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England - Christmas
traditions & customs |
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The English enjoy beautiful Christmas music. They love
to decorate Christmas Trees and hang up evergreen
branches.
One of England's customs is mumming. In the Middle Ages,
people called mummers put on masks and acted out
Christmas plays. These plays are still performed in
towns and villages.
The English gift giver is called Father Christmas. He
wears a long red or green robe, and leaves presents in
stockings on Christmas Eve. However, the gifts are not
usually opened until the following afternoon.
Christmas in England began in AD 596, when St Augustine
landed on her shores with monks who wanted to bring
Christianity to the Anglo Saxons.
Father Christmas delivers them during the night before
Christmas. The Children leave an empty stocking or
pillowcase hanging at the end of the bed. In the morning
they hope it will be full of presents.
In England the day after Christmas is called Boxing Day
because boys used to go round collecting money in clay
boxes. When the boxes were full, they broke them open.
In England Christmas dinner was usually eaten at Midday
on December 25, during daylight.
In England, the only thing that people ate on the day
before the feast was Frumenty, which is, was a kind of
porridge made from corn. Over the years the recipe
changed. Eggs, fruit, spice, lumps of meat and dried
plums were added. The whole mixture was wrapped in a
cloth and boiled. This is how plum pudding began.
In England the traditional Christmas dinner is roast
turkey with vegetables and sauces. For dessert it is
rich, fruity Christmas pudding with brandy sauce. Mince
pies, pastry cases filled with a mixture of chopped
dried fruit.
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