Wednesday, June 16, 2010

The Holly, The Ivy, and the Mistletoe (part 7 Victorian era)

For thousands of years people around the world have enjoyed mid-winter festivals. With the arrival of Christianity, pagan festivals became mixed with Christmas celebrations. One of the leftovers from these pagan days is the custom of bedecking houses and churches with evergreen plants like mistletoe, holly and ivy. Apparently, as well as their magical connection in protecting us from evil spirits, they also encourage the return of spring.


"Holy stond in the hall... Faire to behold:
Ivy stond without the dore...She is ful sore a cold.
Holy and his mery men...They daunsen and they sing;
Ivy and her maidenes...They wepen and they wring."

—Fifteenth-century carol, Reginald Thorne Davies, Medieval English Lyrics: A Critical Anthology, 1972.

A group of English carols set down in the fifteenth century preserves evidence of a ritual contest between boys bearing branches of holly and girls bearing ivy. The red-berried holly, symbolizing light, warmth, and light, was meant to prevail over the black-fruited ivy, which signified the dark and cold of winter. Thus, ivy remained outside the door while holly was carried triumphantly into the hall.

" A Midwinter Night's Dream," Album Cover, Loreena McKennitt

" Holly Girl"

"Tiss Me," Kate Greenaway


Victorian Christmas Eve Table

No era in history however, has influenced the way in which we celebrate Christmas, quite as much as the Victorians. Before Victoria’s reign started in 1837 nobody in Britain had heard of Santa Claus , and no Christmas cards were ever sent.

The Christmas Tree


The Christmas tree was introduced in Britain during the Georgian period, in the early 1800s following the personal union with the Kingdom of Hanover, by Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, Queen to King George III.


Feather Tree with Fruit Ornaments, Taft Museum
A Victorian Family Christmas
A Christmas Carol, "Mr. Fezziwigs Ball" Charles Dickens


In 1832 a young Queen Victoria wrote about her delight at having a Christmas tree, hung with lights, ornaments and presents placed round it. She loved Christmas all her life, and even recorded gifts received in her childhood meticulously and descriptively in her journal. After her marriage to her German cousin Prince Albert, by 1841 the custom became more widespread throughout Britain and many German Christmas traditions were adopted into Royal family life.


Prince Albert decorated the private family Christmas tree with strings of dried fruit, bonbons, wax dolls and painted unshelled walnuts.
“I must now seek in the children an echo of what Ernest, his brother, and I were in the old time, of what we felt and thought; and their delight in the Christmas tree is not less than ours used to be.”- Prince Albert…

From the Taft Museum, Antique Christmas Scene

Antique Victorian Ornaments


Dancing around the Christmas Tree

Angels We Have Heard on High


Antique Tree-Topper


A Victorian family's most prized ornament was the Nuremberg angel atop the tree. It had wings of spun glass, a crinkled gold skirt, and a wax or bisque face. Angels or cherubs represented the Victorian ideal of childlike or womanly innocence.

Taft Museum Angel, with tinsel trim

Tree-Top Angel ca.1940/50

The Gifts

Merry Old Santa
At the start of Victoria's reign, children's toys tended to be handmade and expensive, generally restricting availability to the "rich folk". With the Industrial Revolution however, came mass production, which brought with it games, dolls, books and clockwork toys all at a more affordable price. Affordable that is to "middle class" children. In a "poor child's" Christmas stocking, which first became popular from around 1870, only an apple, orange and a few nuts could be found.
"The Gift"
Stockings by Goullaud


"Christmas Morning"

"Pantins of Pierrot and Columbine," Victorian Dancing Puppets

Charles Dickens wrote books like "Christmas Carol", published in 1843, which encouraged rich Victorians to redistribute their wealth by giving money and gifts to the poor - Humbug! These radical middle class ideals eventually spread to the not-quite-so-poor as well.

Kissing Under the Mistletoe

Kissing under the Mistletoe at a Victorian Soiree
Another Christmas tradition that began during the Victorian era, was that of suspending sprigs of mistletoe from the ceiling…
Those who met under it could claim a kiss. This was away around the social restrictions of the times. No unmarried girl could spend time alone with a young man if they were courting; then they would be chaperoned. At Christmas, under the mistletoe, a lover could taste their sweetheart's lips, perhaps for the first time. The number of kisses allowed under each plant depended on the number of berries. Each time a kiss was given, a berry was taken off. No more berries, no more kisses!

"First Kiss"
Caroling
The custom of caroling is a purely English tradition. The approaching Holiday season was marked by strolling Carolers, and Musicians "The Waits” usually in groups of three; one caroler to play violin, one to sing, and one to sell sheet music. Holiday shoppers would pause to purchase music, joining in the trio for a few stanzas, before hurrying homeward.
Carolers would stop at houses to sing and play the popular carols :

1843 - O Come all ye Faithful
1848 - Once in Royal David's City
1851 - See Amid the Winters Snow
1868 - O Little Town of Bethlehem
1883 - Away in a Manger

…in the hopes to be invited for a warm drink.
Victorian Christmas Carolers
Charles Dickens

On December 18, 1988, Britain's Sunday Telegraph proclaimed Charles Dickens as "the man who invented Christmas." And it is surely true that no other writer has left the world with a clearer picture of Christmas in Victorian England than Dickens.
Dickens might not have invented Christmas, but he is credited with the great revival of Christmas traditions in the Victorian era, which have continued in one form or the other to the present day in all English-speaking countries around the globe.

"And I do come home at Christmas. We all do, or we all should. We all come home, or ought to come home, for a short holiday -- the longer, the better -- from the great boarding-school, where we are for ever working at our arithmetical slates, to take, and give a rest. As to going a visiting, where can we not go, if we will, where have we not been, when we would, starting our fancy from our Christmas Tree!"

8 comments:

  1. What can I say, love the images and the music - though I thought it might be Loreena at first - one of my favourites. Great, great post, really enjoyed ad several of those pictures are absolute crackers (excuse the pun). Thanks.

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  2. Muy interesante la historia y las imágenes fantásticas!!!

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  3. Hi Marta, That is a great post on Christmas past and the vintage photos with the ornaments. I am a collector of antigue Christmas ornaments also from the Victorian period to about the 1930s. Im always on the hunt for antique Christmas goodies. Thanks for sharing all this information. And also thanks for stopping by. Have a good week....Julian

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  4. Thank you dear friends!...I wasn't sure about this post, after all its only mid June..LOL!
    But its one of our Victorian legacies, so I had to include a bit of Xmas is June...
    Bisous
    Marta

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  5. Thank you so much for this wonderful blog!
    www.maijaandme.blogspot.com
    www.tjetjatrot.blogspot.com
    maija

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  6. Marta de veras que es fantastico, y sobre todo me encanta esa epoca navideña. Gracias por esas hermosas imagenes.

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  7. Hola Marta!!!
    Qué maravilla de secuencias históricas tan bien ilustradas nos has preparado!!!
    Una satisfacción conocer origenes de tradiciones propias de la Navidad!!!
    Un abrazo enorme!!!

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  8. Thank you for your support! Its very encouraging.
    Hugs
    Marta

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