la Vie Sirene volume 2 issue 4 - HOLIDAY TRADITIONS

Page 76

Mumming is also an ancient pagan custom that was an excuse for people to have a party at Christmas! It means 'making diversion in disguise'. The tradition was that men and women would swap clothes, put on masks and go visiting their neighbors, singing, dancing or putting on a play with a silly plot. The leader or narrator of the mummers was dressed as Father Christmas. The custom of Mumming might go back to Roman times, when people used to dress up for parties at New Year. It is thought that, in the UK, it was first done on St. Thomas's day or the shortest day of the year. Different types of entertainments were done in different parts of the UK In parts of Durham, Yorkshire and Devon a special sword dance was performed. There were also different names for mumming around the UK too. In Scotland it was known as 'Gusards' in Somerset, 'Mumping', in Warwickshire or 'Thomasing' and 'Corning' in Kent. In Medieval times, it had turned into an excuse for people to go begging round the houses and committing crimes. It became so bad that Henry VIII, made a law saying that anyone that caught mumming wearing a mask would be put in prison for three months! One poem that people said when mumming was:

Christmas is coming, the beef is getting fat,
 Please drop a penny in the old man’s hat.

Over the years, this was changed into a very similar poem that is said by some carol singers today: Christmas is coming, the goose is getting fat,
 Please put a penny in the old man’s hat. The early settlers from the UK took the custom of Mumming to Canada. It is known as Murmuring in Canada, but is banned in most places because people used it as an excuse for begging. Mumming is still done in parts of the UK, USA and Canada. -76-


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Additional Traditions

18min
pages 101-104

Epiphany

3min
pages 99-100

Twelfth Night

2min
page 98

The 12 Days of Christmas

5min
pages 96-97

Hannukah - the Feast of Lights

5min
pages 90-91

Kwanzaa

3min
pages 92-93

Boxing Day

3min
pages 94-95

The Christmas Pickle

1min
pages 87-88

Baking up memories with Kimberley Thomson Morris

0
page 89

Hang with Care - Stockings

2min
pages 84-86

Pinata Cake

1min
page 81

Christmas Pudding

2min
pages 79-80

Murmerring

1min
page 76

Pudding

5min
pages 77-78

Yule Log

3min
page 74

Holly, Ivy & Poinsettias

6min
pages 72-73

Snow & Ice

6min
pages 68-70

A Kiwi Christmas with Victoria Blake

1min
page 71

Presents

3min
pages 58-59

The Nutcracker

5min
pages 60-67

Handbells

1min
page 57

Christmas Crackers

2min
page 55

From around the world

2min
page 54

The Goff Family’s Traditions

2min
page 53

Worldwide traditions

0
page 52

International Giftbringers

3min
page 51

Christmas comestibles

6min
pages 48-50

Christmas Comestibles

2min
page 47

The Gingerbread Man

3min
page 43

Fruitcake

2min
page 46

Fruitcake 101

3min
pages 44-45

Gingerbread

1min
page 42

Christmas Cards

3min
pages 36-37

A Windsor Castle Christmas

5min
pages 28-33

Wreathed in History

3min
page 34

Empty Nest Christmas by Corinne Royer

1min
page 35

Baking Gingerly

4min
pages 39-41

Oh Tannenbaum

1min
page 27

Candy Canes

1min
page 38

Christmas Trees

8min
pages 22-26

Charles Dickens - the modern Father Christmas

9min
pages 6-11

The Colors of Christmas

2min
page 21

Christmas or Xmas?

3min
page 20

Why the 25th of December?

6min
pages 16-17

A Christmas Message from Patricia Semack- Ritter

2min
page 5

Christmas Memories from Bonnie Ramsburg

4min
pages 18-19

When Christmas is Celebrated

3min
pages 14-15

Advent

4min
pages 12-13
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.