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Christmas


Merry Christmas Wishes
From 101lifeStyle.com

The Twelve Days Of Christmas:

The Twelve Days of Christmas and the associated evenings of those twelve days (Twelve-tide), are the festive days beginning the evening of Christmas Day (December 25) through the morning of Epiphany on (January 6). The associated evenings of the twelve days begin on the evening before the specified day. Thus, the first night of Christmas is December 25–26, and Twelfth Night is January 5–6. The one or two Sundays between Christmas Day and Epiphany are sometimes called Christmastide.

Over the centuries, differing churches and sects of Christianity have changed the actual traditions, time frame, and their interpretations. St. Stephen's Day, for example, is December 26 in the Western Church and December 27 in the Eastern Church. December 26 is Boxing Day in the United Kingdom and its former colonies; December 28 is Childmas or the Feast of the Innocents. Currently, the 12 days and nights are celebrated in widely varying ways around the world. For example, some give gifts only on Christmas night, some only on Twelfth Night, and some each of the 12 nights. What remains constant is celebrating the birth of Jesus on December 25th, and a period of twelve days and nights following leading to Epiphany.

For many, the idea of the 12 days as a length of celebration is based on a sequence of verses in the Holy Bible (Matthew 2:1-12), and a belief that it may have taken 12 days for the three kings (also called wise men or magi) to travel to Bethlehem.

Over the centuries, differing churches and sects of Christianity have changed the actual traditions, time frame, and their interpretations. Some still celebrate Twelfth Night as the biggest night for parties and gift-giving, and some also light a Yule Log on the first night (Christmas), and let it burn some each of the twelve nights. Some also have their own traditional foods to serve each night.

All countries with Roman Catholics have forms of celebrations for the Twelve Days of Christmas. The most popular remaining tradition in this century throughout the world is the cooking of the traditional foods to celebrate the Feast of the Epiphany. In some Latin countries, a tortell is baked: This is a traditional cake originating from the Catalonia region of Spain. The recipe varies from the American-style "king cake", but the meaning is the same. Similarly, in France (and French-speaking countries) a "Galette des Rois" (the tart for the (three) Kings) is baked with a bean or small china figure of the Christ-child inside - the person who finds it becomes "King" and wears a paper crown for the day. In Italy the tradition of "La Befana", whose name is taken from the word 'Epiphany', is very substantial and wide-spread.

In Latin America the end of the Twelve Days of Christmas and Epiphany is the beginning of another religious-based season which has meshed with secular and pagan celebrations over time: That being "Carnaval" (or "Carnival") season, which concludes, in turn, on Mardi Gras Day.