A little Epiphany humor.
Tag: Epiphany
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Twelfth Night Christmas Traditions and Folklore
Once they have sufficiently recovered from New Year’s, a lot of people take down their Christmas lights and dismantle their trees. (On the other hand, too many seem to leave them up until spring.) After all, Christmas is past, right? Wrong!
December 5, the eve of Epiphany, is Twelfth Night – the Twelfth Day of Christmas – or is it? Well, it depends on when you start the count. Is Christmas Day the First Day, or should we begin counting the day after? The day after would make January 6, Epiphany (the Christian feast commemorating the visit of the three Magi to the Baby Jesus) the Twelfth Day, which would seem to make sense.
But is Epiphany the Twelfth Day, or should Twelfth Night, a night of reveling to mark the last day of Christmas, really to be observed on the eve of Epiphany, just as Christmas Night, in England anyway, is actually Christmas Eve? The Christian world is divided – and that is only taking into account the West!
Then there’s “Old Twelfth Night” (January 17), but that’s for another post.
In any case, according to tradition, it’s perfectly fine to still have the tree and lights up, but it is bad luck to keep Christmas decorations on display beyond Epiphany. Apparently it was the Victorians who first said so, as a signal that it’s time for everyone to get back to work. The Tudors, on the other hand, kept partying right on through February 1, the eve of Candlemas (the presentation of the Christ Child at the Temple in Jerusalem).
As for Shakespeare’s play, “Twelfth Night,” which would seem to have nothing at all to do with Christmas, it is a charming corollary of a season of merriment, masked balls, and misrule. The first performance took place on Candlemas, 1602.
We may not be able to come to a consensus on the Twelfth Day, but we can say with certainty that the night of December 5 marks the arrival of Befana the Christmas witch. Befana is the wizened crone who bestows gifts and happiness upon the good children of Italy. If the children are bad, they get a lump of coal. (If the family is poor, they get a stick.) It’s traditional to leave a glass of wine and a tasty morsel for Befana. In return, she will sweep the floors with her broom, symbolically sweeping away the problems of the old year.
Think about that when you worry that your tree is losing too many needles.
PHOTO: Make way for the Holly Man!
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Epiphany Traditions Drums and Decorations
I can hardly hear myself think, with twelve drummers drumming!
While I am generally all for extending Christmas as long as possible, we have come finally to the twelfth day, the Feast of the Epiphany, and the official close of the season. This is traditionally the day to take down the Christmas tree and all the festive decorations and to let the tree spirits go about their business. Our wise forebears believed that it is bad luck to take down the decorations earlier. Taking them down later is equally unlucky, so that if you miss the date, you’re supposed to leave everything up for the rest of the year. Ignore this advice at the peril of your crops!
I hope La Befana, the Christmas witch, was good to you.
Photos of other Epiphany celebrations, including one that involves pounding a drum while standing in frigid water:
http://blogs.pjstar.com/eye/2015/01/06/christians-around-the-world-celebrate-epiphany/
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Twelfth Night Confusion Christmas Day Count?
Okay, as a lover of all things Christmas, I’m confused. What day of Christmas is it anyway?
I know it’s Epiphany, but isn’t it supposed to be the Twelfth Day of Christmas, as well? Did I miss my Twelfth Night revel? Was I supposed to start counting on Christmas Day, or the day after? My certainty of Christmas lore is shaken.
According to what I glean from Wikipedia (which is never wrong), nobody quite knows the correct answer – or they think they do and that everyone else is full of s***.
I’d better put on my yellow stockings and cross garters just in case.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twelfth_Night_(holiday)
Perhaps that explains the Shakespearean subtitle, “What You Will.”
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Befana The Christmas Witch of Italy
I pause in my editing of the Scheide tribute to briefly remind everyone that tonight, being the eve of Epiphany, marks the arrival of Befana the Christmas witch. Befana is the wizened crone who bestows gifts and happiness upon the good children of Italy. If the children are bad, they get a lump of coal. (If the family is poor, they get a stick.) It’s traditional to leave a glass of wine and a tasty morsel for Befana. In return, she will sweep the floors with her broom, symbolically sweeping away the problems of the old year.
Yet again, European Christmas traditions are sooooooo pagan.
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