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Halloween History Lesson
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Halloween History Lesson

The History of Halloween
It’s almost that time again. Things are about to go bump in the night. Spook masters would have you believe that the dead actually walk the earth on that day, but Halloween is as much a matter of shadows and mirrors as the horror movies we watch. For anyone interested, here is a history of the modern day holiday known as Halloween.

First of all, it was called All Hallows Eve. We are not speaking of Sleepy Hollow. Hallow means holy, like in The Lord’s Prayer for all the Sunday schoolers out there. Early pagan religions specifically the Celts would celebrate different phases of the earth. One such festival was Samhain. It is pronounced “saw-in.” it was a festival that commemorated the lives of the dead. There was nothing wrong with this, except that they didn’t discriminate between the “good” dead and the “bad” dead. People remembered all of the dead. The date that this festival fell on was October 31st.

Isn’t sounding too scary so far is it? Well, you must remember that early pagan religions were prone to superstition as in the Middle Ages. They were afraid of spirits and the thought of them returning to the human world frightened them.

As history goes, during this time, priests of the religion would contact these spirits to divine the future of the harvest as this was also harvest season. People’s livelihood depended on those crops and they were afraid that the spirits would curse them and destroy the crops.

The church decided to combat such superstition by adding a bit of Christianity to the occasion. They moved the celebration of All Saints Day from March 13th to November 1st. People would hopefully be less scared and more into the Christian celebration than the pagan one. Everyone didn’t change their long held beliefs however. People would cover their faces with masks when they went out at night in hopes that any roaming spirits would recognize them as fellow travelers and suspend their mischief. They also used large carved turnips with candles inside as lanterns.

All Hallows Eve became Halloween in modern times. Instead of walking through the veil between this world and the next, kids dress in a variety of costumes to scare each other silly and get a bit of candy in the process. The only spirits around on Halloween are the ones we create on the movie set. Well, maybe…

Halloween Pumpkin Design Ideas

Tags: Spook, All Hallows Eve, Nothing, Sleepy, Halloween History

17 Comments
  1. Hi, this is a comment.
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  2. I agree. Looking forward to All Hallows Eve!

  3. Me too! What are your plans for this year's All Hallows Eve?

  4. ihope if the swag bucks spook up my tweeting!!

  5. holy shit dude that made me jump too LOL

  6. Scary amount of election cash this All Hallows (Election) Eve: The Washington Post reported last week that c…

  7. years ago there was a tv show called, One Step Beyond, quite scary!

  8. Try a fresnel lens, steel wool and a battery, or any of the firemaking techniques listed in the US Army survival manual.

    The method you speak of, technically, could be considered a felony, depending on the chemicals you use to start your fire.

  9. You might think the director of national intelligence actually runs the spy world. But that would make too much sense.

  10. dude don’t worry, she not’s worth you. Think positive about yourself ! It was not your fault.

  11. RT "@ItzBlizz: u aint lyin!!! haha RT Niggas in GPT don't do nothing but lie lol…"*n …

  12. uploading a "mixed plate" tape for the sleepy sleepers

  13. you misspelled pirahna

  14. Iklan Hijau » Blog Archive » http://www.supermarketkostum.com Spesialis …: … Kostum History Christmas Halloween mov…

  15. All Hallows Eve, or Halloween, was originally a pagan celebration and has been celebrated for thousands of years so yes it was celebrated during the 1800s.

  16. love ice cube from Germany!!!

  17. Harrison Ford as Adrian Chiles? Fictional and real breakfast shows share a lot more than a name Actors discussing their new movies are a frequent item on breakfast TV, but the main UK rivals for the sleepy-eyed audience will both have suffered discomfort at the prospect of covering the latest Harrison Ford movie, released here on Friday. Morning Glory features Ford as Mike Pomeroy, a granite-haired, gravel-larynxed American news anchor who, as a result of a contractual dispute with his network, is forced to become co-host of a viewer-abandoned and critically trashed breakfast TV show at risk of being pulled from the schedules. Unfortunately the crappy format goes under the name Daybreak, for which reason Adrian Chiles and Christine Bleakley were happy on this occasion to cede the big film-star interview to their BBC1 rivals, and clear ratings-winners, Bill Turnbull and Sian Williams. Revealingly, both the Hollywood script about the fictional Daybreak, and newspaper coverage of the…