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- A Christmas tree is usually a decorated conifer tree or an artificial tree of a similar appearance.
- A conifer tree is one that carries cones and has needle-like or scale-like leaves that are typically evergreen (examples: fir, spruce or pine trees).
- While the Christmas tree is an essential part of the Christmas celebrations, evergreen trees have been used to celebrate winter festivals long before the advent of Christianity.
- E.g., winters in parts of modern-day Europe were tough.
- And Pagans used branches of evergreen trees to decorate their homes during the winter solstice (shortest period of daylight and longest night of the year).
- They did it because evergreen trees made them think of the spring to come.
- And spring has historically been associated with fertility and growth across many cultures.
- So, the idea of bringing the evergreen into the house meant bringing in new life in the darkness of winter.
- Eventually, the practice evolved into a Christmas tree during Christmas—an annual festival commemorating the birth of Jesus Christ.
- And there are several theories on how this happened.
- The most prominent theory attributes the association of the Christmas tree with Christmas to the Christian monk Boniface.
- Monk Boniface, who was in Germany for his missionary work, one day saw Germans sacrificing animals before an oak tree (the oak tree was considered sacred).
- He took the axe and felled the tree to stop Pagans’ practice of sacrificing animals.
- Pagans thought their God would punish Boniface, and he would be struck by lightning.
- That never happened, and Boniface took the opportunity to convert those Pagans into Christians.
- Legend has it that a fir tree grew out of the fallen oak and became a symbol of Christ.
- Being triangular in shape, the tree was taken to represent the Trinity (God the Father, God the Son, and God the holy spirit).
- From here, modern Christmas trees emerged in western Germany during the 1500s.
- German Christians brought trees into their homes and decorated them with gingerbread, nuts and apples.
- Britain’s Queen Victoria’sGreat-great-grandmother of Queen Elizabeth II. mother was a German, and she brought the practice of decorating Christmas trees to England.
- Then in 1848, a drawing of the British royal family celebrating around a decorated Christmas tree in Windsor Castle was published by the Illustrated London News.
- And this event popularised the decoration of the Christmas tree in England and from there it spread across the world.
Also Read:
Who is Santa Claus and how did he get associated with Christmas?
Image courtesy of Jeswin Thomas through Pexels
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