1. Most of Santa’s reindeer have male-sounding names,
such as Blitzer, Comet, and Cupid. However, male reindeers shed their antlers
around Christmas, so the reindeer pulling Santa’s sleigh are likely not male,
but female or castrati.
2. Norwegian scientists have hypothesized that
Rudolph’s red nose is probably the result of a parasitic infection of his
respiratory system.
3. The “true love” mentioned in the song “Twelve Days
of Christmas” does not refer to a romantic couple, but the Catholic Church’s
code for God. The person who receives the gifts represents someone who has
accepted that code. For example, the “partridge in a pear tree” represents
Christ. The “two turtledoves” represent the Old and New Testaments.
4. In A.D. 350, Pope Julius I, bishop of Rome,
proclaimed December 25 the official celebration date for the birthday of
Christ.
5. According to the Guinness world records, the tallest
Christmas tree ever cut was a 221-foot Douglas fir that was displayed in 1950
at the Northgate Shopping Center in Seattle, Washington.
6. The world’s largest Christmas stocking measured 106
feet and 9 inches (32.56 m) long and 49 feet and 1 inch (14.97 m) wide. It
weighed as much as five reindeer and held almost 1,000 presents. It was made by
the Children’s Society in London on December 14, 2007.
7. Many European countries believed that spirits, both
good and evil, were active during the Twelve Days of Christmas. These spirits
eventually evolved into Santa’s elves, especially under the influence of
Clement C. Moore’s The Night Before Christmas(1779-1863) illustrated by
Thomas Nast (1840-1902).
8. Christmas wasn’t declared an official holiday in the
United States until June 26, 1870.
9. Ancient peoples, such as the Druids, considered
mistletoe sacred because it remains green and bears fruit during the winter
when all other plants appear to die. Druids would cut the plant with golden
sickles and never let it touch the ground. They thought it had the power to
cure infertility and nervous diseases and to ward off evil.
10. Christmas stockings allegedly evolved from three
sisters who were too poor to afford a marriage dowry and were, therefore, doomed
to a life of prostitution. They were saved, however, when the wealthy Bishop
Saint Nicholas of Smyrna (the precursor to Santa Claus) crept down their
chimney and generously filled their stockings with gold coins.
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