History of Halloween
Halloween is a traditional celebration held on October 31st.
Today, Halloween is an excuse for Halloween theme costume
parties, and entertainment with horror films, haunted houses
and other activities around the popular themes of ghosts,
witches, Dracula, werewolves and the supernatural. Children
love to dress up in halloween costumes and go from door-to-door
in their neighborhood following the old tradition of
trick-or-treating, collecting sweets and gifts, sometimes
money.
Halloween began as an ancient Celtic festival in Great
Britain and Ireland, and has survived most strongly among
Irish, Scottish and Welsh communities. Immigrants from these
communities carried the tradition to North America where it has
gained in popularity. In turn, as part of American pop culture,
Halloween has spread in popularity to most corners of the
English speaking western world, and increasingly into Western
Europe in recent times.
Originally Halloween was a pagan festival, around the idea
of linking the living with the dead, when contact became
possible between the spirits and the physical world, and
magical things were more likely to happen. Like most pagan
festivals, long ago it was absorbed into the festivals of the
expanding Christian church, and became associated with All
Hallows Day, or All Saints Day, which eventually fell on
November 1 under the Gregorian calendar. A vigil for the
festival was held on All Hallows Evening on October 31. In the
vernacular of the times, All Hallows Evening became Hallowe'en
and later the Halloween we know today.
The celebration of Halloween survived most strongly in
Ireland. It was an end of summer festival, and was often
celebrated in each community with a bonfire to ward off the
evil spirits. Children would go from door to door in disguise
as creatures from the underworld to collect treats,
mainly fruit, nuts and the like for the festivities. These were
used for playing traditional games like eating an apple on a
string or bobbing for apples and other gifts in a basin of
water, without using your hands. Salt might be sprinkled on the
visiting children to ward off evil spirits. Carving turnips as
ghoulish faces to hold candles became a popular part of the
festival, which has been adapted to carving pumpkins in
America.
The trick aspect to trick or treating as it emerged in North
America seems to have more obscure origins. It may be a merging
of the collection of treats with another separate old
tradition, especially in Ireland, where children would
sometimes engage in secretive mischief at Halloween. The
original intention was for the activities of mischievous
Halloween spirits to be blamed. Usually the mischief consisted
of playing some minor or witty tricks on some adults - often
the less popular ones - things like moving or hiding everyday
items during Halloween night.
In times past a refusal to give something when requested
during trick or treating may have resulted in some prank, which
was not always carried out in a spirit of good fun. Tossing
eggs or flour at the house, or soaping windows, were common
pranks. In most places today the trick aspect of trick or
treating now survives more as a ritual than any real
threat.
In Scotland and England the tradition of singing or other
entertainment in return for the gifts collected was more common
than the threat of a trick if nothing was given.
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