The Norse Origins of Christmas Traditions

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  • čas přidán 20. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 76

  • @WorldHistoryEncyclopedia

    What is your favourite Christmas tradition? Let us know!

  • @happyhedgewytch4573
    @happyhedgewytch4573 Před 2 lety +5

    Such an informative video...love it!

  • @GentleJungle
    @GentleJungle Před 2 lety +2

    Yule Tidings everyone.💖🎄

  • @PresentasiSejarahCandra
    @PresentasiSejarahCandra Před 2 lety +4

    Our day names, Our traditions, and Our festival culture in Holy Day is mostly adopt from Ancient Babylonian, Roman, and Norse culture. Days of the Gods

  • @kimkinsey6042
    @kimkinsey6042 Před 2 lety +2

    Great information

  • @elaineleslie-kf6pq
    @elaineleslie-kf6pq Před 8 měsíci +1

    Wonderful video, as always. I learned a lot. Did not know the Tuesday comes from name of a Norse god!

  • @alejandrosakai1744
    @alejandrosakai1744 Před 2 lety +1

    Saturnalia: Dancing to (G)I-DLE.
    Yule: Dancing to Lisa Manoban

  • @magnusjonsson7714
    @magnusjonsson7714 Před rokem +2

    Santa is Oden (Odinir) who comes to homes.

  • @mohamedmostafa1375
    @mohamedmostafa1375 Před 2 lety +8

    Merry Christmas to all my Christian brothers and sisters all over the world.

    • @natv6558
      @natv6558 Před rokem +2

      😂🤣😅 this video was a little “triggering” was it?

    • @ROMA--AETERNA
      @ROMA--AETERNA Před rokem

      …and European brothers & sisters all over the world.

  • @dorritsmedsgard5900
    @dorritsmedsgard5900 Před 8 měsíci +1

    My favourite tradition is my Julebuk (Yulegoat)

  • @kimkinsey6042
    @kimkinsey6042 Před 2 lety +2

    Great videos

  • @macariomatira3234
    @macariomatira3234 Před 2 lety +2

    We Wish to have a feature video about the Philippines under Ferdinand E. Marcos from 1965 to 1986

  • @magnusjonsson7714
    @magnusjonsson7714 Před rokem +1

    Laundryday= Lögadag= Lördag=Saturday= washing day

  • @davidcraddock8329
    @davidcraddock8329 Před rokem +1

    interesting nice vid

  • @Tekmirion
    @Tekmirion Před 2 lety +2

    Happy holidays and happy new year!

  • @EndlessJoint
    @EndlessJoint Před rokem +1

    God Jul!

  • @stevenbrown9275
    @stevenbrown9275 Před 2 lety +3

    Great video! Merry Christmas to all of you.

  • @brandonolson6299
    @brandonolson6299 Před rokem +1

    There’s a lot of information in this video that isn’t necessarily correct. Pre-Christianity Yule was celebrated on the 3rd equinox after the beginning of winter which was marked by the full moon in October, which would put Yule celebrations taking place on the first full moon of the new year, just as one example.

  • @Davlavi
    @Davlavi Před 2 lety +3

    for the algorithm

  • @magnusjonsson7714
    @magnusjonsson7714 Před rokem +1

    There are some pagan traditions in swe. Like "christmas tree" = Yggdrasil. A goat is formed as Thors goat.

    • @WorldHistoryEncyclopedia
      @WorldHistoryEncyclopedia  Před rokem

      👍🏻🙂

    • @magnusjonsson7714
      @magnusjonsson7714 Před rokem

      + its tradition to eat christmas ham (julskinka in swedish). Its told that the ham (pig) is the same pig as Särimner, the pig that warriors eat in Vallhalla and ressurects the next day.

  • @tadeuszjaworski7170
    @tadeuszjaworski7170 Před 2 lety

    How come the winter solstice fell on 25th December 2000 years ago if there is a precession movement which means it should have fallen on the day in late November or early December?

  • @omarmaxwell2319
    @omarmaxwell2319 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi

  • @daniellmarcussen2599
    @daniellmarcussen2599 Před rokem

    Jul did not start on solstice. Jul started on the first full moon after the first new moon after winter solstice. This means that jul did not start on the same calendar date from year to year.

  • @wodenofnorthumberland9706

    No, actually the English had the same gods that's why we have the days of the week as such. The Ænglisc and norse were essentially cousins. We didnt get the names from the norse otherwise Wednesday would be odnesday. woden was the English name for him.

    • @WorldHistoryEncyclopedia
      @WorldHistoryEncyclopedia  Před rokem

      👍🏻

    • @magnusjonsson7714
      @magnusjonsson7714 Před rokem

      The english language was much inspired by the scandinavians, and Normandie and etc ofc. In swedish week is: Monday =Måndag=Moonsday, Tuesday = Tisdag = Thyrs day Onsdag = Wedneday = Wot/danday= Odins day, Thurday = Torsdag Thors day Friday =Frey/Freya, Lördag Saturday, Söndag = suns day

  • @rhiannonfugatt3269
    @rhiannonfugatt3269 Před rokem +1

    I liked this video til you began talking about the Celtic calendar, as Jul is not Celtic it is Nordic. While there are many similarities between the ancient Celts and the Nords they were not the same and can not be intermixed or they lose their distinction.

  • @demisnii1718
    @demisnii1718 Před 7 měsíci

    Everything you say is quite alright but why you stop to the Celtics as the origin of the Nordic/Hellenic Gods and Religions, as you know the Celts are descendants of Hellenes/ and all their festivities are copied pasted from the Hellenes (of course the same Gods and Goddesses, with the same identities and powers, are named differently from time to time or from space to space, for example, the Hellenic God, Becomes the Celtic God, who is the Nordic God)

  • @technicholls
    @technicholls Před 2 lety +12

    So, since all these traditions are based on pagan gods and false religious beliefs and NOT the birth of the Christ, why would true christians have anything to do with it? Didn't the Ten Comments forbid worshiping other gods?

    • @nathankloske9313
      @nathankloske9313 Před 2 lety +6

      I'm sure you meant commandments not comments. :)
      And what makes a Christian "true" anyway? With 45,000 denominations of Christianity around the world to choose from, are any of them objectively "true"?

    • @jadecanonoel6247
      @jadecanonoel6247 Před 2 lety

      @@nathankloske9313 when Christ puts faith (Ephesians 2:8-10) in your heart , birth you by His will ( Jhon 1:13) accepts you as His son (Hebrews 12:6) agonize over your sin ,deny self, take up your cross daily(Matthew 16:24-26) hunger and thirst after truth(righteousness) Matthew 5:6 , live right ….that’s true Christian faith. May the Lord God grant you eyes to see and ears to hear 🙏Agape and Phileo.

    • @historian252
      @historian252 Před 2 lety

      You bring up the different branches as if that is supposed to say it isn't true. A Christian is a man or woman who believes in God and that his son Jesus, lord and Savior, died for the sins of those who would believe him and in trhough him they can find salvation. Any "denomination" in Christian revolves less around Jesus being the one to bring salvation and more on who he is, the rituals they perform in worship and how the church is operated.

    • @historian252
      @historian252 Před 2 lety

      One they say that Christmas is based off pagan rituals when that simply isn't true. Christmas was celebrated long before they came to Northern Europeans. Two any of the "traditions" that were brought along have nothing to do with celebrating false gods or creatures. They are merely things Christians have used in festivals such ad the tree where people decorate it and bring gifts to each other but Christmas itself revolves around celebrating the birth of Jesus not about celebrating false gods.

    • @cyrille-gauvinfrancoeur6199
      @cyrille-gauvinfrancoeur6199 Před rokem

      ​@@historian252 The only false god is that of Christians, Jews and Muslims.

  • @jacquelinegorospe4334
    @jacquelinegorospe4334 Před 7 měsíci

    That's why traditions are not holy'

  • @valeria5655
    @valeria5655 Před 2 lety +4

    What are the sources for any of this? It's pop history and misleading at best.
    Yule has nothing to do with Christmas other than that the two vaguely coincide in the same months, the rest of the world isn't centered around the Germanic one. This is a Euro-centric, or I should be more specific, Germano-centric myth at best.
    12 days of Christmas isn't exclusive to Germanic regions of the world and has nothing to do with "Odin", in fact, it was at the council of Tours in 537 that they proclaimed the twelve days from Christmas to Epiphany are a sacred and festive season, and established the duty of Advent fasting in preparation for the feast. This was done in part to solve the administrative problem for the Roman Empire in which different calendars were used between the East and the West.
    Christmas trees have their root in Protestant Germany in the 16th Century, that is many centuries after paganism had died out in those regions. It only spread to the rest of the world somewhere after the 19th century. Meanwhile there is 0 evidence whatsoever that ties them to paganism, the best you have is finding them vaguely similar, which goes as far as "they both happen to decorate trees". As is with practically all of these pop history myths.

    • @gunterra1
      @gunterra1 Před 2 lety +2

      Christian Chrismas in December originally had nothing at all to do with the month of December. It was simply put there by the early Christian missionaries to "get a foot in the door" you might say with the local population in Northern Europe, and unless some of the old customs, Christmas tree, giving of gifts, etc. were added to Christian customs, Christianity wouldn't have had much of a chance to be adopted. Politics and public relations we would call that today.

    • @johnrosa4945
      @johnrosa4945 Před 2 lety +2

      Not to be a fire starter, but the bible literally instructs its followers not to worship trees or worship like the "Gentiles" worship. Gentiles being the pagan neighbors.
      This is why celebrating Christmas and caroling was actually outlawed by puritan settlers in America. It was sought out as sinister. Wasn't until later when the Dutch brought over their native Germanic customs you saw trees pop back up.
      There is also no record of the celebration of Christmas for the first three centuries of Christianity. It was created by the church for the population to be incentivized to convert because Romans were still partaking in Saturnalia and celebrating Sol Invictus.
      I know this will probably be ignored because everytime I tell a Christian their holidays are actually based on other cultures beliefs, they shut down and ignore it.
      Christmas is nothing though. Research on why people dye eggs at Easter.
      Skál.

    • @historian252
      @historian252 Před 2 lety

      Stop trying to post lies when Christmas was formed not to make other people avoid pagan celebrations but to actually celebrate the birth and death of Jesus.

    • @historian252
      @historian252 Před 2 lety

      That is not true. Christianity already spread to those regions without much fuss and continued to grow throughout the population. Most of those events had nothing to do with pagans and only involved them when it came to the small remnants still remaining to bring some small semblance of the former rituald but no worshipping false gods or worshipping inanimate objects.

    • @johnrosa4945
      @johnrosa4945 Před 2 lety +4

      @@historian252 with a name like historian, you'd think you'd have a little more grasp on things. I've given up on trying to teach Christians because they'll choose ignorance of history and science so long as they think they're following their faith. The best guess historians have been able to place the birth of Jesus is sometime in September.. thanks for the input though.