Home Xml Feed Submit Articles Editor Login Contact us
Haabaa Articles
RSS Feeds Add us to favorites
Make us your home page
Free Newsletter
Subscribe to newsletter
Sponsors
  • Add Your Site
  • sponsor Haabaa.com
    Categories
    Arts
    Books
    Music
    Photography
    Painting
    Auto
    Repair
    Cars
    Business
    Management
    Affiliate programs
    Customer Service
    Opportunities
    Communication
    GPS
    VoIP
    GSM
    Computer
    Hardware
    Development
    Geek
    Operating Systems
    Games
    Software
    Finance
    Saving
    Banks
    Stock
    Health & Fitness
    Nutrition
    Excercise
    Beauty
    Disability
    Internet
    Domain names
    Web hosting
    Providers
    Online Business
    Online shopping
    Online gaming
    Security
    Web development
    Law
    News
    World
    Europe
    Asia
    Africa
    America
    Products & Services
    Self Improvement
    Advice
    Anger management
    Society
    Culture
    Religion
    Politics
    Trends
    Sport & Recreation
    Martial arts
    Jogging
    Outdoor games
    Gym
    Travel & Leisure
    Destinations
    Adventures
    Family holiday
    Tutorials
    Programming
    Operating systems
    FLASH
    HTML
    Writing & Speaking


    A few Christmas facts just for fun
    Author: Admin
    Website:
    Added: Tue, 12 Dec 2006 05:10:55 -0600
    Category: Society
    Printable version | Email | Bookmark

    White Christmas
    England has only known seven white Christmases in the entire twentieth century. According to the records of the Meteorological Office in London, snow fell on Christmas Day only in 1938 and 1976. (The definition of a white Christmas in England is when one snowflake falls on the roof of the London Weather Centre.)



    Real Christmas trees are an all-American product, grown in all 50 states, including Alaska and Hawaii.

    Most artificial trees are manufactured in
    Korea, Taiwan, or Hong Kong.


    Christmas Food
    An old wives' tale says that bread baked on Christmas Eve will never go mouldy.



    For every real Christmas tree harvested, 2 to 3 seedlings are planted in its place.

    In 1836,
    Alabama is the first state in the USA to declare Christmas a legal holiday.

    The biggest selling Christmas single of all time is Bing Crosby's White Christmas.

    Due to the time zones, Santa has 31 hours to deliver gifts? This means that he would have to visit 832 homes each second!


    Christmas Day

    December 25th was not celebrated as the birthday of Christ until the year AD 440.



    In 1937, the first postage stamp to commemorate Christmas was issued in Austria.

    For every real Christmas tree harvested, 2 to 3 seedlings are planted in its place. Each hectare provides the daily oxygen requirements of 45 people.

    Twelfth Night
    It is not until Twelfth Night that the figures of the Three Kings are supposed to be added to the Christmas crib.



    In Germany, Twelfth Night is known as 'Three Kings Day'.



    The "Twelve Days of Christmas " gifts: A partridge in a pear tree, two turtledoves, three French hens, four calling birds, five gold rings, six geese laying, seven swans swimming, eight maids milking, nine ladies dancing, ten lords leaping, eleven pipers piping, and twelve drummers drumming. There are 364 gifts altogether, one for everyday of the year.




    The poem commonly referred to as "The Night Before Christmas" was originally titled "A Visit From Saint Nicholas." This poem was written by Clement Moore for his children and some guests, one of whom anonymously sent the poem to a New York newspaper for publication.



    Epiphany, 6th January, is the traditional end of the Christmas holiday and is the date on which we take down the tree and decorations. To do so earlier is thought to bring bad luck for the rest of the year. From the middle ages until the mid-nineteenth century, Twelfth Night was more popular than Christmas day, and even today some countries celebrate Epiphany as the most important day of the Christmas season.

    Three years after Thomas Edison invented the electric light bulb in 1879, Edward H. Johnson, who worked for
    Edison's company, had Christmas tree bulbs especially made for him. He proudly displayed his electric tree lights at his home on Fifth Avenue, New York City. They caused a sensation although some years were to pass before mass-manufactured Christmas tree lights were widely available.

    In
    America in 1822, the postmaster of Washington, DC, complained that he had to add 16 mailmen at Christmas to deal with cards alone. He wanted the number of cards a person could send limited by law. "I don't know what we'll do if this keeps
    on," he wrote.



    Father Christmas
    Father Christmas has two addresses, Edinburgh and the North Pole. Letters addressed to 'TOYLAND' or 'SNOWLAND' go to
    Edinburgh, but letters addressed to 'THE NORTH POLE' have to be sent there because there really is such a place!



    Father Christmas' reindeers are called Rudolph - the leader who lights the way with his bright red nose - Dasher, Dancer, Prancer, Vixen, Donder, Blitzen, Cupid and Comet. (Donder is also known as Donner.)



    The Christmas turkey was imported to France by the Jesuits and it is still known in some French dialects as a 'Jesuite'.



    Christmas Banned
    In 1647, the English parliament passed a law that made Christmas illegal. Christmas festivities were banned by Puritan leader Oliver Cromwell, who considered feasting and revelry on what was supposed to be a holy day to be immoral. Anybody caught celebrating Christmas was arrested. The ban was lifted only when the Puritans lost power in 1660.



    Christmas pudding was first made as a kind of soup with raisins and wine in it.

    Christmas Pudding originates from an old, Celtic dish known as 'frumenty'.



    The Queen's Christmas speech was televised for the first time in 1957.



    Christmas crackers were invented by Thomas Smith. He had imported some French novelties to sell as Christmas gifts, but these were not popular until he wrapped them up and added a snapper.



    Decorations
    Each year between 34-36 million Christmas trees are produced to cope with the holiday demand.



    Electric tree lights were first used just 3 years after Thomas Edison has his first mass public demonstration of electric lights back in 1879. Thomas Edison’s assistant, Edward Johnson, came up with the idea of electric lights for Christmas trees in 1882. His lights were a huge hit. It took quite a few years, however, before they would be made available to the general public.



    In 1895 Ralph Morris, an American telephonist, invented the string of electric Christmas lights similar to the ones we use today. The actual strings of lights had already been manufactured for use in telephone switchboards. Morris looked at the tiny bulbs and had the idea of using them on his tree.



    Christmas Cards and Christmas Post
    In 1843, the first Christmas card was created on the instructions of an Englishman, Sir Henry Cole. J.C. Horsley designed the card and sold 1000 copies in
    London.



    Postmen in Victorian England were popularly called "robins". This was because their uniforms were red. Victorian Xmas cards often showed a robin delivering Xmas mail.



    In the nineteenth century, the British Post Office used to deliver cards on Christmas morning.



    The first Christmas stamp was released in Canada in 1898.



    Christmas Carols
    St Francis of
    Assisi introduced Christmas Carols to formal church services.



    The word comes from the ancient Greek choros, which means "dancing in a circle," and from the Old French word carole, meaning "a song to accompany dancing."



    The first instrument on which the carol "Silent Night" was played was a guitar.



    The popular Christmas song "Jingle Bells" was composed in 1857 by James Pierpont, and was originally called "One-Horse Open Sleigh." It was actually written for Thanksgiving, not Xmas.



    Merry Chrictmas to you all from www.haabaa.com

     


    View all Admin's articles


    About the Author:

    More Society articles


    :- Articles Search

    Search our article database!

    :- Recent Articles
    Disabled Access - Is it that bad?
    Seven Website Design Tips to Make Your Site More Attractive
    In Reality, Spyware is always a threat.
    Upgrading Your IT Data Center Affordably
    Few concerns to think of before creating a members only web site
    Basic Tips to Help Increase your Sales.
    How to get people to visit Your web site again and again...
    Friday The 13th Could Be A Lucky Day?
    Bringing wheelchairs into the 21st Century
    Billing Software, Free and Open this Time
    Guide Dog Facts that will open your eyes (No pun intended)
    Article Writing - Read the Facts Every Writer Should Know

    :- Top Resources


    Copyright 2007 Haabaa Articles. All Rights Reserved.