The Royal Representative

News and views from an American monarchist

Archive for the ‘Christmas’ Category

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

I wish you all health and happiness in 2008. Thanks for being a part of Mandy’s British Royalty.

The Queen’s Christmas Message 2007

Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!

Wednesday, December 6th, 2006

I can’t believe it’s December already. This year has flown by so quickly! I hope it has been a good year for you all, and I sincerely wish you the best in 2007.

Have a Merry Christmas and a fantastic New Years!

Frohe Weihnachten!
Joyeux Noel!
Buon Natale!
Feliz Navidad!
Hauskaa Joulua!
Vrolijk Kerstfeest!

To All The Soldiers

Wednesday, December 6th, 2006

It has been difficult. Nothing would be adequate enough to thank our soldiers for what they have had to endure. I truly appreciate you, American and British soldiers especially, having to fight such a tricky and heated war.

Please know that, for those of you not home this Christmas, we are thinking of you always. We sincerely hope you return soon and safely. Many blessings.

Mandy

Happy Christmas!

Tuesday, December 20th, 2005

A very happy Christmas to one and all. Have a great time celebrating the remaining weeks of 2005, and enjoy your fresh new start in 2006!

God Save The Queen!

+ Mandy +

The Origins of Hogmanay

Tuesday, December 21st, 2004

A guid New Year to ane an` a` and mony may ye see!



While New Year’s Eve is celebrated around the world, the Scots have a long rich heritage associated with this event - and have their own name for it, Hogmanay.

There are many theories about the derivation of the word “Hogmanay”. The Scandinavian word for the feast preceding Yule was “Hoggo-nott” while the Flemish words (many have come into Scots) “hoog min dag” means “great love day”. Hogmanay could also be traced back to the Anglo-Saxon, Haleg monath, Holy Month, or the Gaelic, oge maidne, new morning. But the most likely source seems to be the French. “Homme est né” or “Man is born” while in France the last day of the year when gifts were exchanged was “aguillaneuf” while in Normandy presents given at that time were “hoguignetes”. Take your pick!

In Scotland a similar practice to that in Normandy was recorded, rather disapprovingly, by the Church.

“It is ordinary among some Plebians in the South of Scotland, to go about from door to door upon New Year`s Eve, crying Hagmane.” Scotch Presbyterian Eloquence, 1693.

Hogmanay Traditional Celebrations Historians believe that we inherited the celebration from the Vikings who, coming from even further north than ourselves, paid even more attention to the passing of the shortest day. In Shetland, where the Viking influence was strongest, New Year is called Yules, from the Scandinavian word.

It may not be widely known but Christmas was not celebrated as a festival and virtually banned in Scotland for around 400 years, from the end of the 17th century to the 1950s. The reason for this has its roots in the Protestant Reformation when the Kirk portrayed Christmas as a Popish or Catholic feast and therefore had to be banned. Many Scots had to work over Christmas and their winter solstice holiday was therefore at New Year when family and friends gathered for a party and exchange presents, especially for the children, which came to be called hogmanays.

Merry Christmas!

Monday, December 20th, 2004

The modern Santa Claus is a composite character made up from the merging of two quite separate figures. The first of these is Saint Nicholas of Myra, a bishop of Byzantine Anatolia (now in modern-day Turkey) famous for his generous gifts to the poor. In Europe he is still portrayed as a bearded bishop in canonical robes. The second character is Father Christmas, which remains the British name for Santa Claus. Father Christmas dates back at least as far as the 17th century in Britain, and pictures of him survive from that era, portraying him as a well-nourished bearded man dressed in a long, green, fur-lined robe. He typified the spirit of good cheer at Christmas, and was reflected in the ‘Spirit of Christmas Present’ in Charles Dickens’ famous story, A Christmas Carol.

Some elements of this part of the tradition of Father Christmas could be traced back to the Germanic god Wodan (Odin). The appearance is similar to some portrayals of this god, who brought gifts in the winter season of Yule, and rides a flying horse through the sky.

When the Dutch still owned the land that later became New York, they brought the Saint Nicholas’ eve legend with them to the Americas, but without the red mantle and other symbols. The name Santa Claus is derived from the character’s Dutch name, Sinterklaas.

In the United States, the tradition is to leave Santa a glass of milk and cookies; in Britain, he is given sherry and mince pies instead. British children also leave out a carrot for Santa’s reindeer, and were traditionally told that if they are not good all year round, that they will receive coal in their stockings.

From Wikipedia.org

Have a Blessed Christmas

Monday, December 22nd, 2003

Have a Happy Christmas and fabulous New Year! See you in ‘04….

Mandy

Christmas Tree’s Origins

Saturday, December 6th, 2003

The earliest story relates how British monk and missionary St. Boniface (born Winfrid in A.D. 680) was preaching a sermon on the Nativity to a tribe of Germanic Druids outside the town of Geismar. To convince the idolaters that the oak tree was not sacred and inviolable, the “Apostle of Germany” felled one on the spot. Toppling, it crushed every shrub in its path except for a small fir sapling. A chance event can lend itself to numerous interpretations, and legend has it that Boniface, attempting to win converts, interpreted the firís survival as a miracle, concluding, “Let this be called the tree of the Christ Child.” Subsequent Christmases in Germany were celebrated by planting fir saplings.

We do know with greater authority that by the sixteenth century, fir trees, indoors and out, were decorated to commemorate Christmas in Germany. A forest ordinance from Ammerschweier, Alsace, dated 1561, states that “no burgher shall have for Christmas more than one bush of more than eight shoesí length.” The decorations hung on a tree in that time, the earliest we have evidence of, were “roses cut of many-colored paper, apples, wafers, gilt, sugar.”

It is a widely held belief that Martin Luther, the sixteenth-century Protestant reformer, first added lighted candles to a tree. Walking toward his home one winter evening, composing a sermon, he was awed by the brilliance of stars twinkling amidst evergreens. To recapture the scene for his family, he erected a tree in the main room and wired its branches with lighted candles.

By the 1700s, the Christbaum, or “Christ tree,” was a firmly established tradition. From Germany the custom spread to other parts of Western Europe. It was popularized in England only in the nineteenth century, by Prince Albert, Queen Victoriaís German consort. Son of the duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (a duchy in central Germany), Albert had grown up decorating Christmas trees, and when he married Victoria, in 1840, he requested that she adopt the German tradition.

From http://www.serve.com/shea/germusa/tree.htm