How old is the term trick or treat




















Go there if you want, but this article here is where the sweet stuff is. Candy now, floss later. The true origins of the whole "dressing up in a costume and going around to various houses to greet anyone who answers your knock with a friendly threat" thing is unknown. But according to Encyclopedia Britannica hi, mom the traditions of Halloween have their origins in Samhain , a festival celebrated by the Celts of ancient Britain and Ireland.

Samhain marked the end of summer and the onset of winter, and occurred on a date that corresponds to our November 1st. It was believed that during the Samhain festival, the world of the gods was visible to humans, and the gods took advantage of this fact by playing tricks on their mortal worshippers. Those worshippers in turn responded with bonfires on hilltops and sometimes masks and other varied disguises to keep ghosts from being able to recognize them.

Things tended to get spooky and dangerous around Samhain, with bloody sacrifices and supernatural phenomena abounding. Not quite the neighborhood haunted house, but maybe there's the faintest of echoes there.

Samhain chugged along for centuries, until Christianity poked its nose in: in the 8th century CE, All Saints' Day, a somewhat new Christian holiday, got moved from May 13th to November 1st. And the evening before All Saints' Day became a holy—that is, a hallowed—eve. Why it's so hard to treat pain in infants. This wild African cat has adapted to life in a big city. Animals Wild Cities This wild African cat has adapted to life in a big city Caracals have learned to hunt around the urban edges of Cape Town, though the predator faces many threats, such as getting hit by cars.

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Environment As the EU targets emissions cuts, this country has a coal problem. Celebrations in England resembled Celtic commemorations of Samhain, complete with bonfires and masquerades.

Known as "souling," the practice was later taken up by children, who would go from door to door asking for gifts such as food, money and ale. In Scotland and Ireland, young people took part in a tradition called guising, dressing up in costume and accepting offerings from various households. An effigy of Guy Fawkes is burnt on Bonfire Night, Modern-day trick-or-treating also has elements akin to annual celebrations of Guy Fawkes Night also known as Bonfire Night.

On this night, which commemorates the foiling of the Gunpowder Plot in , British children wore masks and carry effigies while begging for pennies. Some American colonists celebrated Guy Fawkes Day, and in the midth century, large numbers of new immigrants, especially those fleeing the Irish Potato Famine in the s, helped popularize Halloween.

In the early 20th century, Irish and Scottish communities revived the Old World traditions of souling and guising in the United States. By the s, however, pranks had become the Halloween activity of choice for rowdy young people. On the holiday, it is not uncommon for children to go trick or treating throughout their neighborhood. Trick or treating may seem like a modern event, but it can actually be traced back to Celtic Britain and Ireland in the 9th century.

The night of October 31 was known as Samhain, a Pagan festival which was later combined with Christian celebrations and renamed All Saints' Day by the Catholic church.

At Samhain, our Pagan ancestors believed the souls of our dead came into our world - and were appeased by offerings of food and drink. It's believed that trick or treating evolved from a ritual where people dressed as ghosts and demons, performed dances around a bonfire and received treats to appease the evil spirits. Poor people would visit the houses of the rich and receive pastries called soul cakes, in exchange for promises to pray for the homeowners' dead relatives.

In Scotland and Ireland, meanwhile, young people would visit their neighbors' houses and sing a song, recite a poem or perform another sort of 'trick' before receiving a treat of nuts, fruit or coins.



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