A
Most Bewitching Night
The History of Halloween
by
Random History
Known variously as Samhain, Summer?s End,
All Hallow?s Eve, Witches Night, Lamswool, and Snap-Apple
night, Halloween is among the world?s oldest holidays.
Rooted in ancient pagan and Christian festivals that
celebrated the inextricable link between seasonal and life
cycles, Halloween has transcended its cultural roots and is
currently celebrated in various forms all over the modern
world. Halloween as it exists today is an exciting array of
dichotomies as it delights both children and adults, prompts
private religious observance as well as public
exhibitionism, and blends personal imagination with mass
marketing. A day full of magic and mystery, Halloween has
not only survived, but it has thrived during epic cultural,
religious, economic, and industrial changes throughout its
long history.
Roots in Ancient Celtic Festivals
The essential elements of Halloween, such
as costuming, trick-or-treating, lighting bonfires, telling
ghost stories, and attending community parties can be traced
back 2000 years ago to the ancient Celtic festival called
Samhain (SOW-in or SOW-an), which means ?summer?s end.? As
the second major seasonal festival of the year (the first
was called Beltain, celebrated around May 1st), Samhain
marked the death of summer and the beginning of the Celtic
New Year (Rogers 2002). As a moment of change, Samhain was
viewed as a night of magic and power. In a time where there
was little distinction between the diminishing sun and the
possible extinction of life, Samhain was an intensely sacred
festival that marked the boundaries between summer and
winter and life and death (Skal 2002).
The Celts (which included people from
northern France, Ireland, England, Scotland, Wales, and
Brittany) believed that on October 31st the Lord of Death,
Saman, would call together all the souls that had died the
previous year to travel to afterlife during the Vigil of
Samhain. Ancestral ghosts and demons emerged from sidh
(ancient mounds or barrows of the countryside) and were free
to roam the earth, harm crops, and cause trouble (Bannatyne
1990). The living would often disguise themselves in
ghoulish costumes so the spirits of the dead would think
they were one of their own and pass by without incident. The
masked villagers would also form parades to lead the spirits
out to the town limits. In addition to masks and costumes
and, arguably, as a precursor to modern-day
trick-or-treating, the Celts would also offer food to Saman
to persuade him to more be temperate as he judged their
ancestors. Additionally, the Celts would lay out food for
their weary ancestors traveling to the other world or to
appease spirits who were looking for trouble (Rogers 2002).
Because these roaming spirits were thought
to hold the secrets of the afterlife and the future, Celtic
priests, or Druids, thought that divinations could be read
with more clarity on this particular day. The priests would
light large fires to both strengthen the Sun god and to make
divinations by throwing a horse or cat (sometimes in a
wicker cage) into the fire and watch the burning entrails.
At midnight, they would begin to worship Saman, who would be
the ruler of the earth for the next six months (Thompson
2003). Because the Celts were an oral culture, some
speculation remains whether the Druids actually practiced
human sacrifice and the Roman accounts (like Julius Caesar?s
reports) are accurate or just instances of Roman propaganda
(Skal 2002).
Roman Festival of Pomona
When the Romans conquered the Celtic
lands just before the birth of Christ, they both assimilated
and added to ancient Celtic Samhain symbols and rituals. For
example, the festival of Pomona, which celebrated the Roman
Goddess of the harvest Pomona (or Pomorum) on November 1st,
contributed the feast of nuts and fruits to Samhain?s own
autumn celebrations. Apples, in particular, were associated
with Pomona and were, for the Romans, a symbol of love and
fertility. The Druid belief that the eve of Samhain was the
most potent night for prognostication seems to have merged
with aspects of the festival of Pomona in that dozens of
Halloween divinations began to use apples (and nuts) to
predict one?s spouse (Thompson 2003). The Celtic and Roman
traditions not created a night devoted to the dead, but also
a night for divination and romance. With the dawn of the
first century A.D., these pagan traditions would encounter a
new, powerful religion: Christianity.
All Saints and All Souls Days
After Constantine officially declared
Christianity legal in the Edict of Milan in A.D. 313,
Christianity spread throughout the Roman Empire. Realizing
they would have more success in converting others by
assimilating existing powerful pagan rites and symbols into
Christian rituals rather than obliterating them altogether,
shrewd Church leaders gradually appropriated Samhain and
Panoma celebrations into the Catholic rituals of All Saints
and All Souls Days. In fact, Pope Gregory III moved All
Saints Day (or All Hallow?s Day, in England) from May 1st to
November 1st to coincide with the pagan festivals. The eve
of All Saints Day, October 31st, became All Hallow Even,
then Hallowe?en, and then Halloween. In addition, a French
monastic order called the Cluniacs created All Soul?s Day to
commemorate all departed Christian souls (not just the
saints') on November 2nd (Rogers 2002). Taken together, the
three days were called Hallowmas, (?hallow? meaning
?sanctified? or ?holy?) (Thompson 2003).
In many respects, these Christian rituals
remained the same as their pagan counterparts with a few
important derivations. For example, like the ancient pagans,
the Church encouraged their congregation to remember the
dead--but with prayers instead of sacrifice. In addition,
instead of appeasing spirits through food and wine, members
of the congregation would go house to house carrying a
hollowed out turnip lantern whose candle symbolized a soul
trapped in purgatory and offering prayers for the dead in
exchange for ?Soul Cakes.? Poor churches could not afford
genuine relics of the saints and instead held processions
where parishioners dressed as saints, angels, and devils,
resembling the pagan custom of parading ghosts to the town
limits (Bannatyne 1990). Bonfires were also lit, not in
homage to the sun, but to keep the mortal enemy of the new
religion away: Satan, a concept arguably incompatible with
the polytheism of the ancient Celts. The Druids were seen as
witches (wiccas or ?wise ones?), and a fourteenth-century
text called Malleus Maleficarium (The Witches Hammer)
created a link between witchcraft and the devil that
produced a mythology so powerful it lasts even today (Rogers
2002). By the end of the Middle Ages, Hallowmas was among
the most important liturgical movements in the Christian
year.
The Reformation and Halloween
It was on Halloween in 1517 when Martin
Luther began a reformation that would radically limit
celebrations of Halloween in Europe. As subsequent
Protestant sects began forming throughout Western Europe,
many Catholic rituals--including Hallowmas--were banned (Skal
2002). Yet, just as the Celtic Samhain was assimilated with
the Roman festival of Ponoma and merged again with Catholic
custom, the English Protestants appropriated several
elements of Halloween in an autumn festival known as Guy
Fawkes Day. This day celebrated the Protestant triumph of a
Catholic plot led by Guy Fawkes to blow up the
Protestant-sympathetic House of Lords when Parliament met on
Nov 5, 1605 (Rogers 2002). Guy Fawkes was publically hanged
and then drawn and quartered for his role in the plot, and
it became popular to re-enact his punishment through the
festive parading of a scarecrow figure through the streets
(Rogers 2002). The eve of Guy Fawkes Day became ?mischief
night? and, instead of begging for ?soul cakes? in
commemoration of All Saints Day, boys dressed up in costumes
to beg for coal to burn their effigies of Guy Fawkes, the
Pope, or other unpopular political figures. But in countries
that maintained a strong Catholic tradition, such as Ireland
and Scotland, Halloween rituals flourished largely untouched
by the Protestant Reformation (Skal 2002).
Halloween in the New World
The existence of Hallowmas in the
early American colonies depended on the religious fabric of
each emerging colony. Whereas Maryland and Virginia were
settled by Catholic and Church of England followers who
imported Hallowmas symbols and feasts of the Old World, the
Massachusetts Bay Colony, New Hampshire, and Connecticut
were populated by rigid Puritans who viewed the Catholic and
pagan overtones of Hallowmas as anathema to Puritan
philosophy (Bannatyne 1990). Ironically, while the Puritans
felt praying for the souls of the already predestined dead
was redundant, they held a fascination of witchcraft and
divination, and their witch-hunting zeal forever established
one of Halloween?s most enduring symbols. In addition,
Puritan New England practiced other remnants of Hallowmas
such as fortune-telling games (predicting future spouses)
and the celebration of Guy Fawkes Day (Rogers 2002).
The American Revolution created a society
more tolerant of religious diversity and, consequently,
Halloween celebrations became increasingly secular and
centered in the community rather than churches (Bannatyne
1990). While Halloween maintained its association with the
harvest and changing seasons, it was also becoming more
gendered. For example, while young males were creating
mischief such as blocking chimneys, ruining cabbage patches,
unhinging gates, and unstable-ing horses, young women
typically stayed close to home on ?San-Apple Night? to
divine a future mate by bobbing for apples or divining from
apple peels (Thompson 2003). Still, both genders enjoyed
telling ghost stories, which likely derived from both the
Druid belief that the ancestral dead arise on this night and
the Christian directive to honor the souls of the departed
at Hallowmas (Rogers 2002).
Immigration in the Early
Nineteenth Century
Fledging Halloween festivities after
the Revolutionary War in America were given new life by an
unprecedented number of immigrants between 1820 and 1870,
particularly the Irish. Indeed, wherever the Irish went,
their rich Halloween folk beliefs were eagerly embraced by
Americans. The Irish reinvigorated embryonic American
Halloween traditions and added a renewed emphasis on
masquerades, house-to-house visits, and the symbol of
Halloween itself, the Jack O'Lantern. Though there are many
renderings of its origin, the Jack O? Lantern is most often
said to have been named after a man named Jack who trapped
the devil in a tree. Jack agreed to let the devil go if the
devil guaranteed that Jack would not go Hell after Jack
died. When Jack died, he was not allowed into heaven since
he was a cruel and sinful man in life, but Jack was also
denied entrance into Hell because of the pact he had made
with the devil. However, the devil gave Jack a burning ember
from the fires of Hell which Jack placed in a turnip or
carrot to navigate the dark places of the earth. When the
Irish came to America, they found pumpkins plentiful and
better suited as lanterns (Thompson 2003). Other immigrant
groups added their unique traditions as well. For example,
the Germans and Scots enriched American witchcraft mythology
, and African Americans contributed elements of Voudon
(sometimes called voodoo) to American Halloween traditions.
Victorian Era Romanticization
The emergence of both the Victorian
periodical and postcard at the end of the nineteenth century
helped create homogeneity among the disparate ethnic
Halloween traditions--at least among the educated middle and
upper classes. However, while Victorian periodicals created
a synthesis of sorts, they also tended to romanticize
Halloween as a genteel holiday and as a night of romantic
divinations and parlor games (Rogers 2002). In addition,
Victorian ghost stories became less concerned with actual
ghosts and more concerned with romance and passion. As
Victorians attempted to throw better parties than their
neighbors, they added pomp to their celebrations that had
little to do with Halloween (Bannatyne 1990). Ancient
Halloween rites were all but lost as the focus became more
and more the province of children, matchmaking, and kissing
games.
Halloween in the Twentieth Century
As mass-marketed periodicals (such as The
Ladies? Home Journal) and other various mass media continued
to advertise the ?perfect Halloween party,? Halloween became
a bona fide North American holiday in the 1920s that was an
economic boon for businesses and candy manufacturers alike.
As commercialization continued in the early twentieth
century, civic groups such as high schools and rotary clubs
began taking over some of the domestic rituals of Halloween
and promoted it as an event for everyone. As cases of
mischief increased, particularly during the Depression, more
Halloween tricksters were being ?bought off? with candy. For
example, packaging for Ze Jumbo Jelly Beans contained the
message: ?Stop Halloween Pranksters.? In 1939, the magazine
American Homes was the first mass-marketed periodical in the
U.S. to use the term ?trick or treat? as a distinct
property-protection strategy (Skal 2002).
During WWII, some Halloween celebrations
were canceled due to sugar rationing, but soon
trick-or-treating would reach its commercial heyday. Like
the consumer post-war economy, Halloween in the 1950s grew
by leaps and bounds. Candy companies, with plenty of sugar
available again, launched national advertising campaigns
directly at Halloween, and soon trick-or-treating became a
national practice (Skal 2002). Americans continued to add a
distinctly commercial slant to Halloween with Hollywood
scary movies, greeting cards, and decorations. During the
1960s, however, rumors of tainted treats and razor blades in
candy, as well as a cyanide-laced Tylenol scare in 1982,
frightened both parents and children. Though actual
tampering of Halloween candy has been extremely rare, fear
still lingers today (Rogers 2002). Yet, Halloween, as it
tends to do, recovered, and today is the second largest
national holiday behind Christmas.
Halloween is no stranger to controversy
even in the twenty-first century, but the energy of
Halloween has always been targeted by those who wish to
control it, from the early Catholic church to the various
political and religious groups of today. Yet, Halloween has
managed to achieve national status without federal sanction
(such as July 4th and Christmas) because it?s a celebration
of the potential of what humans want to be--and, if only for
one night, what they would not otherwise be (Rogers 2002).
Historically Halloween endures because it allows its
participants to both embrace and defuse their fears
(Thompson 2003). From the ancient Celts who worshipped the
Lord of the Dead to help them visualize the afterlife to the
little vampires and fairies trick-or-treating at your door,
Halloween?s adaptability is the reason it remains?after
nearly 2000 years?the most bewitching night of the year.
References
Bannatyne, Lesley Pratt. 1990. Halloween:
An American Holiday, An American History. New York, New
York: Facts on File, Inc.
Rogers, Nicholas. 2002. Halloween: From
Pagan Ritual to Party Night. New York, New York: Oxford
University Press.
Skal, David J. 2002. Death Makes a
Holiday: A Cultural History of Halloween. New York, New
York: Bloomsbury.
Thompson, Sue Ellen. 2003. Holiday
Symbols and Customs. 3rd Ed. Detroit, Michigan: Omnigraphics,
Inc.
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