The
Winter Solstice occurs exactly when the
earth's
axial tilt is farthest away from
the sun at its maximum of 23° 26'. Though the Winter Solstice lasts
an instant in time, the term is also
colloquially used like
Midwinter to
refer to the day on which it occurs. For most people in the
high latitudes this is commonly known
as the shortest day and the
sun's daily maximum
position in the sky is the lowest. The seasonal significance of the
Winter Solstice is in the reversal of the gradual
lengthening of nights and
shortening of days.
The Winter Solstice is
also the shortest day or lowest sun position for people in low latitudes located between the Tropic of
Cancer
(23°26'N) and the Tropic of Capricorn
(23°26'S). Depending on the shift of the calendar,
the winter solstice occurs some time
between December 21 and December 22 each year in the Northern
Hemisphere
, and between June 20 and June 21 in the Southern
Hemisphere
.
Worldwide, interpretation of the event has varied from culture to
culture, but most cultures have held a recognition of rebirth,
involving
holidays,
festivals, gatherings,
rituals or other
celebrations
around that time.
The word
solstice derives from
Latin
sol (sun) and
sistere (to stand still).
Date
Since 45
BCE, when the 25th of December was
established in the
Julian calendar
as the winter solstice of Europe, (
Latin:
Bruma), the difference between the calendar year (365.2500
days) and the
tropical year (365.2422
days) moved the day associated with the actual astronomical
solstice forward approximately three days every four centuries
until 1582 when
Pope Gregory XIII
changed the calendar bringing the northern winter solstice to
around
December 21. Yearly, in the
Gregorian
calendar, the solstice still fluctuates slightly but, in the
long term, only about one day every 3000 years.
The figures to the left show the differences between the Gregorian
calendar (Figure 1: using 1 leap year per 4 years) and
Persian Jalāli calendar (Figure 2:
using the 33-year arithmetic approximation) in reference to the
actual yearly time of the winter solstice of the northern
hemisphere, the
December solstice. The Y axis is "days
error" and the X axis is Gregorian calendar years. Each point
represents a single date on a given year. The error shifts by about
1/4 day per year, and is corrected by a leap year every 4th year
regularly, and in the case of the Persian calendar also one 5 year
leap period to complete a 33-year cycle, keeping the Persian winter
solstice holiday on the same day every year.
Seasonal Position
How cultures interpret the solstice is varied, since it is
sometimes said to
astronomically mark
either the beginning or middle of a hemisphere's winter. Winter is
a
subjective term, so there is no
scientifically established beginning or
middle of winter but the winter solstice itself is clearly
calculated to within a
second.
For Celtic countries,
such as Ireland
, the calendarical winter season has traditionally
begun November 1 on All Hallows or Samhain. Winter ends and spring begins on
Imbolc or
Candlemas,
which is
February 1 or 2. This calendar
system of seasons may be based on the length of days exclusively.
Most
East Asian cultures define the
seasons by
solar terms, with
Dong zhi at the winter solstice as the middle or
"extreme" of winter. This system is based on the Sun's apparent
height above the horizon at noon. Some midwinter festivals have
occurred according to
lunar calendars
and so took place on the night of
Hōku (
Hawaiian, the full moon closest to the
winter solstice). And many European
solar
calendar midwinter celebrations still centre upon the night of
December 24 leading into the
December 25 in the north, which was considered
to be the winter solstice upon the establishment of the
Julian calendar. In the
Jewish Talmud,
Teḳufat Tevet, the day of the winter solstice, is
recorded as the first day of the "stripping time" or winter season.
Persian culture also recognizes it
as the beginning of winter.
Sunrise and Sunset
Due to the
Earth's elliptical orbit and axial
tilt, neither the earliest sunset nor the latest sunrise fall
exactly on the winter solstice. The earliest sunset occurs earlier
than the solstice (by a few days), and the latest sunrise later.
For one or two weeks surrounding both solstices, both sunrise and
sunset get slightly later or earlier each day. Even on the
equator, sunrise and sunset shift several minutes
back and forth through the year, along with
solar noon. This effect is plotted by an
analemma.
History and cultural significance
The solstice itself may have been a special moment of the annual
cycle of the year even during
neolithic
times. Astronomical events, which during ancient times controlled
the mating of animals, sowing of crops and metering of winter
reserves between harvests, show how various cultural mythologies
and traditions have arisen.
This is attested by physical remains in the
layouts of late Neolithic and Bronze Age
archaeological sites such as Stonehenge
in Britain and New Grange
in Ireland. The primary axes of both of
these monuments seem to have been carefully aligned on a sight-line
pointing to the winter solstice sunrise (New Grange) and the winter
solstice sunset (Stonehenge). Significant in respect of Stonehenge
is the fact that the Great
Trilithon was
erected outwards from the centre of the monument, i.e. its smooth
flat face was turned towards the midwinter Sun. The winter solstice
may have been immensely important because communities were not
certain of living through the winter, and had to be prepared during
the previous nine months.
Starvation was
common in winter between January and April, also known as
the
famine months. In temperate climates,
the midwinter festival was the last feast
celebration, before deep winter began. Most
cattle were
slaughtered so they would not
have to be fed during the winter, so it was almost the only time of
year when a supply of fresh meat was available. The majority of
wine and
beer made during
the year was finally
fermented
and ready for drinking at this time. The concentration of the
observances were not always on the day commencing at
midnight or at
dawn, but the
beginning of the pre-Romanized day, which falls on the previous
eve.
Explanations for parallel traditions
Symbolic
Since the event is seen as the reversal of the
Sun's
ebbing presence in the sky,
concepts of the birth or rebirth of
sun gods
have been common and, in cultures using winter solstitially based
cyclic calendars, the
year as reborn has been celebrated
with regard to
life-death-rebirth deities or
new beginnings such as
Hogmanay's
redding, a
New Years cleaning
tradition. In Greek mythology, the gods and goddesses met on the
winter and summer solstice, and Hades was permitted on Mount
Olympus. Also
reversal is another usual theme as in
Saturnalia's slave and master
reversals.
Migration and appropriation
Many outside traditions are often adopted by neighboring or
invading cultures. Some historians will often assert that many
traditions are directly derived from previous ones rooting all the
way back to those begun in the
cradle of civilization or beyond,
much in a way that correlates to speculations on the
origins of languages.
Therapeutic
Even in modern cultures these gatherings are still valued for
emotional comfort, having something to look forward to at the
darkest time of the year. This is especially the case for
populations in the near
polar regions of the
hemisphere.The depressive
psychological effects of winter on individuals
and
societies are for the most part tied
to coldness, tiredness,
malaise, and
inactivity.
Also, insufficient sunlight in the short winter days increases the
secretion of
melatonin in the body,
throwing off the
circadian rhythm
with longer sleep. Exercise,
light
therapy, increased negative
ion exposure
(which can be attained from plants and well ventilated flames,
burning wood or
beeswax) can reinvigorate
the body from its seasonal lull and relieve
winter blues
by decreasing melatonin secretions, increasing serotonin and
temporarily creating a more even sleeping pattern .
Midwinter festivals and celebrations occurring on the longest night
of the year, often calling for
evergreens, bright illumination, large ongoing
fires, feasting, communion with close ones, and evening physical
exertion by dancing and singing are examples of cultural winter
therapies that have evolved as traditions since the
beginnings of civilization.
Observances
The following is an alphabetical list of observances believed
to be directly linked to the winter solstice. For other
Winter observances see List of
winter festivals.:
A
Japanese Sun Goddess Amaterasu emerging from a cave.
Amaterasu celebration, Requiem of the Dead
(7th century Japan
)
In late
seventh century Japan
, festivities
were held to celebrate the reemergence of Amaterasu or Amateras,
the sun goddess of Japanese mythology, from her seclusion in
a cave. Tricked by the other gods with a loud celebration,
she peeks out to look and finds the image of herself in a mirror
and is convinced by the other gods to return, bringing sunlight
back to the universe.
Requiems for the dead
were held and
Manzai and Shishimai were
performed throughout the night, awaiting the sunrise. Aspects of
this tradition have continued to this day on New Years.
B
The
Saami, indigenous people of Finland
, Sweden
and Norway
, worship
Beiwe, the sun-goddess of fertility and
sanity. She travels through the sky in a structure made of
reindeer bones with her daughter, Beiwe-Neia, to herald back the
greenery on which the reindeer feed. On the winter solstice, her
worshipers sacrifice white female animals, and with the meat,
thread and sticks, bed into rings with ribbons. They also cover
their doorposts with butter so Beiwe can eat it and begin her
journey once again.
Influenced by the
Ancient Greek
Lenaia festival,
Brumalia was an
ancient Roman solstice festival honoring
Bacchus, generally held for a month and
ending
December 25. The festival
included drinking and merriment. The name is derived from the Latin
word
bruma, meaning "shortest day" or "winter solstice".
The festivities almost always occurred on the night of December
24.
C
In the
ancient traditions of the Kalash people of
Pakistan
, during winter solstice, a demigod returns to collect prayers and deliver them
to Dezao, the supreme being. "During this celebrations women
and girls are purified by taking ritual baths. The men pour water
over their heads while they hold up bread. Then the men and boys
are purified with water and must not sit on chairs until evening
when goat's blood is sprinkled on their faces. Following this
purification, a great festival begins, with singing, dancing,
bonfires, and feasting on goat tripe and other delicacies".
Christmas, Natalis Domini (4th
century Rome
, 11th
century England
, Christian)
Christmas or
Christ's Mass is one
of the most popular
Christian celebrations
as well as one of the most globally recognized midwinter
celebrations. Christmas is the celebration of the birth of the
Christian Deity
God Incarnate or
Messiah,
Jesus Christ. The birth is observed on
December 25, which was the
Roman winter solstice upon establishment of the
Julian Calendar. Christian churches recognized folk elements of the
festival in various cultures within the past several hundred years,
allowing much of the folklore and traditions of local pagan
festivals to be
appropriated.
So today, the old festivals such as
Jul,
Коледа and
Karácsony, are still celebrated in many
parts of Europe, but the
Christian
Nativity is now often representational as the meaning behind
the holiday. This is why
Yule and
Christmas are considered interchangeable
in
Anglo–
Christendom. Universal activities include
feasting,
midnight masses and singing
Christmas carols about the
Nativity. Good deeds and gift giving in the tradition of
St. Nicholas by not admitting to being
the actual gift giver is also observed by some countries. Many
observe the holiday for
twelve
days leading up to the
Epiphany.
D
Deuorius Riuri (Gaul)
Deuorius Riuri was the annual
great divine
winter feast, observed by the
Coligny Calendar. The lunisolar Coligney
Midwinter returned to solar alignment every two and a half
years.
Theologically, Maidyarem is associated with Vahman, the Amesha
Spenta (or Holy Immortal) who created the primal bull, and all
cattle, and is associated with good plans and intentions.Maidyarem
is celebrated in Dey, the tenth month of the Zoroastrian calendar,
from the sixteenth (Mihr) to the twentieth (Bahram) day. There are
also speculations that by the
Persian
calendar many celebrated on the last day of the Persian month
Azar, the longest night of the year, when the forces of
Ahriman are assumed to be at the peak of
their strength. The next day, the first day of the month
Dey, known as
khoram ruz or
khore ruz
(the day of sun) belongs to God (
Ahura
Mazda). Since the days are getting longer and the nights
shorter, this day marks the victory of Sun over the darkness. The
occasion was celebrated in the ancient Persian
Deygan
Festival dedicated to Ahura Mazda, and
Mithra on the first day of the month
Dey.
The Winter Solstice Festival or
The
Extreme of Winter ( ) (
Pinyin:
Dōng zhì), (
Rōmaji:
Tōji),
(
Romaja:
Dongji)
is one of the most important festivals celebrated by the Chinese
and other East Asians during the
dongzhi
solar term on or around
December 21 when sunshine is weakest and
daylight shortest;
i.e., on the first day of the dongzhi
solar term.The origins of this festival can be traced back to the
yin and yang philosophy of balance
andharmony in the cosmos. After this celebration, there will be
days with longer daylight hours and therefore an increase in
positive energy flowing in. The philosophical significance of this
issymbolized by the
I Ching hexagram fù (復, "Returning"). Traditionally,
the Dongzhi Festival is also a time for the family to get together.
One activity that occurs during these get togethers (especially in
the southern parts of China and in
Chinese communities overseas) is the making
and eating of
Tangyuan (湯圓, as
pronounced in
Cantonese;
Mandarin Pinyin:
Tāng Yuán) or balls of glutinous rice, which symbolize
reunion. In Korea, similar balls of glutinous rice ( ) (
English
pronunciation:
Saealsim), is prepared in a
traditional porrige made with sweet red bean ( )(
English
pronunciation:
Patjook). Patjook was believed
to have a special power and sprayed around houses on winter
solstice to repel sinister spirits. This practice was based on a
traditional folk tale, in which the ghost of a man that used to
hate patjook comes haunting innocent villagers on the winter
solstice.
G
Goru is the (December)
winter solstice ceremony of the Pays Dogon of
Mali
. It is the last harvest ritual and
celebrates the arrival of humanity from the sky god,
Amma, via
Nommo inside the
Aduno Koro, or the "Ark of the World".
H
The
New Years Eve celebration of
Scotland is called
Hogmanay. The name derives from
the old Scots name for Yule gifts of the Middle Ages. The early
Hogmanay celebrations were originally brought to Scotland by the
invading and occupying
Norse who celebrated
a solstitial new year (England celebrated the new year on
March 25). In 1600, with the Scottish application
of the
January 1 New year and the church's
persistent suppression of the solstice celebrations, the holiday
traditions moved to
December 31.
The
festival is still referred to as the Yules by the Scots of the Shetland Islands
who start the festival on December 18 and hold the
last tradition (a Troll chasing ritual) on
January 18. The most widespread Scottish custom is the
practice of
first-footing which
starts immediately after midnight on New Years. This involves being
the first person (usually tall and dark haired) to cross the
threshold of a friend or neighbor and often involves the giving of
symbolic gifts such as salt (less common today), coal,
shortbread,
whisky, and
black bun (a fruit pudding) intended to bring different kinds of
luck to the householder. Food and drink (as the gifts, and often
Flies cemetery) are then given to the
guests.
I
The
Inti Raymi or
Festival of the
Sun was a religious ceremony of the
Inca Empire in honor of the sun god
Inti.
It also marked the winter solstice and a new
year in the Andes of the Southern
Hemisphere
. One ceremony performed by the Inca priests
was the
tying of the sun. In
Machu
Picchu there is still a large column of stone called an
Intihuatana, meaning "hitching post of the sun" or
literally
for tying the sun. The ceremony to tie the sun
to the stone was to prevent the sun from escaping. The
Spanish conquest, never finding Machu
Picchu, destroyed all the other intihuatana, extinguishing the sun
tying practice. The
Catholic Church
managed to suppress all Inti festivals and ceremonies by 1572.
Since
1944 a theatrical representation of the Inti Raymi has been taking
place at Sacsayhuamán
(two km. from Cusco
) on June 24 of each year, attracting thousands of local
visitors and tourists. The
Monte Alto culture may have also had a
similar tradition.
J
Junkanoo, in The Bahamas,
Junkunno or
Jonkanoo, in Jamaica,
is a fantastic masquerade, parade and street festival, suspected to
be derived from
Dzon'ku 'Nu (tr: Witch-doctor) of
the
West African Papaws, an
Ewe people. It is traditionally performed
through the streets towards the end of December, and involves
participants dressed in a variety of fanciful
costumes, such as the
Cow Head, the
Hobby Horse, the
Wild
Indian, and the
Devil.
The
parades are accompanied by bands usually consisting of fifes
, drums, and coconut graters used as scrapers, and Jonkanoo songs are also
sung. A similar practice was once common in coastal North
Carolina, where it was called
John Canoe,
John Koonah, or
John Kooner. John
Canoe was likened to the
wassailing
tradition of
medieval Britain. John
Canoe was interpreted by many
Euro-Americans to bear strong resemblance to
the social inversion rituals that marked the ancient Roman
celebration of
Saturnalia.
K
Karachun,
Korochun or
Kračún was a
Slavic
holiday similar to
Halloween as a day when
the
Black God and other evil spirits were
most potent. It was celebrated by Slavs on the longest night of the
year. On this night,
Hors, symbolising the old
sun, becomes smaller as the days become shorter in the Northern
Hemisphere, and dies on
December 22nd,
the December solstice. He is said to be defeated by the dark and
evil powers of the Black God. In honour of Hors, the Slavs danced a
ritual chain-dance which was called the
horo.
Traditional
chain-dancing in Bulgaria
is still called horo. In Russia
and Ukraine
, it is known as khorovod. On
December 23rd Hors is resurrected and becomes
the new sun,
Koleda. On this day,
Western Slavs burned fires at cemeteries to
keep their departed loved ones warm, organized dinings in the honor
of the dead so as they would not suffer from hunger and lit wooden
logs at local crossroads.
Koleda, Коляда, Sviatki, Dazh Boh (Ancient Eastern Slavic and Sarmatian)
In ancient Slavonic cultures, the festival of
Kaleda began at Winter Solstice and lasted for ten
days.
In
Russia, this festival was later applied to Christmas Eve but most of the practices were
lost after the Soviet
Revolution
. Each
family made a fire in their hearth and invited their personal
household gods to join in the festivities. Children disguise
themselves on evenings and nights and as
Koledari, visited houses and sang wishes of
good luck, like
Shchedryk, to
hosts. As a reward, they were given little gifts, a tradition
called
Kolyadovanie, much like the old
wassailing or
mummers
Tradition.
L
In the
Aegean civilizations, the
exclusively female midwinter ritual,
Lenaea or
Lenaia, was the
Festival of the Wild
Women. In the forest, a man or bull representing the god
Dionysus was torn to pieces and eaten by
Maenads. Later in the ritual a baby,
representing Dionysus reborn, was presented. Lenaion, the first
month of the Delian calendar, derived its name from the festival's
name. By
classical times, the human
sacrifice had been replaced by that of a goat, and the women's role
had changed to that of funeral mourners and observers of the birth.
Wine miracles were performed by the priests, in which priests would
seal water or juice in a room overnight and the next day they would
have turned into wine. The miracle was said to have been performed
by Dionysus and the
Lenaians. By the 5th
century BCE the ritual had become a
Gamelion festival for theatrical competitions,
often held in Athens in the Lenaion theater. The festival
influenced the
ancient Roman
Brumalia.
Lucia or
Lussi Night happened on
December 13, what was supposed to be the
longest night of the year. The feast was later appropriated by the
Catholic Church in the 16th century
as
St. Lucy's Day.
It was believed in the
folklore of Sweden
that if people, particularly children, did not carry out their
chores, the female
demon,
the Lussi
or
Lucia die dunkle would come to punish them.
M
Makara Sankranti, मकर संक्रान्ति
(India
and Nepal
, Hindu)
Makara Sankranti, celebrated at the beginning of
Uttarayana उत्तरायण, is the only
Hindu festival which is based on the celestial calendar rather than
the lunar calendar. The
zodiac having drifted
from the solar calendar has caused the festival to now occur in
mid-January (see
precession of
equinoxes).
In Tamil Nadu
it is celebrated as the festival of Pongal. The day before Pongal, the last day of
the previous year, they celebrate
Bhogi.
In
Assam
it is called Magh Bihu (the First day of
Magh), in Punjab Lohri and in Hindi speaking states and
Maharshtra it is observed as Makar Sankranti and is
celebrated by exchanging balls of sesame candy (Til Gur)
and requesting each other to be as sweet as the candy balls for the
next year. It is called Makara Sankrant because the sun
enters the zodiacal sign of Capricorn on 14 January (Makar meaning
Capricorn). It is celebrated with much pomp in Andhra Pradesh,
where the festival is celebrated for three days and is more of a
cultural festival than an auspicious day as in other parts of
India.
In
some parts of India, the festival is celebrated by taking dips in
the Ganga
or another
river and offering water to the Sun god. The dip is said to
purify the self and bestow
punya.
In many
states, mainly in Gujarat
, families fly kites from their roofs all day and
into the night. It is a form of celebrating and welcoming
the longer days. In a symbolic way, thousands of kites with
different colors flying in the sky give us a feeling of the Earth
welcoming the brighter, warmer sky. It is also very common to feed
grass to the cows on this day.
In Assam
on Bihu Eve
or Uruka families build house-like structures called
bhelaghar and separate large
bhelaghar are built by the community as a whole.
Different sorts of twine are tied around fruit trees.
Traditionally, fuel is stolen for the final ceremony, when all the
bhelaghar are burned. Their remains are then placed at the
fruit trees. Special
puja
is offered as a thanksgiving for good harvest. Since the festival
is celebrated in midwinter, the foods prepared for this festival
are such that they keep the body warm and give high energy.
Laddu of
til made with
jaggery is specialty of the festival.
Occurring June 20 – June 22 the Maruaroa o Takurua is seen by the
New Zealand Maori as the middle of the winter season. It follows
directly after the rise of Matariki (
Pleiades) which marked the beginning
of the New Year and was said to be when the Sun turned from his
northern journey with his winter-bride
Takurua (the star
Sirius) and
began his journey back to his Summer-bride Hineraumati.
Meán Geimhridh (Irish tr:
midwinter) or
Grianstad an Gheimhridh (Ir tr: winter solstice)
is a name sometimes used for hypothetical midwinter rituals or
celebrations of the
Proto-Celtic
tribes,
Celts, and late
Druids.
In Ireland
's calendars, the solstices and equinoxes all occur at about midpoint in each
season. The passage and
chamber of Newgrange
(Pre-Celtic or possibly
Proto-Celtic 3,200 BCE), a tomb in Ireland, are
illuminated by the winter solstice sunrise. A shaft of
sunlight shines through the roof box over the entrance and
penetrates the passage to light up the chamber. The dramatic event
lasts for 17 minutes at dawn from the 19th to the 23rd of December.
The point of roughness is the term for the winter solstice
in Wales which in ancient
Welsh
mythology, was when
Rhiannon gave birth
to the sacred son,
Pryderi.
- Mummer's Day referencing
the animist garbs, or Darkie
Day referencing the soot facing
ritual, is an ancient Cornish
midwinter celebration that occurs every year on December 26 and
New Year's Day in Padstow
, Cornwall
. It was originally part of the pagan
heritage of midwinter celebrations that were regularly celebrated
all over Cornwall where people would guise
dance and disguise themselves by blackening up their faces or
wearing masks. In Penzance
the festival has been given the name
Montol believing it
to be the Celtic Cornish word for
Winter Solstice.
- For
an unknown period, Lá an Dreoilín or Wren
day has been celebrated in Ireland, the Isle of Man
and Wales
on December 26. Crowds of people, called
wrenboys, take to the roads in various
parts of Ireland, dressed in motley clothing, wearing masks or
straw suits and accompanied by musicians supposedly in remembrance
of the festival that was celebrated by the Druids. Previously the practice involved the killing
of a wren, and singing songs while carrying the
bird from house to house, stopping in for food and merriment.
- In
England
, during the 18th century, there was a revival of
interest in Druids. Today, amongst
Neo-druids, Alban
Arthan (Welsh tr. light of winter but derived
from Welsh poem, Light of Arthur) is celebrated on the
winter solstice with a ritualistic festival, and gift giving to the
needy.
In
Sweden
and many
surrounding parts of Europe, polytheistic tribes celebrated a
Midvinterblot or
mid-winter-sacrifice, featuring both animal and
human sacrifice. The
blót was
performed by
goði, or priests, at
certain cult sites, most of which have churches built upon them
now. Midvinterblot paid tribute to the local gods, appealing to
them to let go winter's grip. The
folk
tradition was finally abandoned by 1200, due to
missionary persistence.
In
research stations throughout
Antarctica
, Midwinter is widely celebrated as a way to mark
the fact that the people who winter-over just went through half
their turn of duty. Depending on the station the
celebrations can last from a day to a week and are typically marked
by parties, team games, redecoration of the premises and days off
work.
Modranicht, Modresnach (Germanic)
Mōdraniht was a
Germanic feast. It was believed that dreams
on this night foretold events in the upcoming year. By 730, it was
thought by
Bede to have been observed by the
Anglo-Saxons on the eve of the winter
solstice. After the reemergence of Christmas in
Britain Mothers Night
was recognized by many as one of the
Twelve Days of Christmas.
P
Early
Germans (c.500–1000) considered the
Norse goddess,
Hertha or
Bertha to
be the goddess of light, domesticity and the home. They baked yeast
cakes shaped like shoes, which were called
Hertha's
slippers, and filled with gifts."During the Winter Solstice
houses were decked with fir and evergreens to welcome her coming.
When the family and serfs were gathered to dine, a great altar of
flat stones was erected and here a fire of fir boughs was laid.
Hertha descended through the smoke, guiding those who were wise in
saga lore to foretell the fortunes of those persons at the feast".
There are also darker versions of Perchta which terrorize children
along with
Krampus. Many cities had
practices of dramatizing the gods as characters roaming the
streets. These traditions have continued in the rural regions of
the
Alps, and various similar traditions, such
as
Wren day, survived in the
Celtic nations until recently.
R
In
twelfth century Russia
, the eastern
Slavs worshiped the winter mother goddess,
Rozhnitsa, offering bloodless sacrifices like honey, bread and
cheese. Bright colored winter embroideries depicting the
antlered goddess were made to honor the
Feast of
Rozhanitsa in late December. And white, deer-shaped
cookies were given as lucky gifts. Some Russian women continued the
observation of these traditions into the 20th century.
S
Derived from a pre-Zoroastrian festival,
Shab-e
Chelleh is celebrated on the eve of the first day of
winter in the
Persian calendar,
which always falls on the solstice. Yalda is the most important
non-new-year Iranian festival in modern-day Iran and it has been
long celebrated in Iran by all ethnic/religious groups. According
to Persian mythology,
Mithra was born at the
end of this night after the long-expected defeat of darkness
against light. "Shab-e Chelleh" is now an important social
occasion, when family and friends get together for fun and
merriment. Usually families gather at their elders' homes.
Different kinds of dried fruits, nuts, seeds and fresh winter
fruits are consumed. The presence of dried and fresh fruits is
reminiscence of the ancient feasts to celebrate and pray to the
deities to ensure the protection of the winter crops.
Watermelons,
persimmons and
pomegranates are traditional symbols of this
celebration, all representing the sun. It used to be customary to
stay awake Yalda night until sunrise eating, drinking, listening to
stories and poems, but this is no longer very common as most people
have things to do on the next day.During the early Roman Empire
many
Syrian Christians fled from
persecution into the
Sassanid Empire
of Persia, introducing the term
Yaldā, meaning
birth, causing
Shab-e Yaldā to became
synonymous with
Shab-e Chelleh. Although both
terms are used interchangeably, Chelleh is more commonly accepted
for this occasion.
Sanghamitta Day (Buddhist)
Sanghamitta is in honor of the Buddhist nun who brought a branch of the Bodhi tree to Sri Lanka
where it has flourished for over 2,000
years.
Originally celebrated by the ancient Greeks as
Kronia, the festival of
Cronus,
Saturnalia was the feast at which the Romans
commemorated
thededication of the temple of
Saturn, which originally took place on
17 December, but expanded to a whole
week, up to
23 December. A large and
important public festival in Rome, it involved the conventional
sacrifices, a couch set in front of the temple of
Saturn and the untying of the ropes that
bound the statue of Saturn during the rest of the year. Besides the
public
rites there were a series of holidays
and customs celebrated privately. The celebrations included a
school holiday, the making and giving of small presents
(
saturnalia et sigillaricia) and a special market
(
sigillaria). Gambling was allowed for all, even slaves
during this period. The
toga was not worn, but
rather the
synthesis, i.e., colorful, informal "dinner
clothes" and the
pileus
(freedman's hat) was worn by everyone. Slaves were exempt from
punishment, and treated their masters with disrespect. The slaves
celebrated a banquet before, with, or served by the masters.
Saturnalia became one of the most popular
Roman festivals which led to more
tomfoolery, marked chiefly by having masters and slaves ostensibly
switch places, temporarily reversing the social order.
In Greek and Cypriot
folklore it was believed that children born during
the festival were in danger of turning into Kallikantzaroi which come out of the Earth
after the solstice to cause trouble for mortals. Some would
leave
colanders on their doorsteps to
distract them until the sun returned.
Şeva Zistanê (Kurdish)
The
Night of Winter ( ) is an unofficial holiday
celebrated by communities throughout the Kurdistan
region in the Middle East. The night is
considered one of the oldest holidays still observed by modern
Kurds and was celebrated by ancient tribes in
the region as a holy day. The holiday falls every year on the
winter solstice. Since the night is the longest in the year,
ancient tribes believed that it was the night before a victory of
light over darkness and signified a rebirth of the sun. The sun
plays an important role in several ancient religions still
practiced by some Kurds in addition to its importance in
Zoroastrianism.
In modern
times, communities in the Kurdistan
region still observe the night as a holiday.
Many families prepare large feasts for their communities and the
children play games and are given sweets in similar fashion to
modern-day Halloween practices.
Sol Invictus Festival (3rd century Roman Empire)
Sol Invictus ("the undefeated Sun") or, more
fully,
Deus Sol Invictus ("the undefeatedsun god") was a
religious title applied to at least three distinct divinities
during the later
Roman Empire;
El Gabal,
Mithras, and
Sol.A
festival of the birth of the Unconquered Sun (or
Dies Natalis Solis Invicti) wascelebrated by the
Romans on December 25. On this, the first day after the six day
solar standstill of the winter solstice, the duration of daylight
first begins to increase, as the sun once again begins its sunrise
movement toward the North, interpreted as the "rebirth" of the sun.
With the
growing popularity of the Christianity,
Jesus of Nazareth
came to be given much of the recognition previously
given to a sun god, thereby including Christ
in the tradition. This was later condemned by the early
Catholic Church for associating Christ with
pagan practices.
Soyalangwul is the winter solstice ceremony of the
Zuni and the Hopitu Shinumu, "The Peaceful
Ones," also known as the
Hopi Indians. It is
held on
December 21, the shortest day of
the year. The main purpose of the ritual is to ceremonially bring
the sun back from its long winter slumber. It also marks the
beginning of another cycle of the Wheel of the Year, and is a time
for purification.
Pahos (prayer sticks) are made prior to
the Soyal ceremony, to bless all the community, including their
homes, animals, and plants. The
kivas (sacred underground
ritual chambers) are ritually opened to mark the beginning of the
Kachina season.
W
Wayeb' or
Uayeb, referencing the
unlucky
god N, were actually five nameless days leading up
to the end of the
Haab, the solar
Maya calendar. It was thought to be a
dangerous time in which there were no divisions between the mortal
and immortal worlds, and deities were free to cause disaster if
they willed it. To ward off the spirits, the Maya had a variety of
customs they practiced during this period. For example, people
avoided leaving their houses or grooming their hair.
Calendar Round rituals would be held at the
end of each 52 year round (coincidence of the three Maya
calendars),
4 wayeb to
1 Imix 0 Pop, with all
fires extinguished, old pots broken, and a new fire ceremony
symbolizing a fresh start. The next Calendar Round will be on the
winter solstice of 2012, beginning a new
baktun.
Haab' observations are still held by Maya
communities in the highlands of Guatemala
.
We
Tripantu (Mapuche in southern
Chile
)
We Tripantu (
Mapudungun
tr: new sunrise) is the conclusion of the
Mapuche New Year that takes
place between
June 21 and
June 24 in the
Gregorian calendar. It is the Mapuche's
equivalent to the
Inti Raymi. The
ancestral incertidubre stayed up throughout the year's longest
night with anxiety that the next day would not come. After three
days it became clear that the winter was diminishing. The
Pachamama (
Quechua tr: Mother Earth), Nuke Mapu (
uke'
Mapu) begins to bloom fertilized by
Sol,
from the Andean heights to the southern tip. Antu (Pillan),
Inti (
Aymara), or
Rapa (
rapanui) Sol, the sun starts to
come back to earth, after the longest night of the year: it's
winter Solstice. Todo start to bloom again.
Y
Originally the name
Giuli signified a 60 day tide
beginning at the lunar midwinter of the late Scandinavian
Norse and
Germanic tribes. The arrival of
Juletid thus came to refer to the midwinter
celebrations. By the late
Viking Age, the
Yule celebrations came to specify a great
solstitial Midwinter festival that amalgamated the traditions of
various midwinter celebrations across Europe, like
Mitwinternacht,
Modrasnach,
Midvinterblot, and the
Teutonic solstice celebration,
Feast of the
Dead.
A documented example of this is in 960, when
King Håkon of Norway
signed into
law that Jul was to be celebrated on the night
leading into December 25, to align it with the Christian
celebrations. For some Norse sects,
Yule
logs were lit to honor
Thor, the god of
thunder. Feasting would continue until the log burned out, three or
as many as twelve days.
The indigenous lore of the Icelandic
Jól continued beyond the Middle Ages, but was condemned when the Reformation arrived. The
celebration continues today throughout
Northern Europe and elsewhere in name and
traditions, for
Christians as
representative of the
nativity of
Jesus on the night of December 24, and for others as a cultural
winter celebration on the 24th or for some, the date of the
solstice.
- In Germanic Neopagan sects,
Yule is celebrated with gatherings that often involve a meal and
gift giving. Further attempts at reconstruction of surviving
accounts of historical celebrations are often made, a hallmark
being variations of the traditional. However it has been pointed
out that this is not really reconstruction as these traditions
never died out – they have merely removed the Christian elements
from the celebration and replaced the event at the solstice.
- The Icelandic Ásatrú and the
Asatru Folk Assembly in the US
recognize Jól or Yule as lasting
for 12 days, beginning on the date of the winter solstice.
- In Wicca, a form of the holiday is
observed as one of the eight solar holidays, or Sabbat. In most Wiccan sects, this
holiday is celebrated as the rebirth of the Great God, who is
viewed as the newborn solstice sun. Although the name Yule
has been appropriated from Germanic and Norsk paganism, elements of
the celebration itself are of modern origin.
Z
Adapting the Egyptian Osiris Celebrations, the
Babylonians held the annual renewal or new year
celebration, the
Zagmuk Festival. It lasted 10
days overlapping either the winter solstice or
vernal equinox in its center peak. It was a
festival held in observation of the sun god
Marduk's battle over darkness. The Babylonians held
both land and river
parades.
Sacaea, as
Berossus
referred to it, had festivals characterized with a subversion of
order leading up to the new year. Masters and slaves interchanged,
a mock king was crowned and
masquerades clogged the streets. This has
been a suggested precursor to the
Festival of Kronos,
Saturnalia and possibly
Purim.
In
ancient Latvia
,
Ziemassvētki, meaning winter festival,
was celebrated on December 21 as one of
the two most important holidays, the other being Jāņi. Ziemassvētki celebrated the
birth of
Dievs, the highest god of
Latvian mythology.The two weeks before
Ziemassvetki are called
Veļu laiks,
the "season of ghosts."During the festival, candles were lit for
Dieviņš and a fire kept burning
until the end, when its extinguishing signaled an end to the
unhappiness of the previous year. During the ensuing feast, a space
at the table was reserved for Ghosts, who was said to arrive on a
sleigh. During the feast, certain foods were always eaten: bread,
beans, peas, pork and pig snout and feet. Carolers
(
Budeļi) went door to door singing songs and eating from
many different houses. The holiday was later adapted by Christians
in the
middle ages. It is now celebrated
on the 24th, 25th and 26th of December and largely recognized as
both a Christian and secular cultural observance.
Lithuanians of the
Romuva religion continue to celebrate a
variant of the original
polytheistic
holiday.
See also
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