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Christmas in Great Nortend

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Christmas in Great Nortend is a widely celebrated holiday, as in most Christian countries. As one of the great high festivals observed by the Church of Nortend, it commands a place in the religious life of the nation second only to Easter. As such, Christmas is normally celebrated focussing on religious tradition, commemorating the actual birthday of Jesus Christ, although more secular customs have always been a staple of the season since its inception in Great Nortend with the arrival and spread of Christianity in the 8th century.

Christmas is celebrated on December 25th, but is followed by various festivals until Epiphany on January 6th, making the „Twelve Days of Christmas”. Christmas is preceded by the six weeks of Advent which is characterised by penance and fasting. Hence, when the Christmas season, called Christmastide, arrives, it is all the more spectacularly marked by festivities, feasting, shopping and general merriments. Christmas is also the beginning of the Christmas term, one of the four quarterly terms of the civil year which begins on Michaelmas, September 29th, in the Michaelmas term.

Advent

Advent is celebrated over six weeks in Great Nortend, according to the rite of the Church of Nortend. It begins on the Sunday after Martinmas, celebrated on November 11th. This Sunday is known as Ad te levavi,[1] from the words of the Office anthem at the mass.

During Advent, the coming festivities are anticipated by making preparations for Christmas. The house is cleaned and food prepared, including Christmas puddings, cakes and fruit mincemeat which are made early in Advent to mature. Gingerbread and peppercake, made from allspice, are popular as well, especially made into shapes using wooden moulds, often intricately carved and handed down through generations. Throughout Advent, Advent calendars and Advent candlesticks are put up and used to mark off the days and weeks of Advent by opening windors or doors in the calendar, or by lighting successive candles each Saturday evening. Otherwise, no special decorations are put up during Advent.

Advent is also a fasten tide throughout its six weeks according to the Church of Nortend, excepting festivals and Sundays. Therefore, the main meal of the day must not include flesh meat, although strict abstinence from meat or meat products is never required by the Church of Nortend. However, unlike Lent, Advent is marked by a succession of festivals which break the fast, which creates a much less penitential and more joyful season of hope, than Lent. The most consecutive days of fasting before O Sapientia is four, between St. Hugh’s Day and St. Cecilia’s Day, from the 18th to the 21st of November inclusive, and between the Conception of Mary and St. Lucy’s Day, from the 9th to the 12th inclusive.

On St. Nicholas’s Day, December 6th, children leave out leather shoes stuffed with hay and an apple on the doorstep of their house. The next morning, they will have been emptied in exchange for a number of silver threepences. Young boys are given gifts on this day, and often one will be chosen to act as a „boy bishop” for the day. St. Lucy’s Day, December 13th, is the comparable day for girls who receive gifts and choose one to be „Lady Lucy” who wears a garland with candles.

The Wednesday, Friday and Saturday after St. Lucy’s Day on December 13th are the Advent ember days. O Sapientia begins on December 16th, marked by the singing of the Great Anthems every night at Vespers until Christmas Eve. St. Thomas’s Day, originally and anciently celebrated on December 21st, was moved to December 29th to replace the festival of St. Thomas a Becket after the Small Schism, owing to the latter martyr’s infamous support for the Papacy over the Crown. This means „Wisdomtide” consists of more a more solemn period of fasting lacking any festivals at all other than Sundays, until Christmas Day.

Christmas Even

Christmas

Christmastide

Epiphany

See also

References

  1. In English, „Unto thee lift I up [my soul]”.