A
wedding is the
ceremony
in which two people are united in
marriage
or a similar institution. Wedding traditions and customs vary
greatly between
cultures,
ethnic groups,
religions,
countries, and
social classes. Most wedding ceremonies
involve an exchange of
wedding vows by
the couple, presentation of a gift (offering, ring(s), symbolic
item, flowers, money), and a public proclamation of marriage by an
authority figure or leader. Special wedding garments are often
worn, and the ceremony is followed by a
wedding reception. Music, poetry, prayers
or readings from Scripture or literature also may be incorporated
into the ceremony.
Common elements across cultures
A number of cultures adopt the traditional Western custom of a
bride wearing a white dress. This tradition
came to symbolize purity in the
Victorian
era (despite popular misconception, the white dress did not
indicate
virginity, which was symbolized
by the face
veil). Within the '
white wedding' tradition, a white dress and
veil are unusual choices for a woman's second or subsequent
wedding.
Exchanging rings may be the oldest and most universal symbol of
marriage in the western culture, but the origins are unclear. The
ring's circular shape represents perfection and never-ending love.
The rings are exchanged during the wedding ceremony and according
to tradition, symbolize the love, faithfulness and commitment of
the marriage union.
The wedding is often followed by a reception in which the rituals
may include toasting the newlyweds, their first dance as
spouses, and the cutting a wedding cake.
Traditional wedding garb
- Cheongsam or
Hanfu, Chinese
traditional
formal wear.
- Batik and Kebaya, a garment worn by the Javanese people of Indonesia
and also by the Malay people of
Malaysia.
- Barong Tagalog,
an embroidered, formal men's garment of the Philippines
.
- Kimono, the traditional
garments of Japan

- Sari, Indian popular and
traditional dress in India

- Dhoti, male garment in
South India

- Dashiki, the traditional West African wedding attire
- Aodai, traditional
garments of Vietnam

- Morning dress, western daytime
formal dress
- Kilt, male garment particular to Scottish culture
- Kittel, a white robe worn by the groom at
an Orthodox Jewish wedding. The
kittel is worn only under the Chupah, and is
removed before the reception.
- Topor, a type of conical
headgear
- Evening Suits
- Black tie ("dinner jacket" in the UK;
often referred to as a "Tuxedo" in the US;
traditionally appropriate only for use after 6:00 p.m., but also
seen in daytime, especially in the United States)
- Non-traditional "tuxedo" variants (colored jackets/ties,
"wedding suits")
- White tie ("evening dress" in the UK;
very formal evening attire)
- Sherwani, a long coat-like garment worn
in South Asia
- Wedding crown, worn by Scandinavian brides
- Wedding veil
- Wedding dress
- Langa Oni, traditional two piece
garment typically worn during a Pakistani wedding.
Wedding music
Western weddings
Music played at Western weddings
includes a processional song for walking down the aisle (ex:
wedding march) and reception dance
music includes:
- Various works for trumpet and organ, arguably the most famous
of which include the Prince of
Denmark's March by Jeremiah
Clarke as a processional, the "Trumpet Tune" by Henry Purcell and the "Trumpet Voluntary" by John Stanley as recessionals.
- Selections by George Frideric
Handel, perhaps most notably the "Air" from his Water Music as processional and the
"Alla Hornpipe" as recessional.
- The "Bridal Chorus" from
Lohengrin by Richard Wagner, often used as the
processional and commonly known as "Here Comes the Bride". Richard
Wagner is said to have been anti-Semitic, and as a result, the Bridal
Chorus is often not used at Jewish weddings. It is also generally
discouraged for use at Roman
Catholic weddings.
- Johann Pachelbel's Canon in D is an alternative
processional.
- The "Wedding March"
from Felix Mendelssohn's incidental music for the Shakespeare play, A Midsummer Night's Dream,
used as a recessional.
- The "Toccata" from Charles-Marie
Widor's Symphony for Organ No.
5, used as
a recessional.
- Segments of the Ode to Joy, the
fourth movement of Ludwig van
Beethoven's Ninth
Symphony.
- At wedding receptions, Der Ententanz, a 1950s Swiss
Oom-pah song known more commonly in America
as The Chicken Dance, has
become a popular part of the reception dance music.
Jewish weddings
At traditional
Jewish weddings, a solemn,
wordless tune is sung as the groom and then bride walk down the
aisles.
Wedding customs around the world
African customs
Pygmy wedding traditions
Pygmy engagements were not
long and usually formalized by an exchange of visits between the
families concerned. The groom to be would bring a gift of game or
maybe a few arrows to his new in-laws, take his bride home to live
in his band and with his new parents. His only obligation is to
find among his relatives a girl willing to marry a brother or male
cousin of his wife. If he feels he can feed more than one wife, he
may have additional wives.
Arab wedding customs
Although
Christian weddings in the
Arab World bear similarities to Western
weddings,
Muslim weddings in the Arab
countries are influenced by
Muslim
traditions. Muslim weddings start with a
Sheikh and
Al-kitaab (book) for the bride and groom.
It is a Western misconception that the groom may not see his bride
until the wedding day; indeed, a wedding is not
Islamically valid unless both bride and groom are
willing, and the groom is often encouraged to visit her before the
wedding (as advised in many
aḥadīth
of the
Islamic prophet Muhammad). However, these visits must be chaperoned
to ensure purity of action between the two. Men and women in
wedding ceremonies and receptions are segregated, with areas for
men and for women.
Bengali wedding customs
Bengali
wedding refers to both Muslim and Hindu
weddings in Bangladesh
and West
Bengal
. Although Muslim and Hindu marriages have
their distinctive religious rituals, there are many common cultural
rituals in marriages across religion among
Bengali people.
Chinese wedding customs
Traditional Chinese marriage is a ceremonial ritual within Chinese
societies that involve a marriage established by
pre-arrangement between families. Within
Chinese culture, romantic love was
allowed, and
monogamy was the norm for most
ordinary citizens. A band of musicians with gongs and flute-like
instruments accompanies the bride parade to groom's home. Similar
music is also played at the wedding banquet. Depending on the
region that the bride hails from, Chinese weddings will have
different traditions such as
Tea
Ceremony or the use of a wedding emcee. Also in modern times,
Chinese couples will often go to photo studios to take "glamour
shots" posing in multiple gowns and various backgrounds.
Cantonese wedding customs
Most Cantonese wedding rituals follow the main Chinese wedding
traditions, although some rituals are particular to the
Cantonese people.In a Cantonese wedding the
bride price is based on the groom's economic status. The idea of
"selling the daughter" or bride isn't a phrase that is used often
therefore the price of the bride isn't too demanding. Most of the
time the bride price is in the form of gold jewelry, fine fabric,
or money, even a roast pig which symbolizes the bride to be a
virgin.Wedding presents are given by the elderly couples or couples
that are older than the newlyweds and tea is served by the younger
family members.
European customs
British Customs
The
Western custom of a bride
wearing a
white
wedding dress, came to symbolize purity in the Victorian era,
not virginity. Within the "white wedding" tradition, a white dress
and veil is not considered appropriate in the second or subsequent
wedding of a widow or divorcee. The specific conventions of Western
weddings, largely from a
Protestant and
Catholic viewpoint, are discussed at
"
White wedding."
A wedding is often followed or accompanied by a wedding reception,
known as the 'Wedding Breakfast', at which an elaborate
wedding cake is served. Western traditions
include
toast the couple, the
newlyweds having the
first dance, and
cutting the cake. A bride may throw her
bouquet to the assembled group of all
unmarried women in attendance, with folklore suggesting the person
who catches it will be the next to wed. A fairly recent equivalent
has the groom throwing the bride's
garter to the assembled unmarried men;
the man who catches it is supposedly the next to wed.
The Wedding Breakfast is one occasion where every member of the
family, who has had at least some role in the wedding, is present.
It is also important being the first time the newly married Bride
and Groom share their first meal together as a lawfully wedded
couple. The word Breakfast comes from a more ancient tradition of
fasting before the wedding ceremony, the Wedding Breakfast is
therefore 'breaking that fast'. The modern Wedding Breakfast
includes the service of food to guests that can range from
traditional roasts, buffets, or regional treats such as in the case
of a London Wedding in the 'East End'.
A modern tradition is for brides to wear or carry "something old,
something new, something borrowed, something blue" during the
service. It is considered good luck to do so. Often the bride
attempts to have one item that meets all of these qualifications,
such as a borrowed blue handkerchief which is "new to her" but
loaned by her grandmother (thus making it old). Another addition to
this custom is to wear a penny in one's shoe to bring
prosperity.
The full text of the verse is:
- Something old, something new,
- Something borrowed, something blue,
- And silver sixpence in your shoe.
French customs
In smaller
French
towns, the groom may meet his fiancée at her home
on the day of the wedding and escort her to the chapel where the
ceremony is being held. As the couple proceeds to the
chapel, children will stretch long white ribbons across the road
which the bride will cut as she passes.
At the chapel, the bride and groom are seated on two red velvet
chairs underneath a silk canopy called a
carre.Laurel
leaves may be scattered across their paths when they exit the
chapel. Sometimes small coins are also tossed for the children to
gather.
At the reception, the couple customarily uses a toasting cup called
a
Coupe de Marriage. The origin of giving this toast began
in France, when a small piece of toast was literally dropped into
the couple's wine to ensure a healthy life. The couple would lift
their glass to "a toast", as is common in Western culture
today.
Some couples choose to serve a
croquembouche instead of a wedding cake. This
dessert is a pyramid of crème-filled pastry puffs, drizzled with a
caramel glaze.
At a more boisterous wedding, tradition involves continuing the
celebration until very late at night. After the reception, those
invited to the wedding will gather outside the newlyweds' window
and bang pots and pans. They are then invited into the house for
some more drinks in the couple's honor, after which the couple is
finally allowed to be alone for their first night together as
husband and wife. This practice spread throughout France as a way
to celebrate special occasions.
Decorative replicas of these special
sabres can be purchased from artisans in Lyon
, France (the
French capital of cutlery).
If the couple is also having a religious ceremony, the civil
ceremony acts as a private family wedding. The mayor of the town
where the wedding is taking place usually performs the civil
ceremony. Once the civil ceremony is complete, the couple will
receive a livret de famille, a booklet where a copy of the
marriage certificate is recorded. This
is an official document and, should the couple have children, each
child's birth certificate will be recorded in the livret de famille
too. The civil marriage ceremony in France is free of charge.
Greek customs
Two or three days before the wedding, the couple organizes a
celebration called
Krevati (Greek for
bed) in their new home. In Krevati, friends and
relatives of the couple put money and young children on the
couple's new bed for prosperity and fertility in their life. After
the custom, they usually have a party with food and music.
On the day of the wedding, usually Saturday, but also Friday or
Sunday, the groom cannot see the bride until the wedding ceremony.
The groom usually arrives first in church and waits for bride, who
usually arrives late. After they exchange flower bouquets, they
have the wedding ceremony, where the best man puts the
wedding rings and crowns on the couple. The
couple drink red wine from the same glass (between one and three
sips, depending on the tradition). This is not "communion" in the
formal religious sense, but about sharing the cup of life. At the
end of the wedding ceremony, as the newly wedded pair leave the
church, the guests throw rice and flowers for fertility and
felicity. Special guests, such as close friends and family receive
sugar-coated almonds (traditionally an odd number, usually seven
but sometimes five) as a gift from the couple. Most Greek
ceremonies are
Orthodox.
After the ceremony, usually the couple hold a great wedding party
in some place with plenty of food, drinks, music and dance, usually
until next morning. The wedding party starts with the invited
people waiting for the couple, who usually come after some time.
They start the party dancing blues and eating a piece of their
wedding cake. In some point of the party, they also dance the
traditional
zeibekiko (groom) and
çiftetelli (bride).
In many
places of Greece
, where they
hold a more traditional wedding, they usually play only traditional music and eat local food. For example in the
region of Cyclades
, they eat the traditional pasteli (solid honey with sesame) and in the region
of Crete
they cook
rice with goat. In most traditional weddings, they bake
whole animals like pigs, goats or sheep just like the Greek
Easter celebration. Before the church
ceremony, especially in smaller areas, usually friends and
relatives of the bride and the groom, accompanies them separately
to the church playing traditional instruments, according to the
region.
A typical Greek wedding will usually have more than 100 invited
people (but usually 250-500) who are friends, siblings,
grandparents, uncles, aunts, first or second cousins, neighbors and
colleagues. It is common to have guests whom the couple has never
met before. This is because the people who will be invited are
usually determined by the parents of the couple and not by the
couple themselves. Traditionally, the whole village would have
attended the wedding, so very often the parents invite friends of
theirs and their children, to the weddings of their own
children.
There are many other traditions which are local to their regional
areas. One famous tradition is the pinning of money on the bride's
dress. This custom originated in one part of Greece, where it is a
substitute for wedding presents, however it has become more
widespread recently.
Italian customs
In some
parts of Italy
, a party,
known as a Serenade, is thrown outside of the bride's home by the
groom. His family and friends come and wait for the bride,
entertaining themselves until she appears. The groom then sings to
his bride to further seduce her. Once his song is sung, the party
ends.
The day of the wedding, the
groomsmen try their
hardest to make the groom as uncomfortable as possible by saying
things like "Maybe she forgot where the church is".
It is also traditional for the grooms family to give a
dowry to the bride and to provide the
engagement ring. The bride's family is then
responsible for receiving the guests of the wedding in their home
for a reception afterward.
The color green is very important in the Italian wedding. In Italy,
the tradition of something blue is replaced with something green.
This color brings good luck to the married couple. The veil and
bridesmaids also
were important in an Italian wedding. The tradition began in
Ancient Rome when the veil was used to
hide the bride from any spirits that would corrupt her and the
bridesmaids were to wear similar outfits so that the evil spirits
were further confused.
An old Roman custom was that brides threw nuts at rejected suitors
as they left the ceremony.
In
Sicilian customs, the dessert course is
often presented as a
Venetian Table,
a dazzling array of pastries, fruits, coffees, cakes, (etc)
presented in great quantity with much celebration. This is often
called Venetian Hour.
After dessert, more dancing commences, gifts are given, and the
guests eventually begin to leave. In
Southern Italy, as the guests leave, they
hand envelopes of money to the bride and groom, who return the gift
with a
wedding favor, a small token
of appreciation.
Polish customs
In
Polish
weddings the
celebrations may continue for two or three days. In the
past, the engagement ceremony was organized by the future groom as
a formal family gathering, during which he asked his chosen lady to
marry him. In the recent years this custom has changed and today an
engagement is much more personal and intimate. An elegant dinner
party afterwards is still a nice way to inform the closest family
members about the couples' decision to get married.
In some regions of Poland the tradition to invite the wedding
guests in person is still upheld. Many young couples, accompanied
by the parents, visit their family and friends to hand them the
wedding invitations personally.
According to the old tradition a groom arrives with his parents at
the house of a bride just before the wedding ceremony. At that time
both parents and parents-in-law give a young couple their blessing.
The couple enter the church together and walks up to the altar
followed by two witnesses and the parents. In Poland it is quite
unusual for the bride to be walked down the aisle or to have
bridesmaids and groomsmen in a wedding. The couple is assisted by
two witnesses, a man (usually grooms' side) and a woman (usually
brides' side) who are either family members or close friends.
The Polish bride traditionally wears a white dress and a veil. The
groom, on the other hand usually wears a fitted suit with a bow tie
and a
boutonnière that matches the
brides' bouquet. During the ceremony wedding rings are exchanged
and both the husband and wife wear them on their right hand. When
they leave the church the guests toss rice or coins at the married
couple for good and prosperous future together. Right after the
ceremony the closest family and all the guest form a line in the
front of the church to congratulate the newlyweds and wish them
love and happiness. As soon as the married couple leave the church
they get showered with rice for luck or guests drop coins at their
feet for them to pick up.
Once all the guests have showered the couple with kisses, hugs and
flowers everyone heads to the reception. It is a custom in Poland
to prepare "passing gates" on the way to the reception for the
newlyweds who, in order to pass, have to give the "gate keepers"
some vodka. This is a misinterpretation of an earlier tradition,
when the "passing gates" were built when the bride was an orphan
and money collected by "gate keepers" from the guests was handed
over to the bride as her dowry (being orphan implied usually
poverty).
The married couple is welcomed at the reception place by the
parents with bread and salt. The bread symbolizes the prosperity,
salt stands for hardship of life, the parents wish the young couple
that they never go hungry and learn how to deal with every day
hardships together. The wedding party lasts (and the bride and
groom remain) until the last guest leaves, usually until
morning.
In Poland, movements like
Human
Liberties Crusade
or Wedding of the Weddings promote non-alcoholic wedding celebrations.
Romanian customs
Lăutari are musicians performing traditional songs.
The music of the
lăutari establishes the structure of the elaborate Romanian
peasant weddings. The lăutari also function
as guides through the wedding rituals and moderate any conflicts
that may arise during what can be a long, alcohol-fueled party.
Over a period of nearly 48 hours, this can be very physically
strenuous.
Following custom almost certainly dating back at least to the
Middle Ages, most lăutari spend the fees
from these wedding ceremonies on extended
banquets for their friends and families over the
days immediately following the wedding.
Scottish customs
Scotland
is a popular place for young English couples to get
married since, in Scotland, parents' permission is not required if
both the bride and groom are old enough to legally be married
(16). In England
it was the case that if either was 16 or 17 then
the permission of parents had to be sought. Thus Scotland, and
especially the blacksmith's at Gretna Green
, became a very popular place for couples to
elope to, especially those
under 18 and usually living in England. Gretna Green now
hosts hundreds of weddings a year and is Scotland's third most
popular tourist attraction.
Customs:
- The bride's family sends invitations on behalf of the couple to
the wedding guests, addressed by hand. The couple may send the
invitations themselves, especially if they are more middle-aged.
The invites will specify if the invitation is for ceremony and/or
reception and/or evening following the meal at the reception.
- Guests send or deliver wedding gifts to the
bride's family home before the wedding day. Alternatively, the
couple may register at department store and have a list of gifts
there. The shop then organizes delivery, usually to the bride's
parents' house or to the reception venue.
- A wedding ceremony takes place at a church, register office or possibly another favorite
location, such as a hilltop. In this regard Scotland differs
significantly from England where only pre-approved public locations
may be used for the wedding ceremony. Most ceremonies take place
mid afternoon and last about half an hour during which the marriage
schedule is signed by the couple and two witnesses, usually the
best man and chief bridesmaid.
- The newly wed couple may leave the ceremony to the sound of
bagpipes.
- There is a wedding reception following the ceremony, usually at
a different venue.
- The bridal party lines up in a receiving line and the wedding
guests file past, introducing themselves.
- Usually a drink is served while the guests and bridal party
mingle. In some cases the drink may be whisky
or wine with a non alcoholic alternative.
- The best man and bride's father toast the bride and groom with
personal thoughts, stories, and well-wishes, usually humorous. The
groom then follows with a response on behalf of his bride. Champagne is usually provided for the
toast.
- There is nearly always dancing following the meal. Often in
Scotland this takes the form of a céilidh, a night of informal traditional
Scottish dancing in couples
and groups to live traditional
music. The first dance is led by the bride and groom, followed
by the rest of the bridal party and finally the guests.
- The cake-cutting ceremony takes place; the bride and groom
jointly hold a cake cutter and cut the first pieces of the wedding
cake.
- Gifts are not opened at the reception; they are either opened
ahead of time and sometimes displayed at the reception, or if
guests could not deliver gifts ahead of time, they are placed on a
table at the reception for the bride and groom to take home with
them and open later.
- A sprig of white heather is usually worn
as a buttonhole for good luck.
- It is the norm for the groom and much of the male bridal party and guests to wear kilts, although
suits are also worn. Kilts and Highland
dress are often hired for this purpose [citation
required].
Handfasting
Handfasting is an ancient
Celtic wedding ritual in which the bride's and groom's
hands are tied together — hence the phrase "tying the knot".
"Handfasting" is favored by practitioners of Celtic-based religions
and spiritual traditions, such as
Wicca and
Druidism.
Filipino wedding customs
The groom usually wears the
Barong
Tagalog during the wedding, along with the male attendants,
though nowadays the wealthy opt to don Western attire such as a
tuxedo. Weddings held within the same year by two siblings, usually
sisters, called
Sukob are frowned upon as it is regarded
as bad luck. Some hold it that the wedding rings dropping to the
ground is a portent of bad luck (this is usually said to the ring
bearer to ensure that the child is careful in handling the rings).
Money, in the form of paper bills, is sometimes taped or pinned to
the groom and bride's dress during their first dance.
Indian wedding customs
Indian weddings continue for several days. Due to the diversity of
Indian culture, the wedding style, ceremony and rituals may vary
greatly from amongst various states, regions, religions and castes.
While the
Christians of India
usually follow a more or less Western wedding ceremony, the Indian
Hindus, Muslims,
Jains and
Sikhs follow traditions quite different from the West.
It is quite common that during the traditional wedding days, there
would be a
tilak ceremony (where the
groom is anointed on his forehead), a ceremony for adorning the
bride's hand and feet with
henna (called
mehendi) accompanied by
Ladies' Sangeet (music and dance), and many other
pre-wedding ceremonies. Another important ceremony is the "Haldi"
program where the bride and the groom are anointed with turmeric
paste. All the close relatives make sure that they have anointed
the couple with turmeric.On the day (i.e. late evening) of the
wedding
proper, the Bridegroom, his friends and relatives
come singing and dancing to the wedding site in a procession called
baraat, and then the religious
rituals take place to solemnize the wedding according to the
religion of the couple. While the groom may wear traditional
Sherwani or
dhoti or Western
suit, his face is usually veiled with a mini-curtain of flowers
called
sehra. The bride (Hindu or
Muslim) always wears red clothes, never white because white
symbolizes widowhood in Indian culture. In Southern and Eastern
states the bride usually wears a
red
Sari, but in northern and central states the preferred garment
is a decorated skirt-blouse and veil called
lehenga. After the solemnization of marriage, the
bride departs with her husband. This is a very sad event for the
bride's relatives because traditionally she is supposed to
permanently "break-off" her relations with her
blood relatives to join her husband's
family. The wedding may be followed by a "reception" by the groom's
parents at the groom's place. While gifts and money to the couple
are commonly given, the traditional
dowry from the bride's
parents to the couple is officially forbidden by the law.
Japanese wedding customs
Japanese wedding customs fall into two categories: traditional
Shinto ceremonies, and modern
Western-style ceremonies. In
either case, the couple must first be legally married by filing for
marriage at their local government office, and the official
documentation must be produced in order for the ceremony to be
held. Before ever getting married there are two types of mate
selection that may occur with the couple: (1)
miai, or an arranged marriage and (2)
ren
ai, or a love match. The Japanese bride-to-be may be painted
pure white from head to toe, visibly declaring her maiden status to
the gods. Two choices of headgear exist. One, the
watabōshi, is a white hood; the other, called the
tsunokakushi, serves to hide
the bride's 'horns of jealousy.' It also symbolizes the bride's
intention to become a gentle and obedient wife.
Traditional
Japanese wedding customs
(shinzen shiki) involve an elaborate ceremony held at a
Shinto shrine. Japanese weddings are being
increasingly extravagant with all the elaborate details placed into
thought. However, in some cases, younger generations choose to
abandon the formal ways by having a "no host party" for a wedding.
In this situation, the guests include mainly of the couple's
friends who pay an attendance fee.
Western-style ceremonies
In recent years, the "Western Style Wedding" (influenced by
Christian weddings) has become the choice of most couples in Japan.
An industry has sprung up, dedicated to providing couples with a
ceremony modeled after church rituals. Japanese western style
weddings are generally held in a chapel, either in a simple or
elaborate ceremony, often at a dedicated
wedding chapel within a hotel.
Before the ceremony, there is a rehearsal. Often during this
rehearsal, the bride's mother lowers the veil for her daughter,
signifying the last act that a mother can do for her daughter,
before "giving her away". The father of the bride, much like in
Western ceremonies, walks the bride down the aisle to her awaiting
groom.
After the rehearsal comes the procession. The wedding celebrant
will often wear a wedding cross, or cana, a cross with two
interlocking wedding rings attached, which symbolize a couple's
commitment to sharing a life together in the bonds of holy
matrimony. The wedding celebrant gives a brief welcome and an
introductory speech before announcing the bride's entrance. The
procession ends with the groom bowing to the bride's father. The
father bows in return.
The service then starts. The service is given either in Japanese,
English or quite often, a mix of both. It follows Protestant
ceremony, relaxed and not overtly religious. Typically part of
1 Corinthians 13 is
read from the
Bible. After the reading, there
is a prayer and a short message, explaining the sanctity of the
wedding vows (
seiyaku). The bride and groom share their
vows and exchange rings. The chapel register is signed and the new
couple is announced. This is often followed by the traditional
wedding kiss. The
service can conclude with another hymn and a benediction.
Contemporary-style ceremonies
With the two types of ceremonies, Shinto and Western, available it
was bound for the two to be combined into what is called a
contemporary Japanese wedding. Contemporary Japanese weddings are
celebrated in many ways. On the beginning of the wedding day, the
participants are to get ready at the parlor's beauty shop. The
responsibility of the beauty shop is to dress the bride, the groom,
and the other participants in the formal Japanese attire. Dressing
the bride is the important task for the bride is to change into
several outfits throughout her wedding day. Due to the complexity
of the design, dressing a bride can be difficult and time consuming
and for this reason the bride must be the first person to arrive
two hours prior to the wedding ceremony. The bride's attire
consists of an extravagant kimono, heavy make-up, a wig, and a head
covering. An hour prior to the wedding ceremony, the guests and the
groom should start to arrive.
When everyone is dressed in their formal attire, the bride and the
groom are to separate from each other and meet their close
relatives in a waiting room. The relatives present will appear in
the family photo and will also attend the religious ceremony.
During this gathering, the kaizoe (assistant) will inform the
participants of what will take place and what they should do during
the day for they are not familiar with the ceremony.
When all is understood, the relatives and participants are brought
to the photo studio where the professional photographs are to be
taken. Taking the photographs of the bride, the groom, and their
relatives are considered to be the essential part of the wedding
day. The photographs of the couple and their family are designed to
represent the couple's prospective future together.
After the lengthy photo session, the bride, the groom, and others
are brought to the Shinto shrine. Nowadays, the Shinto shrine may
be conveniently located inside a hotel where all the activities
will take place. A Shinto priest conducts the ceremony. In the
ceremony, the bride and the groom are purified. However, the
ceremony's important event occurs when the bride and the groom
exchange nuptial cups of
sake also
known as
san-san-ku-do. With the addition of Western
tradition, the exchange of rings and weddings vows also take place.
Those guests who did not attend the religious ceremony are able to
view the ceremony on video screens located in the lobby.
Like Western-style traditions, a reception takes place right after
the wedding ceremony. The guests of the reception include family
members, friends, and colleagues. Due to the wedding industry's
attempt to maximize time and space, the reception will last exactly
two hours. The reception does not include any random activities,
but follows a strict order of events. The reception includes
dramatic entrances by the bride and the groom with special effects,
speeches, and other performances.
Throughout the reception, the bride shall receive the guests'
utmost attention for she changes two to three times for the
dramatic entrances. With all the dramatic entrances, the groom will
join the bride. For example, the first entrance includes the bride,
the groom, and the
nakodo couple.
Nakodo means a
"matchmaker" or a "go-between", which is usually referred to the
husband. The
nakodo couple plays such an important role
that their names appear on the announcement of the wedding. The
purpose of the
nakodo is to symbolize a stable marriage.
As the two couples appear a special effect of a cloud of white
smoke will appear to surround them. Simultaneously, the hall lights
are dimmed and the stage lighting will turn to the color of
rose-pink; this astonishes the guests. Pictures are to be taken
during the dramatic entrances of the bride and the groom. After the
photographs have been taken, they will be led back to their
table.
At this point the
Master of
Ceremonies will congratulate the newlyweds and their family.
He/she will then introduce the
nakodo, who will start the
opening speeches and more speeches will follow. Being that the
reception is highly structured the speakers will have the idea of
being formal and concise in mind. With all the speeches finished,
the bride and the groom will perform the Western-style traditions,
which include the following: (1) the cake cutting ceremony and (2)
the newlyweds' first dance as husband and wife.
The next part of the reception is the toast, or
kanpai,
which simplifies the mood of the reception where the guests can
start to relax, eat, and drink. What follows the toast are the
short congratulatory speeches made by relatives, friends, and
colleagues. During this time, the bride has gone to change into her
first costume and continues throughout the reception. However, the
groom will also have a chance to change into his costume, which is
the Western tuxedo. By the end of the night, both the bride and the
groom have changed from their traditional Japanese attire to their
Western-style attire.
After their last change of costumes, the newlyweds will perform the
candle service. Both will have a long, unlit candle, which will be
lit from the table where their parents are seated. Next, the couple
will walk around the room in a circle and light the candles placed
on their guests' table. Once all the candles are lit, the newlyweds
will return to their table where they will light what is called the
Memorial Candle.
By the time the candle service is done the two hours restriction
will soon expire. The remaining few minutes includes short
speeches, songs, dances, etc. As the reception ends a flower
presentation ceremony will take place, which is where the newlyweds
will present their parents with a gift of flowers to display
appreciation for their parents raising them to the people they are
today. At this point, the reception has ended with quick flashes
and farewells.
Malay wedding customs
A
Malay wedding ceremony
spreads over two days, beginning with the
akad nikah
ceremony on the first day. The groom signs the marriage contract
and agrees to provide the bride with a
mas kahwin (dowry).
After that, their hands are dyed with henna during the berinai
besar ceremony. The bride's hair is also trimmed or her eyebrows
shaped by a beautician known as the
mak andam.One the
second day, the bride is with her family and friends with musicians
and bunga manggar or palm blossom carriers at the bride's house. At
the house they are greeted with sprinkling of yellow rice and
scented water.
North American customs
United States customs
Most
weddings in the United
States
follow a similar pattern to the Italian
wedding. Customs and traditions vary, but common components
are listed below.
- Before the wedding
- The host sends invitations to
the wedding guests, usually one to two months before the wedding.
Invitations may most formally be addressed by hand to show the
importance and personal meaning of the occasion. Large numbers of
invitations may be mechanically reproduced. As engraving was the highest quality printing
technology available in the past, this has become associated with
wedding invitation tradition. Receiving an invitation does not
impose any obligation on the invitee other than promptly accepting
or declining the invitation, and offering congratulations to the
couple.
- While giving any gift to the newlywed couple is technically
optional, nearly all invited guests who attend the wedding choose
to do so. Wedding gifts are most commonly sent to the bride's or
host's home before the wedding day. Gifts are typically not brought
to ceremonies or receptions, and any that are will not be opened,
but rather placed aside for later delivery to the newlyweds'
home.
- A color scheme is selected by some to match everything from
bridesmaids' dresses, flowers, invitations, and decorations, though
there is no necessity in doing so.
- At the wedding
- A wedding ceremony may take place anywhere, but often a church,
courthouse, or outdoor venue. The
ceremony is usually brief, and is may be dictated by the couple's
religious practices. The most common non-religious form is derived
from a simple Anglican ceremony in the
Book of Common
Prayer.
- The bride usually wears a white, off-white, silver, or other
very light-colored dress, particularly at her first marriage.
Brides may choose any color, although black is strongly discouraged
by some as it is the color of mourning in the west.
- Rice is sometimes thrown at the newlyweds
as they leave the ceremony to symbolize
fertility. Some individuals, churches or communities choose
birdseed due to a false but widely believed myth that birds eating
the rice will burst. Because of the mess that rice and birdseed
make, modern couples often leave in clouds of bubbles.
- The wedding party may form a receiving line at this point, or
later at a reception, so that each guest may greet the entire
wedding party.
- At the wedding reception
- Drinks, snacks, (or often a full meal at long receptions) are
served while the guests and wedding party mingle.
- Often the best man and/or maid of honor toast the newlyweds
with personal thoughts, stories, and well-wishes; sometimes other
guests follow with their own toasts. Champagne is usually provided
for this purpose.
- In a symbolic cutting of the wedding cake, the couple may
jointly hold a cake knife and cut the first pieces of the wedding
cake, which they feed to each other. In some sub-cultures, they may
deliberately smear cake on each other's faces, which is considered
vulgar elsewhere.
- If dancing is offered, the newlyweds first dance together
briefly. Often a further protocol is followed, wherein each dances
next with a parent, and then possibly with other members of the
wedding party. Special songs are chosen by the couple, particularly
for a mother/son dance and a father/daughter dance. In some
subcultures, a dollar dance takes place
in which guests are expected to dance with the one of the
newlyweds, and give them a small amount of cash. This practice, as
is any suggestion that the guests owe money to the couple, is
considered rude in most social groups as it is contrary to basic
western etiquette.
- In the mid-twentieth century it became common for a bride to
toss her bouquet over her shoulder to the assembled unmarried women
during the reception. The woman who catches it, superstition has
it, will be the next to marry. In a similar process, her groom
tosses the bride's garter to the unmarried men, followed by the man
who caught the garter placing it on the leg of the woman who caught
the bouquet. While still common in many circles, these practices
(particularly the latter) are falling into less favor in the 21st
century.
Wedding gifts
The purpose of inviting guests is to have them witness a couple's
marriage ceremony and vows and to share in their joy and
celebration. Gifts for the wedding couple are optional, although
most guests attempt to give at least a token gift of their best
wishes. Some couples and families feel, contrary to proper
etiquette, that in return for the expense they put into
entertaining and feeding their guests, the guests should pay them
with similarly expensive gifts or cash.
The couple often
registers for gifts
at a store well in advance of their wedding. This allows them to
create a list of household items, usually including china,
silverware and crystalware, linens or other fabrics, pots and pans,
etc. Registries are intended to aid guests in selecting
gifts the newlyweds truly want, and the service is sufficiently
profitable that most retailers, from luxury shops to discount
stores, offer the opportunity. Registry information should,
according to etiquette, be provided only to guests upon direct
request, and never included in the invitation. Some couples
additionally or instead register with services that enable money
gifts intended to
fund items such as
a honeymoon, home purchase or college fund. Some find bridal
registries inappropriate as they contravene traditional notions
behind gifts, such as that all gifts are optional and delightful
surprises personally chosen by the giver, and that registries lead
to a type of price-based competition, as the couple knows the cost
of each gift. Traditionally, weddings were considered a personal
event and inviting people to the wedding who are not known to at
least one member of the couple well enough to be able to choose an
appropriate gift was considered inappropriate, and registries
should therefore be unnecessary. Whether considered appropriate or
not, others believe that weddings are opportunities to extract
funds or specific gifts from as many people as possible, and that
even an invitation carries an expectation of monetary reward rather
than merely congratulations.
Letters of thanks for any gift are traditionally sent promptly
after the gift's receipt. Tradition allows wedding gifts to be sent
up to a year after the wedding date. Thanks should be sent as soon
as possible, preferably within two weeks.
African-American customs
Jumping
the broom developed out West African Asante
custom. The broom in
Ashanti and
other
Akan cultures also held spiritual
value and symbolized sweeping away past wrongs or warding off evil
spirits. Brooms were waved over the heads of marrying couples to
ward off spirits. The couple would often but not always jump over
the broom at the end of the ceremony.
The custom took on additional significance in the context of
slavery in the United
States. Slaves had no right to legal marriage; slaveholders
considered slaves property and feared that legal marriage and
family bonds had the potential to lead to organization and revolt.
Marriage rituals, however, were important events to the Africans,
who came in many cases come from richly ceremonial
African cultures.
Taking marriage vows in the presence of a
witness and then leaping over the handle of a
broom became the common practice to create a
recognized union. Brooms are also symbols of the
hearth, the center of the new family being created.
Jumping the broom has become a practice in many modern weddings
between
African Americans.
There are also traditions of broom jumping in Europe, in the Wicca
and Celtic communities especially. They are probably unconnected
with the African practice.
Pakistani wedding customs
A
Pakistani
wedding typically consist of four ceremonies on
four separate days. It may consist of 3 days if the first
function called "
Mehndi" is done in a
combined manner by both the bride and groom's family.
The first function is Mehndi in which the families get together and
celebrate the upcoming wedding function. On this day, it is
customary to wear either green, yellow, orange, or other vibrant
colors. The bride-to-be gets her hands painted with henna, and
songs and dances go on throughout the night. The next day is
"baraat" which is hosted by the bride's family. This event is
usually held in a reception hall, and the groom comes over with his
family and friends; a large feast is given. The bride's friends and
relatives are also present, and the Baraat event can be considered
the 'main' wedding event as it is the largest one out of all the
events. Then there is the holy ceremony of "Nikah" which is
performed by a religious
imam, after which bride and groom
are declared as husband and wife.
Next day there is a function of "
Walima" in
which the groom's family is the host and the bride's family come
over for a big feast. On her wedding day, the bride-to-be can wear
any color she wants, but vibrant colors and lots of traditional
gold jewelry are typically worn. It is customary for the bride to
wear traditional clothes such as a
lahnga,
shalwar
kameez, or
sari. These weddings are also typical of
the
Muslim community in India.
Iranian wedding
Persian
wedding tradition, despite its local and regional variations, like
many other rituals in Persia
goes back to
the ancient Zoroastrian
tradition. Though the concepts and theory of the marriage
have changed drastically by
Islamic
traditions, the actual ceremonies have remained more or less the
same as they were originally in the ancient Zoroastrian
culture.
Russian wedding customs
A
traditional Russian
wedding lasts for at least two days and some
weddings last as long as a week. Throughout the celebration
there is dancing, singing, long toasts, and food and drinks. The
best man and maid of honor are called witnesses, "svideteli" in
Russian. The ceremony and the ring exchange takes place on the
first day of the wedding.
Throughout the years, Russian weddings have adopted many western
customs, including bridesmaids and flower girls.During the wedding
feast any of the guests can start chanting "Gor'ko" ("bitter")
which usually is immediately supported by the rest of the guests.
In this case bride and groom should kiss each other and the kiss
should last for as long as the chanting continues.
Religious aspects of weddings
In virtually all religions, marriage is a life-long union between
two or more people and is established with ceremonies and
rituals. The people are most commonly one man and one
woman , though some religions have permitted
polygamous marriages and some faiths and
denominations recognize
same-sex
marriages.
In marriage, Christians see a picture of the relationship between
Jesus and the Church. In
Judaism, marriage is so important that remaining
unmarried is deemed unnatural. Islam also recommends marriage
highly; among other things, it helps in the pursuit of spiritual
perfection. The
Bahá'í Faith
sees
marriage as a
foundation of the structure of society, and considers it both a
physical and spiritual bond that endures into the
afterlife.
Hinduism sees
marriage as a sacred duty that entails both religious and social
obligations. By contrast,
Buddhism does not
encourage or discourage marriage, although it does teach how one
might live a happily married life and emphasizes that marital vows
are not to be taken lightly (see
separate article for
details).
Different religions have different beliefs as regards the breakup
of marriage (see
divorce). For example, the
Roman Catholic Church believes that marriage is a
sacrament and a valid marriage between two
baptized persons cannot be broken up by any
other means than death. This means that civil divorcés cannot
remarry in a Catholic church marriage as long as their spouse is
alive.
In the area of
nullity, religions
and the state often apply different rules. A couple, for example,
may begin the process to have their marriage annulled by the
Catholic Church only after they are no longer married in the eyes
of the civil authority. The Catholic Church will not, in fact,
grant an annulment petition unless the marriage has also been
dissolved or annulled under civil law. Though sometimes styled
"Catholic divorce", an annulment means not a dissolution of a
marriage, but the recognition that a marriage has not taken place
at all. This applies to sacramental marriages; marriages between an
unbaptized and a baptized person can be dissolved according to
Canon law (see
Pauline privilege).
Detailed viewpoints on various wedding customs
Customs associated with various religions
Christian customs
Many religions have extensive teachings regarding marriage. Most
Christian churches give some form of
blessing to a marriage; the wedding ceremony typically includes
some sort of pledge by the community to support the couple's
relationship. A
church wedding is a ceremony presided over
by a Christian
priest or pastor. Ceremonies
are based on reference to
God, and are
frequently embodied into other church ceremonies such as
Mass.
Customs may vary widely between denominations. In the Roman
Catholic Church "Holy Matrimony" is considered to be one of the
seven sacraments, in this case one that the spouses bestow upon
each other in front of a priest and members of the community as
witnesses. As all sacraments, it is seen as having been instituted
by Jesus himself (see
Gospel of
Matthew 19:1-2,
Catechism of the Catholic
Church §1614-1615). In the Eastern Orthodox church, it is one
of the
Mysteries, and is seen as an
ordination and a martyrdom.
Mar Thoma customs
Kerala
is the
homeland of Syrian Malabar
Nasrani (Mar Thoma Christians or St. Thomas Christians).
It is believed that they were converted by
Thomas the Apostle, the disciple of
Jesus, in the 1st century. Their wedding customs and traditions
include several Jewish elements and
Indian customs. The ceremony is divided
into two parts. In part I, the officiating minister receives the
wedding ring from the groom, blesses it and puts it on the ring
finger on the right hand of the bride. This is a very old custom
that is still followed. In Part II, the bride and groom join hands,
and a Bible portion is read. Then they are crowned as the head of a
new family. The first gift to his wife is a necklace with a golden
pendant called
Minnu. The groom ties it around the neck of
the bride. She is also given a saree known as
Manthrakodi.
After the ceremony at the church there is the reception that will
be followed by a ceremony called
kachakoduppu. In the
presence of immediate relatives only, at the house of the groom,
the groom gives a
kacha (saree) to his mother-in-law. From
that time they address one another as mother and son.
Quaker customs
A
Quaker wedding ceremony in a
Friends meeting is
similar to any other
meeting for
worship, and therefore often very different from the experience
expected by non-Friends.
Hindu customs
Hindu ceremonies are conducted totally or at least partially in
Sanskrit, the language of the
Hindu scriptures. The wedding celebrations may
last for several days (see the previous sub-section on
Indian
customs) and they can be extremely diverse, depending upon the
region, denomination and
caste. On the night
of wedding
proper, the bride and the bridegroom garland
each other (
jaymaala) in front of the guests. Most guests
witness only this short ceremony and then socialize, have dinner
and leave. The religious part comes hours later, witnessed by close
friends and relatives. A
Brahmin (Hindu
priest) arranges a sacred
yajna
(fire-sacrifice), and the sacred fire (
Agni) is
considered the prime witness (
sākshī) of the marriage. He
chants
mantras from the
Vedas and subsidiary texts while the couple are seated
before the fire. The most important step is
saptapadi or
saat phere, wherein the
bride and the groom, hand-in-hand, encircle the sacred fire seven
times, each circle representing a matrimonial vow. The
Hindu Marriage Act 1955 of India
considers this step to be necessary and sufficient for the Hindu
wedding to be complete. Then the groom marks the bride's forehead
with
vermilion (
sindoor) and puts a gold necklace (
mangalsutra) around her neck. Several other
rituals may precede or follow these afore-mentioned rites. Then the
bride formally departs from her blood-relatives to join the groom's
family.
Jewish customs
A traditional Jewish wedding usually follows this format:
- Before the ceremony, the couple formalize a written
ketubah (marriage contract),
specifying their obligations to each other and contingencies in
case of divorce. The ketubah is signed by two witnesses
and later read under the chuppah.
- The couple is married under a wedding canopy (chuppah),
signifying their new home together. The chuppah can be made from a
piece of cloth or other material attached to four poles, or a
prayer shawl (tallit) held over the couple by
four family members or friends.
- The couple is accompanied to the chuppah by both sets of
parents, and stands under the chuppah along with other family
members if desired.
- Seven blessings are recited, blessing the bride and groom and
their new home.
- The couple sip from a glass of wine.
- At some weddings the couple may declare that each is sanctified
to the other, and/or repeat other vows, and exchange rings.
- In Orthodox and traditional Jewish weddings, the bride does not
speak under the chuppah and only she receives a ring. The groom
recites "Harei at mekudeshet li k'dat Moshe V'Yisrael"- "behold you
are [thus] sanctified to me as the law of
Moses and Israel" as he places the ring on the bride's right
index finger. The bride's silence and acceptance of the ring
signify her agreement to the marriage. This part of the ceremony is
called kiddushin. The groom's giving an
object of value to the bride is necessary for the wedding to be
valid.
- In more egalitarian weddings, the bride responds verbally,
often giving the groom a ring in return. A common response is "ani
l'dodi, v'dodi li" (I am my beloved's, my beloved is mine)
- In Orthodox weddings, the groom then says:
- "If I forget you, O Jerusalem, may my right hand forget its
skill.
- May my tongue cling to the roof of my mouth.
- If I do not remember you,
- if I do not consider Jerusalem in my highest
joy."
- The ceremony ends with the groom breaking a glass
underfoot.
- The couple spend their first moments as man and wife in
seclusion (apart from the wedding guests, and with no other person
present). This cheder yichud - "the room of seclusion (or
'oneness')" halachically strengthens the
marriage bond, since unmarried women are traditionally not alone
with an unrelated male.
- The ceremony is followed by a seudat mitzvah, the wedding meal, as
well as music and dancing.
- At the conclusion of the wedding meal, Birkat Hamazon (Grace After Meals) is
recited, as well as the seven wedding blessings.
In more observant communities, the couple will celebrate for seven
more days, called the
Sheva
Brachot (seven blessings) during which the seven wedding
blessings are recited at every large gathering during this
time.
Mormon customs
Within
The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (also known as Mormons), the
act of marriage is regarded as an eternal affair. As such, there
are two kinds of marriages recognized by the Church, civil marriage
and celestial marriage. Civil marriages are those legally
contracted under local law and are dissolved upon the death of the
participants, while celestial marriages, also known as
sealings, bind the participants
as husband and wife for all eternity if both are righteous.
Celestial marriages can only be performed by
Priesthood authority within a
Sealing Room in a
dedicated
temple. Only members
of the LDS church who have a temple recommend may attend an LDS
wedding. The wedding is often referred to as a sealing, in which
husband and wife are sealed beyond death into the next life. Space
is limited in sealing rooms so only family and close friends
attend.
The sealing can be performed at the same approximate time as the
civil marriage or for a couple civilly married for at least one
year. In the latter case, if the couple already has children, they
may also accompany the ceremony to be sealed to their parents.
Children who are born to parents who have already been sealed need
no such ceremony, as they have been "born in the covenant."
Many LDS couples will then hold wedding receptions or
open houses after the wedding
ceremony in another venue that is open to all family and friends.
Some couples choose to recreate a more traditional wedding
ceremony, or will simply perform certain traditional acts, such as
the throwing of the bouquet, first dance, etc.
Wedding types
Double wedding
A
double wedding is a single ceremony where two
affianced couples rendezvous for two
simultaneous or consecutive weddings. Typically, a fiancé with a
sibling might plan a double wedding with
that sibling. In the Philippines, however, the wedding of two
siblings within the same year is considered bad luck and is called
sukob.
Destination wedding
A
destination wedding is any wedding in which the
engaged couple, alone or with guests, travels to attend the
ceremony; most often in a vacation-like setting.
This could be a beach
ceremony in the Caribbean
or on the California
coast, a lavish
event in Las
Vegas
, or a simple ceremony at the home of a
geographically distant friend or relative.
Weekend wedding
A
weekend wedding is a wedding in which couples
and their guests celebrate over the course of a weekend. Special
activities, such as spa treatments and golf tournaments, may be
scheduled into the wedding itinerary throughout the weekend.
Lodging usually is at the same facility as the wedding and couples
often host a Sunday brunch for the weekend's finale.
White wedding
A
white wedding is a term for a traditional formal or
semi-formal Western wedding. This term refers to the color of the
wedding dress, which became popular in the Victorian era after
Queen Victoria wore a
white gown when she married
Prince Albert. Although it is often
said that the color white symbolizes virginity, it was actually
originally used as a
display of
wealth, as it alluded to the money available to spend on a
dress which could only be worn once, as white would become easily
soiled and so couldn't be reused.
Military wedding
A
military wedding is a ceremony conducted in a military
chapel and may involve a
Saber Arch. In
most military weddings the groom will wear (and occasionally the
bride if both individuals are in the Armed Services), a
military dress uniform in lieu of civilian
formal wear, although military
dress
uniforms largely serve the same purpose. Some retired military
personnel who marry after their service has ended may opt for a
military wedding.
Civil wedding
A
civil wedding is a ceremony presided over by a local
civil authority, such as an
elected or appointed
judge,
Justice of the Peace or the
mayor of a locality. Civil wedding ceremonies
may use references to God or a
deity (in UK
law), but generally no references to a particular religion or
denomination. They can be
either elaborate or simple. Many civil wedding ceremonies take
place in local town or city halls or courthouses in judges'
chambers.
Sneak wedding
Eloping, the act of getting
married without consent or approval of parents or others.
Same-sex wedding
A
same-sex or
same-gender wedding is a ceremony
in which two people of the same sex are married. This event may be
legally documented as a marriage or another legally recognized
partnership such as a
civil union. Where
such partnerships are not legally recognized, the wedding may be a
religious or symbolic ceremony designed to provide an opportunity
to make the same public declarations and celebration with friends
and family that any other type of wedding may afford.
Offiants at same-sex weddings may be religiously ordained. Many
religions and branches of religions, including
Quakers,
Unitarians,
Ethical Culture, Reform and
Reconstructionist
Jews, the
United Church of Christ, the
Episcopal Church ,
the
Metropolitan Community
Church, and the
Reformed
Catholic Church recognize and perform same-sex marriages, even
if the government of their geographic area may not.
Outdoor wedding
Many couples wish for a wedding with spiritual content but do not
want the restrictions of a church setting or they want to promise
to the goodness of themselves as lovers and human beings with- out
making reference to deities.You may wish to register your marriage
at a registry office and then hold a wedding ceremony, conducted by
a trained minister, in the venue of your choosing your own home or
garden. Alternative wedding ceremonies are experienced by the
couples as just as valid as any church marriage ceremony and the
promises or vows made are taken just as seriously by them. They
often feel attracted to the traditions of wearing splendid clothes,
processing, speaking of their love before their loved ones,
exchanging gifts and relating friends and families by promises but
have no wish of the church setting or the limitations of a registry
office.
Gallery
Image:Pernikahan.jpg|Sundanese wedding in Indonesia
.Image:Egypt-Nubian wedding.jpg|Nubian wedding, near Aswan
, Egypt
.Image:Wedding at the Victory Monument in
Minsk 2007-03-03.jpg|Wedding ceremony at the Victory Monument in
Minsk
.Image:East Timorese hakka wedding.jpg|Ethnic
Hakka people in a wedding in East
Timor, 2006.Image:Japanese Wedding Day.jpg|Japanese bride and
groom, wearing white and black kimonos
respectively.Image:Bride-boquet-toss.jpg|A new bride tossing her
flower bouquet over her
shoulder.Image:FilipinoWeddingInWinnipegManitobaCanada.jpg|Filipino
wedding in Winnipeg
, Manitoba
, Canada
.File:Anillos.jpg|Wedding rings
See also
Wedding planning
Wedding traditions
Ceremony aspects
Related travel
Religious aspects
Related events
Related categories
Glossaries
References
- Britannica article: Richard Wagner
- London Wedding
http://www.veilandtrain.com/veilandtrain_blog/how-can-i-have-a-real-east-end-wedding/
- Olmert, Michael (1996). Milton's Teeth and Ovid's Umbrella:
Curiouser & Curiouser Adventures in History, p.155. Simon
& Schuster, New York. ISBN 0684801647.
- Olmert, Michael (1996). Milton's Teeth and Ovid's Umbrella:
Curiouser & Curiouser Adventures in History, p.152. Simon
& Schuster, New York. ISBN 0684801647.
- Krucjata Wyzwolenia Człowieka
- Lepiej łyknij wody [Gazeta Wyborcza - DUżY FORMAT]
Witold Szabłowski
- Kinko, Ito (March 9, 2000) Modern japan through its weddings:
gender, person, and society in ritual portrayal. Blackwell
Publishing, 29, Retrieved January 11, 2009, from EBSCOhost
- Lebra, T, Sugiyama (1984). Japanese women: constraint and
fulfillment. Honolulu University of Hawaii Press, Retrieved January
10, 2009, from NetLibrary
- Western Style Weddings in Japan
- Goldstein-Gidoni, O (2000, March). The production of tradition
and culture in the japanese wedding enterprise. Taylor &
Francis, 65, Retrieved January 10, 2009, from EBSCOhost
- Miss Manners Guide for the Turn-of-the-Millennium, Judith
Martin, 1990, p.647, ISBN#0-671-72228-X
- Miss Manners Guide to Excruciatingly Correct Behavior: Freshly
Updated, Judith Martin, 2007, p. 414, ISBN 0-393-05874-3
- Against the Grain
- Miss Manners Guide for the Turn-of-the-Millennium, Judith
Martin, 1990, p. 580
- Miss Manners Guide for the Turn-of-the-Millennium, Judith
Martin, 1990, p. 638
- Miss Manners Guide for the Turn-of-the-Millennium, Judith
Martin, 1990, p.587, ISBN#0-671-72228-X
- Miss Manners Guide to Excrutiatingly Correct Behavior: Freshly
Updated, Judith Martin, 2007, p. 435, ISBN 0-393-05874-3
- Miss Manners Guide for the Turn-of-the-Millennium, Judith
Martin, 1990, p.643, ISBN#0-671-72228-X
- Making Wedding Arrangements at Holy Spirit
Church
- The Hindu Marriage Act