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History, legend and tradition

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  • History, legend and tradition

    Gold Coast Bulletin (Australia)
    December 16, 2004 Thursday

    History, legend and tradition


    THE history of Christmas dates back more than 5000 years, the
    traditions we now associate with December 25 were celebrated
    centuries before the Christ child was born.

    The concept of Christmas originated in ancient Egypt in the days of
    King Osiris and Queen Isis around about 3000BC.

    After the untimely death of King Osiris, his wife Isis claimed a
    full-grown evergreen tree sprang overnight from a dead stump,
    symbolising the new life of the king's spirit from his death.

    On each anniversary of Osiris's birth - the date we now know as
    December 25 - Isis would leave gifts around this tree.

    Isis became the Queen of Heaven and Osiris became the reborn divine
    son of heaven. Through the later Phoenicians, Osiris became Baal the
    sun god.

    The mother and child became the Babylonian's objects of worship, the
    trend spread across the world under various names - Cybel and Deoius
    in Asia, Fortuna and Jupiter in pagan Rome.

    The 12 days of Christmas, the yule log, the giving of gifts, carol
    singers and feasts can all be traced back to the early Mesopotamians.

    The Mesopotamians believed Marduk - the ruler of all their gods -
    waged war on the monsters of chaos each winter. To help Marduk in his
    struggle the Mesopotamians held a 12-day festival.

    The Persians and the Babylonians celebrated Sacaea, a similar
    festival featuring an exchange of roles; slaves became masters and
    masters obeyed.

    Early Europeans feared the sun would not return after the December
    winter solstice, rituals and celebrations welcomed the sun after the
    shortest day of the year.

    In Scandinavia, the sun disappears for days during winter.

    In ancient times, a sunless 35 days saw scouts scurry to the
    mountaintops in search of the sun. At the first glimpse of light, the
    great yuletide festival would be held with a special feast served
    around a fire burning with the Yule log.

    Across the land bonfires would be lit and apples tied to tree
    branches as a reminder of the return of the warmer season.

    The ancient Greeks celebrated the victory of their god Kronos against
    Zeus and the Titans in December and the Roman's celebrated their god
    Saturn during the Saturnalia festival from mid-December to January 1.

    The celebration involved festive feasts, visits with friends, and the
    exchange of gifts called strenae or lucky fruits. The Romans decked
    their halls with garlands of laurel and green trees lit with candles.

    As Christianity spread across the globe, church leaders became
    increasingly cranky about the continuing pagan festivals. They tried
    to put a stop to the fun and games but gave up and combined old
    traditions with the new enlightenment.

    The exact day of the Christ child's birth is not reliably recorded
    but it has been celebrated since 98AD. According to the Encyclopaedia
    Britannica, some Latins may have transferred the birthday of Christ
    from January 6 to December 25 around 354AD. December 25 was then a
    Mithraic feast or the birthday of the unconquered Sun.

    The Syrians and Armenians clung to January 6 accusing the Romans of
    sun worship and idolatry, claiming the December 25 festival was
    invented by the disciples of Cerinthus.

    In 137AD, the Bishop of Rome ordered the birthday of the Christ Child
    celebrated as a solemn feast. In 350AD, Julius I - another Bishop of
    Rome - chose December 25 as the day to celebrate.
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