpiece of our Christmas traditions.

 

Posted in Christmas | 2 Comments

Wassup With Wassailing?

wassailing1-3As traditional and familiar as most any English Christmas carol, the song is among the season’s more misunderstood. A celebration of a holiday custom that pretty much puzzles modern celebrants: wassailing.

Wassailing? What’s wassailing?

The text of the carol employs noun and verb forms of “wassail.” A word derived from the Old Norse ves heil and Old English was hál meaning “be in good health”. The phrase found first use as a simple greeting. However Danish-speaking inhabitants of England turned was hail, and the reply drink hail, into a drinking formula.

Wassail also denoted the drink used for the toast. Spiced wine resembled the ancient Roman hypocras, which survived into the early Middle Ages as a libation for the wealthy. The necessity of importing the wine and such spices as ginger, cinnamon, cloves, allspice, and nutmeg made it dear. When fine ales replaced the wine, more people could afford it, and recipes varied according to the means of each family. Though usually prepared for immediate consumption, wassail sometimes was bottled and allowed to ferment.

The term has evolved in English for more than a millennium. What began as a simple greeting, became a toast in ritualized drinking. Now absorbed into holiday customs rooted in notions of social propriety.

The Wassail Bowl

The first mention of a wassail bowl was in the thirteenth century. A vessel in which revelers dipped cakes and fine bread. The practice of floating crisps of bread in the wassail bowl gave rise to our use of “toast” as a drinking salutation.

Friends—and strangers, too—caroled their townsfolk on Christmas and were thanked with a glass of wassail. By about 1600, the practice of taking a wassail bowl about the streets had taken root. Instead of consuming the punch-like concoction at home, wassailers went house to house offering a warm drink, sometimes expecting payment.

It didn’t take long for wassailing in expectation of recompense to merge with other manifestations of holiday “misrule” that characterized old English Christmas. At Christmastide, the poor expected privileges denied them at other times, including the right to enter the homes of the wealthy, who feasted them from the best of their provisions. In exchange, the lord of the manor had the goodwill of his people for another year. At these gatherings, the bands of roving wassailers often performed songs for the master while drinking his beer, toasting him, his family, his livestock, wishing continued health and wealth.

The following holiday traditions are a direct result of the tradition of wassailing:

  • “Toasts”
  • Christmas parties
  • Christmas bonuses
  • Punch bowls (Think eggnog)

From Wassailing Through History

So lift your cups and join me now is I say was hál to this strange and wonderful old English tradition. And you thought wassailing was just a fancy name for caroling.

 

Posted in Christmas | 2 Comments

Just 14 Shopping Days Left Until Christmas

Have you finished your Christmas shopping? Some people like to finish early. Others won’t stop until they run out of time. Did you take advantage of Black Friday deals? What about cyber Monday? According to fortunly.com, 28.8% of U.S. shoppers start their Christmas shopping in November. 62% of Americans buy their gifts in the week before Christmas. Here are some other key statistics about the Christmas shopping season:

  • 23% of Christmas shoppers in the U.S. rely on social media to help them make the right choice.
  • 14.2% of Americans sell their possessions to fund Christmas spending.
  • Nearly half of Americans don’t buy Christmas decorations.
  • 60% of people in the U.S.A. prefer to buy their holiday gifts online.
  • Holiday retail sales in 2018 surpassed $1 trillion.
  • In 2018, U.S. households spent an average of $1,536 during the Christmas holiday period.

Posted in Christmas | Comments Off on Just 14 Shopping Days Left Until Christmas