Fan The Flames This Halloween
The origins of Halloween can be traced back nearly 2000 years to Celtic Ireland. It began life as a festival known as Samhain – the halfway point between summer and the darker winter months that lay ahead and was one of four Celtic fire festivals held throughout the year.
Costumes
October 31st was also seen as the time when the divide between this world and the next was at its thinnest, which meant that spirits were able to pop across for the night. People would dress up as ghouls and ghosts on Halloween to fool spirits who had come for a visit into thinking they were one of them. That’s where the tradition for dressing up on Halloween originated.
Whilst dressed in costumes, the poor would often go door-to-door begging for food in exchange for a song or a witty verse and so trick-or-treating was born.
Pumpkins
The tradition of placing a candle in a pumpkin seems to have several origins. Believe it or not, in Mediaeval times people used the skull of a dead family member as a candle-holder which was placed outside the front door as a means of keeping spirits at bay.
In the United States, carved pumpkins are known as Jack O 'Lanterns due to an old Irish folk tale. There once lived a villain called Jack who, having struck a deal with the Devil to never take his soul, was condemned to wander aimlessly after he died, as he was not fit to enter heaven either. With only a hot ember to light his way, Jack placed it inside a gouged out vegetable to act as a lantern.
Jack O' Lanterns were originally carved out of turnips, but Irish emigrants to America adopted the plentiful pumpkin because it’s much easier to carve.
Bonfires
Nowadays, bonfires are more closely associated with Guy Fawkes night, but originally they were very much part of the Halloween celebrations. The fires were usually built on the top of a hill and surrounded by a circular trench to represent the sun. It was believed the fires kept evil spirits away and would also encourage the sun to return at the end of winter.
A flaming brand was then taken from the fire and used to light fires in the homes of all the villagers to protect them through the coming months. There are different rituals throughout most Celtic countries that relate to the fire: in Scotland, newly-engaged couples threw nuts into the flames. If the nuts burnt silently, the marriage would be happy, but if they spat or hissed, it suggested trouble ahead.
The bottom line is that there’s nothing better than gathering around a fire – either inside or outdoors – on All Hallows Eve to tell a few ghostly tales, toast some marshmallows and scare the living daylights out of each other.
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