Showing posts with label Celebrations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Celebrations. Show all posts

Easter Time

Christians celebrate Easter to commemorate the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Some aspects of modern celebrations, however, pre-date Christianity.
According to the Venerable Bede, Easter derives its name from Eostre, an Anglo-Saxon goddess of spring. A month corresponding to April had been named "Eostremonat", or Eostre's month, leading to "Easter" becoming applied to the Christian holiday that usually took place within it. Prior to that, the holiday had been called Pasch (Passover), which remains its name in most non-English languages.
It seems probable that around the second century A.D., Christian missionaries seeking to convert the tribes of northern Europe noticed that the Christian holiday commemorating the resurrection of Jesus roughly coincided with the Teutonic springtime celebrations, which emphasized the triumph of life over death. Christian Easter gradually absorbed the traditional symbols.
For more about Easter's history and origins, visit Holidays on the Net
If you like cooking traditional Easter food, go to Fabulous Foods. com

The History of Father's Day

Happy Father's Day to those who celebrate this day on the third Sunday of June. In Spain, Father's Day coincides with Saint José's Day and it is obviously celebrated on another day. Surfing on the net, I've found this article on the history of Father's Day by Cheri Sicard.
Hope you all like it.

While many people believe that Father's Day is a holiday invented by the fine folks at Hallmark, it's not so. The celebration of Dad's special day can most likely be credited to Mrs. John B. Dodd, of Washington State, who first suggested the idea of the holiday in 1909.

Mrs. Dodd's father, civil war veteran William Smart, was widowed when his wife died in childbirth with their sixth child. Despite the obvious hardships, Mr. Smart proceeded to raise the newborn along with his five other children, by himself.

It wasn't until Sonora Dodd became an adult that she realized the strength and selflessness her father had shown in raising his children as a single parent. The original date chosen for the holiday was June 5, Mr. Smart's birthday, however the celebration was postponed until June 19, the third Sunday in June, because there was not enough time to prepare.

At about the same time in various towns and cities across America other people were beginning to celebrate a Father's Day. Some accounts credit Mrs. Charles Clayton of West Virginia, as the founder of Father's Day, although most histories give credit to Mrs. Dodd.

In early times, wearing flowers was a traditional way of celebrating Father's Day. Mrs. Dodd favored the red rose to honor a father still living, while a white flower honored a deceased dad. J.H. Berringer, who also held Father's Day celebrations in Washington State as early as 1912, chose a white lilac as the Father's Day Flower.

In 1924 President Calvin Coolidge supported the idea of a national Father's Day, but it never became official until 1966 when President Lyndon Johnson signed the presidential proclamation that set aside the 3rd Sunday of June as Father's Day.

Christmas means "Mass of Christ"

If you are a curious person, I’m sure you’ll like this site. Did you know? answers all the questions related to Xmas.

More about Christmas

Enjoy this site full of Christmas printables for either your students or kids.
You'll have great fun!

Christmas is coming

It’s time to start writing letters to Santa Claus. It’s a funny activity for your students at school. Go to Write to Santa Claus and find out more about it.

Remember, remember, the 5th of November

By the way, remember this? It’s the first line of a popular nursery rhyme written in memory of Guy Fawkes and the Gunpowder Plot:
"Remember, remember, the 5th of November
The Gunpowder Treason and plot;
I know of no reason why Gunpowder Treason
Should ever be forgot"
And today November 5th is still celebrated in England with bonfires and fireworks, on which effigies of Guy Fawkes are burned.If you want to know more about it, visit Guy Fawkes and the Bonfire Night.

Halloween is coming!

Being a traditional holiday in America, Britain and Canada, it is now celebrated in several other countries around the world. Did you know that Halloween is the holiday when the most candy is sold?
Now that Halloween is approaching why not visit some of these webpages full of wonderful material for you to use in your English lessons?
For games, crafts, cards, colouring pages and some other fun stuff, go to.
Ben & Jerry’s and BlackDog’s Halloween Party.
Interested in H’s origin, don’t miss this page:
The History of Halloween
Trick or Treat?