13 facts about Halloween that You Didn't Know

13 facts about Halloween that You Didn't Know

Categories: Holidays and Festivals

Halloween is one of the most interesting holidays. This small celebration of immigrant origin is a popular holiday in the United States today, but where did it come from? You'll find out now!

13 facts about Halloween that You Didn't KnowSource: Patheos.com

13 facts about Halloween that You Didn't Know

1. Every year Americans spend about $7 billion on Halloween.

13 facts about Halloween that You Didn't Know

2. Halloween is both an ancient and a modern holiday. Its roots can be traced back to the Celtic-Irish holiday of Samhain.

13 facts about Halloween that You Didn't Know

3. "Samhain" means "the end of summer", it was celebrated from the evening of October 31.

13 facts about Halloween that You Didn't Know

4. It was believed that evil spirits and fairies arrived that night, and to drive them away, people built giant bonfires.

13 facts about Halloween that You Didn't Know

5. Halloween is an abbreviation of "All Saints' Eve", it is a Catholic holiday dedicated to the memory of saints. In the photo: lighting candles in honor of all saints in Stockholm.

13 facts about Halloween that You Didn't Know

6. Many Halloween traditions are actually Catholic in origin. For example, a pumpkin with slits symbolizes the soul in purgatory.

13 facts about Halloween that You Didn't Know

7. Going to the neighbors for sweets and gifts has its roots in the Middle Ages and was performed during most Christian holidays.

13 facts about Halloween that You Didn't Know

8. In Scotland, mummers went to Christmas, sang and asked for gifts. In New York, children dressed up in Thanksgiving costumes and gypsied gifts from merchants until the 30s.

13 facts about Halloween that You Didn't Know

9. The first printed mention of "trick-o-treat" dates back only to 1939 — in American Home Magazine.

13 facts about Halloween that You Didn't Know

10. The tradition of dressing in costumes originates from medieval masquerades and Guy Fawkes masks (on November 5).

13 facts about Halloween that You Didn't Know

11. The poem Halloween (1785) by the Scottish poet Robert Burns does not mention costumes, but it popularized the holiday outside of Scotland.

13 facts about Halloween that You Didn't Know

12. Halloween was once celebrated in the USA as a day of Scottish pride — similar to how the Irish celebrate St. Patrick's Day.

13 facts about Halloween that You Didn't Know

13. Halloween witches used to be depicted in different colors. Black became the most popular after the success of The Wizard of Oz.

Keywords: Origin | Usa | Pumpkin | Facts | Halloween

Post News Article

Recent articles

How is your cat trying to talk to you
How is your cat trying to talk to you

Cat owners know that their pets have a very wayward character. This feature is clearly manifested when the owner makes the wrong ...

The world through the eyes of short-sighted people
The world through the eyes of short-sighted people

In the modern era of high-resolution images and the heyday of hyperrealism, the work of Philip Barlow immediately attracts ...

Repin's painting " Sailed»: what does this phrase mean and why would it surprise an artist
Repin's painting " Sailed»: what does this phrase mean and ...

The catch phrase "Repin's painting & #171;Sailed & #187;" means a hopeless, but not critical situation. We have been sure since ...

Related articles

Funny fool Schlitz Sertis: how the fate of the most famous freak of the XX century turned out
Funny fool Schlitz Sertis: how the fate of the most famous ...

The sight of this ugly, but at the same time sweet, kind, lively and friendly person causes not so much horror as sympathy and ...

10 false ideas about slavery in the United States
10 false ideas about slavery in the United States

Slavery existed in the British American colonies and the United States from 1619 to 1865. Today, this is a difficult topic for ...

Wild West in pictures by John Grabil
Wild West in pictures by John Grabil

Between 1887 and 1892, the famous photographer John Grabeel sent 188 photographs to the Library of Congress in Washington. Today, ...