24.12.13

Christmas Special: Christian and pagan origins

     Christmas is a holiday now celebrated through many different cultures around the world. Some Muslim nations even hold Christmas as a special time of year. The holiday has grown to encompass more than the Christian reverence of Christ's birth, and  it now stands for the love of mankind for his fellows, an appreciative acknowledgement toward the friends and family that make life meaningful.
     The origins of this "Christian" day are far from their modern recognition of Jesus of Nazareth's birth.
Ancient Egyptians and ancient Greeks worshiped gods of the resurrection (Osiris and Dionysus respectably) at the end of the year, but European paganism had the strongest impacts on modern traditions.
     The sum total of Christian impact on the holiday is a recognition of Jesus's birth. All similarities end there since Jesus was born anywhere from August to September, not December. Early church fathers make no recognition of Christmas as a revered time of year since adoption of the holiday began later. After centuries of church leaders discouraging celebrations on 25 December because of non-Christian traditions, Pope Gregory I instructed his priests not to ban winter celebrations but adapt them for Christians. This did not definitively end Christian opposition to Christmas's celebration. Though Christmas was eventually an intimate part of Christian religion, Oliver Cromwell's government banned the festivities in England during his reign because of the pagan origins. In the British colonies of the New World, Puritan groups such as the Massachusetts Bay Colony continued the ban for several years while other areas embraced  the tradition.
     The Romans held an annual week-long festival, Saturnalia, 17-25 December, to honor Saturn, the god of agriculture. A Christianized Roman populace later replaced their heathen celebration habits with a recognition of  Christ's birth, but the traditions used to celebrate this holiday did not noticeably change for centuries. An example of unchanging practices despite a religious shift is easily exemplified with the human-shaped biscuits, the origin of the gingerbread man, that were eaten during Saturnalia to symbolize the human sacrifice of the Lord of the Misrule at the end of the festive week. While the human sacrifice is no longer a part of tradition, the gingerbread man is.
     The dominant origin for most Christmas traditions actually spring from European pagans. Rituals celebrated the winter solstice and recognized the return of daylight with spring on the way. Pagans decorated their trees in worship of natural spirits, the predecessor to Christmas trees, used mistletoe to poison the victims for their human sacrifices, and sang carols to ward off evil spirits.
     Santa Claus is an excellent example of merged traditions. Bishop Nicolas of Myra in Turkey attended the Council of Nicaea in 325 AD. In 1087 his body was moved from Turkey to Italy where it absorbed the gift-giving tradition of Pasqua Epiphania, a local saint, especially placing toys in children's stockings. Gifts were exchanged on 6 December, the anniversary of Nicolas's death. As this tradition spread north into pagan tribes, representation of Nicolas merged with Woden: a man with long white beard riding a horse through the sky in late autumn in heavy winter clothing. The celebration date shifted to 25 December as Christians attempted to convert the pagan rituals as was done with Saturnalia centuries before.
     The modern depiction of Santa Claus, however, comes largely from the nineteenth century. In his Knickerbocker History, Washington Irving, an American writer, used the translated Dutch name of Nicolas (Sinterklaas), "Santa Claus," to describe a bearded, horse-riding man. The poem "T'was the night before Christmas" changed the steed from a horse to reindeer and added the descent by chimney. Harper's Weekly, a newspaper, popularized the visual aspects of Santa Claus from the 1860-1880s. As the final touch, Coca-Cola commissioned a Santa advertising campaign in the 1930s with the only stipulation being a Coca-Cola red suit. Thus, Santa Claus contains elements of Christian, pagan, and commercial origins that effectively represents the amalgamation of Christmas today.
     By the 1880s the modern conception of "Christmas" was secured with egg nog, Christmas cards, Santa Claus, and the Christmas poems and stories by Clement Clark Moore and Charles Dickens. By the mid 1940s Christmas became a commercial focus for many American-based companies with FDR's extension of the Christmas shopping season to Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, as well as Coca-Cola's successful development of Christmas advertising begun in the 1930s.
     Christmas has long been a winter holiday celebrated by people of different religions around the world. Despite the modern Christian emphasis, it is fitting that a holiday begun to celebrate life and human relationships continues to spread joy around the world in all different cultures, religions, and peoples.


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Agatha Tyche

4.12.13

Years that Question

     The history of man normally has various centers of power. Rarely are those centers tangled into one place. America, the superpower, is projected to be replaced by China at the economic pinnacle by 2016. The Christian missionary title of the world already belongs to South Korea so the United States has lost that too. As a military might, the young nation still holds up the mark for now.
     With the widespread protests, civil wars, and increasing wealth of the Middle East, the population explosion in Africa, and the increasing economic might of SE Asian nations like the Philippines, India and Indonesia, the focal point of global power is already changing, but will the landscape change as a whole or only within the upper classes? European imperialism shredded the last African-based empires a century and a half ago, and the Ottoman Empire's fall after World War I ended the last prominent Middle Eastern empire.
     Will economic development in previously termed "third world" countries finally sling-shot forward? If a non-Western country becomes a superpower, will the change in power be beneficial to their economic development and social stability or will the effort of rising up empty the coffers? Alternatively, will the newly found power refocus attention on the new pole and cause further development?
     Much of the twentieth century focused on the mutual destruction of Europe's powers. With this new century other nations are stepping on the springboards of global domination, but will they learn the lessons of their predecessors or only seek accumulation and domination?
     As with all new things, elements of excitement and fear merge indistinguishably. Population dynamics of a growing world are prying power from the elderly Western nations. What will become of the old powers - looted, restored, or stabilized? Will a multi-polar world destroy or encourage trade?
     Let's find out.


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Agatha Tyche