lpetrich
Contributor
The ultimate reason is, of course, the Earth's axial tilt, which makes it receive a varying pattern of incoming sunlight over the year. At each solstice, one hemisphere gets the most light that it will get, and the opposite one gets the least.
People in various parts of the world have been celebrating at Northern-Hemisphere winter solstice time for centuries. Christmas, Yule, Saturnalia, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, HumanLight, ...
Many of these celebrations are ripoffs or imitations of older ones, it must be said. Reform Jews made Hanukkah into a big celebration to compete with Christmas, as Ebonmuse has noted in Why Hanukkah? Kwanzaa was invented by black nationalist Ron Karenga in 1966, and HumanLight was invented by the New Jersey Humanist Network in 2001.
But how far back can we look? It is certainly difficult to tell what people celebrated in the absence of written records, but there are other clues that one can use.
Ebonmuse has also noted that it is the Season of Light. All those lights in the celebrations are for making up for the lack of light at that time of year in northern latitudes. And Christmas trees? They are evergreens, meaning that they keep their leaves all year round, keeping them from looking dead.
These features are unconnected with Jesus Christ and part of the Bible forbids decorating trees (Jeremiah 10:3-4). But these features are connected with the ultimate reason, axial tilt, which means less sunlight, which in turn means more darkness and colder weather, and so forth. But they do not give us much of a time clue.
The name of
Yule does, however. Various early Germanic peoples had Yule celebrations, and these got turned into Christmas ones; Scandinavian people still use their cognates of "Yule" for the holiday (Danish jol, Icelandic jól, Norwegian jul, Swedish jul). This suggests that it was also celebrated by the ancestral Germanic people, who likely produced the
Jastorf culture of Denmark and northern Germany around 500 BCE - 1 CE.
And since Christmas trees are originally Germanic, they may more properly be called Yule trees.
People in various parts of the world have been celebrating at Northern-Hemisphere winter solstice time for centuries. Christmas, Yule, Saturnalia, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, HumanLight, ...
Many of these celebrations are ripoffs or imitations of older ones, it must be said. Reform Jews made Hanukkah into a big celebration to compete with Christmas, as Ebonmuse has noted in Why Hanukkah? Kwanzaa was invented by black nationalist Ron Karenga in 1966, and HumanLight was invented by the New Jersey Humanist Network in 2001.
But how far back can we look? It is certainly difficult to tell what people celebrated in the absence of written records, but there are other clues that one can use.
Ebonmuse has also noted that it is the Season of Light. All those lights in the celebrations are for making up for the lack of light at that time of year in northern latitudes. And Christmas trees? They are evergreens, meaning that they keep their leaves all year round, keeping them from looking dead.
These features are unconnected with Jesus Christ and part of the Bible forbids decorating trees (Jeremiah 10:3-4). But these features are connected with the ultimate reason, axial tilt, which means less sunlight, which in turn means more darkness and colder weather, and so forth. But they do not give us much of a time clue.
The name of
And since Christmas trees are originally Germanic, they may more properly be called Yule trees.