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Festive Flora
Why holly and not hyacinth, poinsettias and not peonies? Learn the legends behind your favorite holiday plants.
Elesha Coffman
A few weeks ago, a reader asked about the origin of the wreath. She had heard that it was meant to be a symbol of Christ's crown of thorns. That connection is a stretch, but the wreath and other Christmastime foliage have symbolized many things over the centuries, some of them Christian.
The wreath seems to represent a convergence of two lines of
tradition. One one side, it's probably related to circlets worn on the head. In
cultures of the ancient Persian Empire, nobles wore diadems of fabric and
sometimes jewels, and Greeks rewarded Olympic victors and other high achievers
with laurel crowns. It's unclear how such headgear was transformed into wall
decor, but perhaps people just hung their crowns up as souvenirs. Neither
Christmas nor Advent wreaths are worn as headbands, though for the Swedish
festival of St. Lucia, on December 13, the family's eldest daughter wears a
headpiece decorated with greenery and nine lighted candles.
Though early Roman Christians used laurel in their Christmas
decorations because it symbolized victory, glory, and cleansing from guilt,
Europeans largely favored evergreens. This shows the modern wreath's other
heritage: German and Celtic solstice festivities. In cold, northern climates,
people latched onto anything that represented light and life against darkness
and despair. As a result, their favorite winter symbols included torches
(analagous to Advent candles) and plants that stayed green all year. A wreath
with burning candles, then, is related to the Yule loga good-luck charm held over from the 12-day Norse winter festival of Jol. Christmas candles may also be related to Hanukkah candles, as both of the nearly concurrent
observances celebrate holy light.
Though wreaths have no direct connection to Christ's crown,
holly does. European Christians in the Middle Ages said that its prickly leaves
and red berries represented thorns and drops of blood. Some also believed that
the cross was made of holly, though others believed it was made of oak. Holly
used in Christmas decorations was often kept after the holiday for
protectionagainst witchcraft in England and against lightning in Germany.
Decorative mistletoe, too, usually lasted beyond the
Christmas season, until Candlemas (February 2) or even until the next year, when
a new sprig took its place. The kissing tradition stems from an old Scandanavian
custom whereby enemies who met under mistletoe in the forest would lay down
their weapons and maintain a truce until the next day. Mistletoe is usually
excluded from church decorations, for the obvious reason, but also because the
plant was worshiped by Druids, who believed it could cure all diseases.
Perhaps the only Christmas plant without pagan superstitions
attached to is the poinsettia. Dr. Joel Roberts Poinsett, the American
ambassador to Mexico, brought the flower to this country in 1829. Mexicans call
it the "flower of Holy Night" because its red bracts (they're not petals) make a
shape like the Star of Bethlehem. According to a Mexican legend, long ago a poor
boy was afraid to enter the church on Christmas Eve because he had no gift to
bring the baby Jesus. In prayer, the boy told God that he really wanted to bring
a gift but could not afford one. When the boy opened his eyes, a poinsettia
bloomed at his feet. He joyfully brought the plant inside, an act that might
relate to the practice in many churches of decking the altar with poinsettias.
Copyright © 2000 by the author or Christianity Today International/Christian History magazine.
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