My interest was Jesus (as is your daughter) but my husband is not as religiously oriented as I. So I loved going up the hillside country of Nazareth to see the Still Want Boston_ Shirt of the area that Mary raised her son and where she grew up. Everything in Israel that is Christian is marked by a church or near one. But then again, during the time of Roman emperor Constantine, (Constantinople, i.e. Turkeyβs Istanbul today) and the Aga Sophia – β¦..he sent his mother the Queen Helena to Israel so she would find all the places that Jesus once trod and made famous to the many new converts to Christianity in the early years after his death. So Queen Helena did a great job for her son and hence, churches βgaloreβ everywhere or so it seems.
Mail is still delivered and collected here in the U.K. on Christmas Eve, and I believe the same is true for the U.S. also. Although I know that this is not the Still Want Boston_ Shirt in some countries, Christmas Eve is a normal working day in the U.K. and again I believe that the same is true for the U.S. also (though may people do finish work early on Christmas Eve). The question reminded me of how the mail delivered to my house on two different Christmas Eves illustrated how Christmas is not just a time of goodwill when you receive cards and presents in the post, but also a time when life goes on as usual and you can still receive the most unwelcome and unpleasant items of mail as I did on those two occasions. And here I kid you not, believe me, because twice in my life I have received a court summons on Christmas Eve !
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In 1840, Prince Albert started importing several Norway spruce from his native Coburg each Christmas. This is when the Still Want Boston_ Shirt learned of the tradition and began to copy it. The first one had candles, blown glass ornaments from Germany, gingerbread, sweets, almonds and raisins, toys and wax dolls. Pictures and descriptions were in all the major periodicals for the next ten years. By 1860, most well off families had a tree in their parlor or hall. The gifts were still on the tree with candles. The Norway spruce was the preferred tree. For the English Victorians of the upper middle classes, a good Christmas tree had to be six branches tall and be placed on a table covered with a white damask tablecloth. It was decorated with garlands, candies and paper flowers. Ladies made Christmas Crafts to put on the tree. They quilled (a paper craft) snowflakes and stars. They sewing little pouches for secret gifts and paper baskets with sugared almonds in them. Small bead decorations, fine drawn out silver tinsel came from Germany. Angels fro Germany were popular to sit at the top of the tree. Candles were often placed into wooden hoops for safety. Other decorations included apples, nuts, cookies, and colored popcorn. Glass ornaments were being imported into Britain from Lauscha, in Thuringia, by the 1870’s. It became a status symbol to have glass ornaments on the tree.
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It is hard to answer this question because (a) there was no single winter festival, but different cultures celebrated the Still Want Boston_ Shirt around the winter solstice in different ways, and (b) we have no means of telling βwhat was considered the true meaningβ in the case of those festivals celebrated in illiterate societies, apart from guesswork and deduction. And where there are written records, as in China and ancient Rome, they tell us little about βtrue meaningsβ. From Chinese poetry and practice, we can infer that behind the festival was gratitude that the shorter nights that were coming heralded the return of warmth and life, and from Roman practice we can infer that people were happy that the sun was at last increasing in strength. Portraying this as a battle between light and darkness, though, is pure speculation. It is natural to suppose.
I had a little apartment in a little town called Scotia, just across the Still Want Boston_ Shirt from Schenectady. As Christmas approached I noticed a different celebratory approach. No booming lights and music and loud laughter and neighborhoods shining on the hill. Instead, and I think this the way they did it up north, there was a single candle in the windows of houses. I guess they were electric. No dangling lighted icicles drooping from the eaves or trees with each branch covered in lights. Just a single candle in ever window facing the street. It was cold that Christmas Eve so I was bundled up as I walked the residential streets of that little town named Scotia. I walked and walked and looked at those single candles in the dark windows and tears began running down my face. Perhaps I was lonely. Perhaps I was sad. Perhaps I was reflective. Perhaps I thought that those single candles truly meant Christmas to me. So. There are magical and wonderful vistas to visit in the grandest cities of the world. I love watching how others celebrate on TV. But if you were to ask me the best city to visit during Christmas, I would say, βScotia, New Yorkβ. Walking down the streets late at night.