Christmas
Annie Crough Illustration,
Animation and Graphics - Ornaments, apparel, housewares, and
toys imprinted with Christmas motifs.
Christmas Country
- Sales of Koestel wax angels, Santa dolls, porcelain and blown
glass ornaments, and holiday jewelry.
The Christmas Palace
- Markets Christmas items and collectibles.
Christmas Time at Fillingham
- UK based store with worldwide shipping, offering a variety of
Christmas trees, lights, decorations, toys and accessories. Includes
newsletter.
Divine Whimsy - Witt
World Inc. makes and markets four different stocking designs,
two complementary tree skirts, bottle and gift bags.
Elf Magic - Elf themed
products including ornaments, shirts, hair bows, plates, and dolls.
The Embroidery Works
- Personalized Christmas stockings, custom tree skirts and ornaments
made to customer specifications.
E-Pixels Shop
- Christmas letters hosted on a web page, with personal content
and photographs.
Europe in the Village
- German nutcrackers, smoking men by Steinbach and Ulbricht, and
Russian carved Santas.
The First Noel - Christmas
shop featuring villages, Santas, angels, nativities, and ornaments.
German Handcraft
Imports - Offers a large inventory of hand-crafted Christmas
gifts from Erzgebirge, Germany.
Greenheart Farms Nursery
- A variety of poinsettia plants shipped in continental USA for
Christmas.
Hill Country Annie
- Santas, snowmen and angels hand-crafted from antique quilts
and chenille.
Holiday Innovations
- All natural reindeer food.
Holiday Magic
- Features magical reindeer food for children to sprinkle on the
lawn on Christmas Eve.
Holiday Tree & Trim
Co. - Superstore, with over 5000 illustrated product listings
including trees, lights, garlands, outdoor decorations, collectibles
Illuminations of North
Carolina, Inc. - Luminarias for Christmas Eve.
KoolyNDilly's Christmas
Shoppe - Holiday displays and decorations including trees,
animated figurines, stockings, and Christmas themed toys.
Kriss Kringle's -
Features Christmas gifts, collectibles, and personalized ornaments.
LucyGirl Design
- Hand crafted ornaments made from real chicken eggs. Featuring
sample designs.
Magic Reindeer
Feed - An all-natural gift for children of all ages. Sprinkle
on the ground Christmas Eve in order to entice Santa's reindeer
to stop at your home.
Noël Eternel
- Gifts, ornaments and collectibles, with Christmas stories, traditions,
legends, recipes, and fun facts.
Possible Dreams
- Clothtique Santa Claus and other collectible figurines.
Reindeer Food
- Half pint containers of reindoor food, to sprinkle around a
house to ensure Santa stops by.
Richard Sellmer Verlag
- About 100 different Advent calendars are available, including
3-D, fabric, and online varieties.
Ruby's
Treasure Chest - Songbook of traditional carols, with illustrations
to color. Includes song list and sheet music sample.
Sandy Elliott's Christmas
Bazaar - Assembled goosefeather trees and kits, spun cotton
ornaments and decorations and craft supplies.
Santa Claus House
- A selection of Christmas gifts.
SantaMap - A guide to
the world of Santa and the North Pole.
Shop A Christmas Store
- Offers handmade Christmas ornaments, nativities, Polonaise Glass;
Steinbach Nutcrackers; Department 56; Possible Dreams and Christmas
lights.
Team Santa Hats -
Custom santa hats available in most colors, and embroidered with
corporate, team, or patriotic logos.
Tin Creations by Rose
- Offers a selection of handmade decorations, ornaments, and angels
from recycled materials.
Twins Feather Trees
- Reproduces antique German feather trees, olde world Santas,
and other holiday items.
We Be Christmas -
Pre-lit and unlit artificial trees, wreaths and garlands, novelties
and figurines, and fireplace screens.
Xmas-Online - Handcrafted
Christmas ornaments and holiday gifts.
Christmas
- history
From
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Christmas (literally, the Mass of Christ) is a traditional holiday
in the Christian calendar which takes place around the end of
December and celebrates the nativity of Jesus Christ. Christmas
is also celebrated as a secular holiday throughout much of the
world, including countries with little Christian population, such
as Japan. The precise date of the birth and historicity of Jesus
are hotly debated.
The word 'Christmas' is often abbreviated to "Xmas".
Date of Celebration
Christmas is celebrated on December 25 in all Christian churches
(Eastern Rite Roman & Protestant), but since most Eastern
Orthodox churches have not accepted either the Gregorian calendar
or the Revised Julian Calendar reforms, the Ecclesiastic December
25 will fall on the civil date of January 7 for the years between
1900 to 2099. The date comes from the tradition that Jesus was
born during The Jewish Festival of Lights (i.e. Hanukkah the 25th
of Kislev - the beginning of Tevet) Kislev being accepted generally
to correspond with December. The modern popular choice of 5BC
for the year of Jesus's birth would place the 25th of Kislev on
the 25th of November with the Old Julian calendar.
Traditionally in the United Kingdom the Christmas season ran
for twelve days following Christmas Day, the twelve days of Christmas,
a period of feasting and merrymaking that ended on Twelfth Night,
the Feast of the Epiphany. This period corresponds with the liturgical
season of Christmas.
Customs and Celebrations
An enormous number of customs surround Christmas, and vary from
country to country. Many aspects, such as the Christmas Tree,
the Yule Log, and the giving of presents, were taken from the
earlier pagan holiday of Yule and the traditional celebrations
of the Winter solstice. Thus a few Christian churches, most notably
the Jehovah's Witnesses, view Christmas as a pagan holiday and
do not celebrate it. Some of the more popular aspects of British,
North American, and Japanese Christmasses include Santa Claus
(or Father Christmas) who brings gifts to children on his sleigh
pulled by reindeer; the giving of gifts to friends and family;
decorating a Christmas Tree with lights and ornaments; and the
decoration of the home with evergreen foliage, particularly holly
and mistletoe. In North America and, to a lesser extent, the United
Kingdom it is traditional to decorate the outside of houses with
large numbers of lights.
In most Western countries, Christmas celebrations take have both
religious and secular aspects. The religious celebrations start
with the celebration of Advent around the start of December, and
are marked by special church services. Advent services lead up
to the celebration of the birth of Jesus, and often include Advent
carols. In the period immediately before Christmas, there are
many Christmas services at which Christmas hymns and Christmas
carols are sung, and there are special services, typified by the
Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols at Cambridge. At Christmas
special services often include a Midnight Mass, or a Mass of the
Nativity. The church's season of Christmas ends on the feast of
the Epiphany, also known as Twelfth Night, the traditional date
of the visit of the Three Kings to the child Jesus.
Christmas is also celebrated by the non-religious as a secular
holiday and, often, an opportunity to catch up with one's extended
family. In many it is a time for giving gifts, exchanging Christmas
cards, and having Christmas parties, which often take place over
several weeks before Christmas Day. On Christmas Day a special
meal of Christmas dishes is usually served, for which there are
varying traditional menus in every country. In the United Kingdom,
the traditional meal consists of roast turkey or goose, served
with roast potatoes and other vegetables, followed by christmas
pudding, a heavy boiled pudding made with dried fruit (traditionally
plums) and flour. Christmas is a time when shops will increase
their sales, and introduce new products which are sold at premium
prices, taking advantage of the many marketing opportunities.
Radio and TV stations popularise Christmas by broadcasting Christmas
carols and Christmas songs. However, some Christian religions
and denominations (like the Jehovah's Witnesses and various Puritan
groups), don't participate the celebration of holidays without
explicit Biblical authorization, and so neither celebrate Christmas
nor exchange Christmas cards, because they think these customs
are against Biblical teachings. (Matthew 14:6-12; Romans 13:13)
The Christmas period in some countries, such as the United Kingdom
extends beyond Christmas day up to New Year, which also has its
own parties, though in Scotland Hogmanay which occurs at the New
Year is celebrated more than Christmas. The secular aspects of
Christmas continue afterwards with the sales of goods in shops
at the Christmas sales and New Year sales, when shops sell off
goods which were not sold before Christmas, or use the opportunity
to clear out goods, or simply take advantage of the many shoppers
who go to these events in order to increase their sales. Another
popular aspect of the Christmas season is the pantomime.
Christmas is also somewhat popular in Japan, encouraged by the
commercial sector who see the opportunities in encouraging gift-giving.
The gift-giving is mainly done between lovers, and Christmas does
not carry religious connotations. Christmas is not as important
as New Year's Day in Japan. The Japanese use the American and
British Santa Claus in their holiday.
The holiday's popularity is so pronounced that other faiths have
emphasized their own winter holidays to serve as their own religion's
equivalent. The most obvious example is Judaism's Chanukah which
has evolved in the 20th century into a similar family gift giving
holiday.
In the Republic of China on Taiwan, Christmas is not officially
celebrated, but December 25 coincidentially falls on the date
of the signing of the Constitution of the Republic of China in
1947 and hence there is an official holiday on that date, which
is largely treated as if it was Christmas.
Christmas is traditionally associated with the Northern Hemisphere
winter, and thus winter motifs are prominent in Christmas decorations
and in the Santa Claus myth. Residents of countries located in
the tropics and the Southern Hemisphere thus experience somewhat
of a dissonance between popular culture depictions of Christmas
and their own balmy Christmas celebrations.
Christmas is, typically, the largest annual economic stimulus
for the economies of celebrating Christian nations.
Countries that celebrate Christmas on December 25th precede it
by Christmas Eve, and some of them follow it by Boxing Day. In
the Netherlands, Germany, and Scandinavia Christmas Day and Boxing
Day are called (the equivalent of) First and Second Christmas
Day.
For some shops and other businesses Christmas Day is the only
day in the year that they are closed.
The traditional Christmas flower is the poinsettia.
Christmas in Culture
A large number of fictional Christmas stories have been written,
usually involving heart-touching tales that involve a Christmas
miracle. Several of these stories have passed into popular culture
and been accepted as part of the tradition of Christmas.
One of the most popular is Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol,
in which the curmudgeonly miser Ebenezer Scrooge, who rejects
compassion and philanthropy, and Christmas as a symbol of both,
is visited by the "Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and
Future" who show him the consequences of his ways. Dickens
is sometimes credited with shaping the modern celebration of Christmas
(tree, plum pudding, carols) through his novel and other Christmas-related
stories.
Another Christmas story is the acclaimed film, It's a Wonderful
Life which is essentially the reverse of A Christmas Carol where
the hero, George Bailey, is a businessman who sacrificed his dreams
to help his community. On Christmas Eve, a guardian angel prevents
from committing suicide in despair and magically shows him how
much he meant to the world around him.
Timing of Christmas Gifts
For most of the world, Christmas gifts are given on Christmas
Eve (24 December) or Christmas Day.
For those countries who concentrate on Saint Nicholas as the
bearer of gifts, presents are given on 5 December or 6 December.
In Spain, and countries with a similar tradition, gifts are brought
by the three Kings, Magi or Wise Men at Epiphany on 6 January.
In the UK, there seems to have been a tradition of giving gifts
to non-family members on Boxing Day, 26 December but this does
not occur now. Some families no doubt give presents more than
once during the winter season.
History of the Date of Christmas
Many scholars have argued over the exact birthday and year of
Christs birth. It is not a conclusive matter. It is probably impossible
to say that He was born on one date or another. What we do know
is that the year was between 5-7BC due to the astrological pnomen
at that time, and the date of the Census. Where these coincide
there we have the most likely date. Some say it was not possible
to have been born in deep winter, because Luke tells us that shepherds
spent the night Jesus was born outdoors with their flocks.(Luke
2:8) But the others say that this is speculation. The fairest
thing is to say that He was born probably between October and
March 5-7BC. Originally, Christmas' date was set to correspond
with Roman festival of the birth of the Sun God Mithra. As early
as A.D. 354, the Birth of Christ was celebrated on Dec. 25th in
Rome. Other cities had other traditional dates. The history of
Christmas is closely associated with that of the Epiphany. The
earliest body of gospel tradition, represented by Mark no less
than by the primitive non-Marcan document embodied in the first
and third gospels, begins, not with the birth and childhood of
Jesus, but with His baptism; and this order of accretion of gospel
matter is faithfully reflected in the time order of the invention-of
feasts. The great church adopted Christmas much later than Epiphany,
and before the 5th century there was no general consensus of opinion
as to when it should come in the calendar, whether on the 6th
of January, or the 25th of March, or the 25th of December.
The earliest identification of the 25th of December with the
birthday of Christ is in a passage, otherwise unknown and probably
spurious, of Theophilus of Antioch (171-183), preserved in Latin
by the Magdeburg centuriators, to the effect that the Gauls contended
that as they celebrated the birth of the Lord on the 25th of December,
whatever day of the week it might be, so they ought to celebrate
the Pascha on the 25th of March when the resurrection befell.
The next mention of December 25 is in Hippolytus' (c. 202) commentary
on Daniel. Jesus, he says, was born at Bethlehem on December 25,
a Wednesday, in the forty-second year of Augustus. This passage
also is almost certainly interpolated. In any case he mentions
no feast, nor was such a feast congruous with the orthodox ideas
of that age. As late as 245 Origen, in his eighth homily on Leviticus,
repudiates as sinful the very idea of keeping the birthday of
Christ "as if he were a king Pharaoh." The first certain
mention of December 25 is in a Latin chronographer of A.D. 354,
first published entire by Mommsen. It runs thus in English: "Year
I after Christ, in the consulate of Caesar and Paulus, the Lord
Jesus Christ was born on the 25th of December, a Friday and 15th
day of the new moon." Here again no feastal celebration of
the day is attested.
There were, however, many speculations in the 2nd century about
the date of Christ's birth. Clement of Alexandria, towards its
close, mentions several such, and condemns them as superstitions.
Some chronologists, he says, alleged the birth to have occurred
in the twenty-eighth year of Augustus, on the 25th of Pachon,
the Egyptian month, i.e. the May 20. These were probably the Basilidian
gnostics. Others set it on the 24th or 25th of Pharmuthi, i.e.
the 19th or 20th of April. Clement himself sets it on the November
17, 3 B.C. The author of a Latin tract, called the De Pascha computus,
written in Africa in 243, sets it by private revelation, ab ipso
deo inspirali, on the March 28. He argues that the world was created
perfect, flowers in bloom, and trees in leaf, therefore in spring;
also at the equinox, and when the moon just created was full.
Now the moon and sun were created on a Wednesday. The 28th of
March suits all these considerations. Christ, therefore, being
the Sun of Righteousness, was born on the 28th of March.
The same symbolical reasoning led Polycarp (before 160) to set
his birth on Sunday, when the world's creation began, but his
baptism on Wednesday, for it was the analogue of the sun's creation.
On such grounds certain Latins as early as 354 may have transferred
the human birthday from January 6 to December 25, which was then
a Mithraic feast and is by the chronographer above referred to,
but in another part of his compilation, termed Nat ails invicti
solis, or birthday of the unconquered Sun. Cyprian calls Christ
Sot verus, Ambrose Sol novus foster, and such rhetoric was widespread.
The Syrians and Armenians, who clung to January 6, accused the
Romans of sun-worship and idolatry, contending with great probability
that the feast of the 25th of December had been invented by disciples
of Cerinthus and its lections by Artemon to commemorate the natural
birth of Jesus. John Chrysostom also testifies December 25 to
have been from the beginning known in the West, from Thrace even
as far as Gades. Ambrose, On Virgins, writing to his sister, implies
that as late as the papacy of Liberius 352 - 356, the Birth from
the Virgin was feasted together with the Marriage of Cana and
the Banquet of the 4000, which were never feasted on any other
day but January 6.
Chrysostom, in a sermon preached at Antioch on December 20, 386
or 388, says that some held the feast of December 25 to have been
held in the West, from Thrace as far as Cadiz, from the beginning.
It certainly originated in the West, but spread quickly eastwards.
In 353 - 361 it was observed at the court of Constantius II. Basil
of Caesarea (died 379) adopted it. Honorius, emperor (395 - 423)
in the West, informed his mother and brother Arcadius (395 - 408)
in Byzantium of how the new feast was kept in Rome, separate from
January 6, with its own troparia and sticharia. They adopted it,
and recommended it to Chrysostom, who had long been in favour
of it. Epiphanius of Crete was won over to it, as were also the
other three patriarchs, Theophilus of Alexandria, John of Jerusalem,
Flavian I of Antioch. This was under Pope Anastasius I, 398 -
400.
John or Wahan of Nice, in a letter printed by Combefisinhis Historiamonoizeiitarurn,
affords the above details. The new feast was communicated by Proclus,
patriarch of Constantinople (434 - 446), to Sahak, Catholicos
of Armenia, about 440. The letter was betrayed to the Persian
king, who accused Sahak of Greek intrigues, and deposed him. However,
the Armenians, at least those within the Byzantine pale, adopted
it for about thirty years, but finally abandoned it together with
the decrees of Chalcedon early in the 8th century. Many writers
of the period 375 - 450, e.g. Epiphanius, Cassian, Asterius, Basil,
Chrysostom and Jerome, contrast the new feast with that of the
Baptism as that of the birth after the flesh, from which we infer
that the latter was generally regarded as a birth accoding to
the Spirit. Instructive as showing that the new feast travelled
from West eastwards is the fact (noticed by Usener) that in 387
the new feast was reckoned according to the Julian calendar by
writers of the province of Asia, who in referring to other feasts
use the reckoning of their local calendars. As early as 400 in
Rome an imperial rescript includes Christmas among the three feasts
(the others are Easter and Epiphany) on which theatres must be
closed.
Source:
information here is licensed under the GNU
Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia
article Christmas.
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