A tree older than Christmas

Engraving of adults and children gathered around a desk with a small Christmas tree adorned with candles. German Protestants sought to replace ornate Nativity scenes with the simpler tree. Picture: Wikimedia Commons

Engraving of adults and children gathered around a desk with a small Christmas tree adorned with candles. German Protestants sought to replace ornate Nativity scenes with the simpler tree. Picture: Wikimedia Commons

Published Dec 23, 2022

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Troy Bickham

Why, every Christmas, do so many people endure the mess of dried pine needles, the risk of a fire hazard and impossibly tangled strings of lights?

I sometimes wonder if I should just buy an artificial tree. Then my inner historian scolds me – I have to remind myself that I’m taking part in one of the world’s oldest religious traditions. To give up the tree would be to give up a ritual that predates Christmas itself.

Almost all agrarian societies independently venerated the sun in their pantheon of gods at one time or another – there was the Sol of the Norse, the Aztec Huitzilopochtli, the Greek Helios.

The solstices, when the sun is at its highest and lowest points in the sky, were major events. The winter solstice, when the sky is its darkest, has been a notable day of celebration in agrarian societies throughout human history. The Persian Shab-e Yalda, Dongzhi in China and the North American Hopi Soyal all independently mark the occasion.

The favoured decor for ancient winter solstices? Evergreen plants.

Whether as palm branches gathered in Egypt in the celebration of Ra or wreaths for the Roman feast of Saturnalia, evergreens have long served as symbols of the perseverance of life in bleak winters and the promise of the sun’s return.

Christmas came much later. The date was not fixed on liturgical calendars until centuries after Jesus’ birth, and the English word “Christmas” – an abbreviation of “Christ’s Mass” – would not appear until more than 1 000 years after the original event.

While December 25 was ostensibly a Christian holiday, many Europeans simply carried over traditions from winter solstice celebrations, which were notoriously raucous affairs. For example, the 12 days of Christmas commemorated in the popular carol actually originated in ancient Germanic Yule celebrations.

The continued use of evergreens, most notably the Christmas tree, is the most visible remnant of those ancient solstice celebrations. Although Ernst Anschütz’s well-known 1824 carol dedicated to the tree is translated into English as “O Christmas Tree”, the title of the original German tune is simply “Tannenbaum,” meaning fir tree. There is no reference to Christmas in the carol, which Anschütz based on a much older Silesian folk love song. In keeping with old solstice celebrations, the song praises the tree’s faithful hardiness during the dark and cold winter.

Sixteenth-century German Protestants, eager to remove the iconography and relics of the Roman Catholic Church, gave the Christmas tree a huge boost when they used it to replace Nativity scenes. The religious reformer Martin Luther supposedly adopted the practice and added candles.

But a century later, the English Puritans frowned upon the disorderly holiday for lacking biblical legitimacy. They banned it in the 1650s, with soldiers patrolling London’s streets looking for anyone daring to celebrate the day. Puritan colonists in Massachusetts did the same, fining “whosoever shall be found observing Christmas or the like, either by forbearing of labour, feasting, or any other way”.

German immigration to the American colonies ensured that the practice of trees would take root in the New World.

Yet, the German tradition of the Christmas tree blossomed in the US largely because of Britain’s German royal lineage.

Since 1701, English kings had been forbidden from becoming or marrying Catholics. Germany, which was made up of a patchwork of kingdoms, had eligible Protestant princes and princesses to spare. Many British royals privately maintained the familiar custom of a Christmas tree, but Queen Victoria – who had a German mother as well as a German grandmother on her father’s side – made the practice public and fashionable.

In the 1840s, Christmas became the target of reformers like novelist Charles Dickens, who sought to transform the raucous celebrations of the largely sidelined holiday into a family day in which the people of the rapidly industrialised nation could relax, rejoice and give thanks.

His 1843 novella, “A Christmas Carol”, in which the miserly Ebenezer Scrooge found redemption by embracing Dickens’s prescriptions for the holiday, was a hit with the public. While the evergreen decor is evident in the hand-coloured illustrations Dickens specially commissioned for the book, there are no Christmas trees in those pictures.

Victoria added the fir tree to family celebrations five years later. Although Christmas trees had been part of private royal celebrations for decades, an 1848 issue of the “Illustrated London News” depicted Victoria with her German husband and children decorating one as a family at Windsor Castle.

The cultural impact was almost instantaneous. Christmas trees started appearing in homes throughout England, its colonies and the rest of the English-speaking world. Dickens followed with his short story “A Christmas Tree” two years later.

During this period, America’s middle classes generally embraced all things Victorian, from architecture to moral reform societies.

Sarah Hale, the author most famous for her children’s poem “Mary had a Little Lamb,” used her position as editor of the best-selling magazine “Godey’s Lady’s Book” to advance a reformist agenda that included the abolition of slavery and the creation of holidays that promoted pious family values.

An engraving of Queen Victoria’s tree in “Godey’s Lady’s Book” popularised Christmas trees in the US.

While trees sporadically adorned the homes of German immigrants in the US, it became a mainstream middle-class practice when, in 1850, Godey’s published an engraving of Victoria and her Christmas tree. A supporter of Dickens and the movement to reinvent Christmas, Hale helped to popularise the family Christmas tree across the pond.

Only in 1870 did the US recognise Christmas as a federal holiday.

As American and British cultures extended their influence around the world, Christmas trees started to appear in communal spaces even in countries not predominately Christian. Shopping districts in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Hong Kong and Tokyo now regularly erect trees.

The modern Christmas tree is a universal symbol that carries meanings both religious and secular. Adorned with lights, they promote hope and offer brightness in literally the darkest time of year for half of the world.

In that sense, the modern Christmas tree has come full circle. - The Conversation

  • Bickham is a professor of history at the Texas A&M University

The Independent on Saturday

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