According to History.com, the legend is that the Norse god Odin had an eight-legged horse named Sleipnir, who kids would leave treats for in hopes that Odin would favor them with gifts in return. The tradition gained popularity in America during the Great Depression, when parents tried to make children understand the importance of being grateful for anything they might receive on Christmas. If you’re looking to take your tree to the next level, check out 20 Genius Christmas Tree Decorating Tips, According to Experts. While holiday greetings have been around since time immemorial, the first Christmas card was British in origin. According to the Victoria & Albert Museum, the institution’s founding director, Henry Cole, sent the first known Christmas card, which included a drawing of a family gathering and the words “a merry Christmas and a happy New Year to you” in 1843. While using trees in holiday celebrations is believed to originally be a pagan tradition, more recognizable iterations of the Christmas tree hail from Germany, and date as far back as the 16th century. The modern Christmas tree, however, was popularized in the UK in the 1840s, when German-born Prince Albert displayed the first known British Christmas tree in Windsor Castle. For more holiday trivia sent right to your inbox, sign up for our daily newsletter. While Thomas Edison’s colleague Edward Hibberd Johnson is credited as the inventor of Christmas lights connected on strands, the tradition of illuminating Christmas trees comes from Germany, where it was being practiced as early as the 17th century, according to the Library of Congress. However, the lights back then were a lot less safe than the LED ones we string today—at the time, celebrants would simply attach candles to their trees and light them. While there’s no clear answer as to when the first songs about Jesus’ birth were written, the origin of caroling as we know it dates back to 13th century Britain. At the time, instead of singing, Anglo-Saxons would go from door to door wishing their neighbors good health—or “waes hael” in Anglo-Saxon, according to Andy Thomas, author of the 2019 book Christmas: A Short History from Solstice to Santa. Ever gotten smooched under a sprig of mistletoe during the holidays? You’ve got the Druids to thank for that. According to Ronald Hutton, author of the 2009 book Blood and Mistletoe: The History of the Druids in Britain, mistletoe was believed to have fertility-restoring properties for barren animals—perhaps the reason the parasitic plant is associated with love and romance today. For customs that are out of date, check out 15 Weird, Forgotten Christmas Traditions Nobody Does Anymore. If you’ve ever opened a Christmas cracker and donned its paper crown for the holidays, you have Tom Smith to thank for that tradition. The British candy maker is credited with inventing the modern day Christmas cracker in 1847 when trying to devise new packaging for some of his holiday sweets. While the jolly, big-bellied version of Santa may be a relatively modern tradition, the story of Saint Nicholas dates back to 3rd century Turkey. The real Saint Nicholas was a bishop born in what is now Turkey in 270 AD, and was said to have done frequent charitable deeds for others, which earned him widespread acclaim. However, according to the Saint Nicholas Center, it was in the 20th century that the modern Santa Claus got his red suit and sizable stomach. For more amazing bits of trivia about the season, check out 55 Fun Christmas Facts to Get You in the Holiday Spirit. According to a 2010 article in Smithsonian magazine, fruitcake dates back to the Middle Ages, when imports of dried fruit to Western Europe from Asia gave rise to this sweet, dense treat, which became popular in multiple European nations during the same time period. European immigrants brought the tradition stateside—and you’ll still see some of its European iterations, like German stollen and Italian panforte, in U.S. stores around the holidays today. The earliest mention of a modern Advent calendar is seen in an 1851 children’s book, according to the German Christmas Museum. However, the printed Advent calendar is attributed to Gerhard Lang, who is credited with creating the first commercially-available version of the Advent calendar—complete with doors and treats—in his native Germany in 1908. If you typically decorate your door with a wreath at Christmastime, it’s probably thanks to the Romans. According to a 1988 article in The New York Times, Romans would frequently give friends and family members branches to celebrate the new year, with those pieces of greenery eventually being fastened into the wreath as we know it today. Like many Christmas traditions, the creation of gingerbread houses started in Germany. According to the 2015 book The Oxford Companion to Sugar and Sweets, gingerbread was already a popular treat in Germany by the Middle Ages, with the city of Nuremberg becoming particularly famous for its gingerbread houses.ae0fcc31ae342fd3a1346ebb1f342fcb The idea of the Christmas cookie is European in origin—and probably a lot older than you might imagine. According to the 2008 book Entertaining from Ancient Rome to the Super Bowl: An Encyclopedia, gingerbread cookies and gingerbread houses likely became popular during the same time period, with the former initially used more as Christmas tree decorations than as treats. If you’ve ever bought ornaments or sipped a hot cocoa at an outdoor Christmas market, who do you think you have to thank for that? Once again, the answer is Germany. While similar markets would have been common throughout the Holy Roman Empire, the first modern Christmas market is said to be Dresden’s Striezelmarkt, founded in 1434. For a more recent trend that Americans also didn’t invent, look to the custom of wearing garish holiday-themed sweaters somewhat ironically. Per The Washington Post, “ugly Christmas sweater” parties first became popular in Vancouver, Canada at the beginning of this century. The U.S. embraced the concept too, expanding it into themed work days, retailers who specialize in making loud holiday apparel, and even ugly sweater fun runs. Whether you decorate with them, bake with them, or just snack on them, you have Germany to thank for candy canes as well. Carly Schildhaus of the National Confectioners Association told History.com that the treat is thought to have been invented in 1670, “when the choirmaster at the Cologne Cathedral in Germany handed out sugar sticks among his young singers to keep them quiet during the Living Creche ceremony.” Why the distinctive shape? “In honor of the occasion, he bent the candies into shepherds’ crooks,” Schildhaus added. The bright red flowers can be found in homes, businesses, and on church altars throughout the U.S. all season, but poinsettias weren’t well-known in America until Joel Roberts Poinsett—botanist and the first ambassador to Mexico—brought the plant back to his home country in 1828. (Hence the name.) One story associated with the flower is that of a poor Mexican girl who can’t afford a proper gift to bring to church for the baby Jesus. So she offers weeds with a pure heart, and they magically transform into beautiful poinsettias. It really is the thought that counts.

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