3 Christmas traditions that may have pagan roots, and 4 that (probably) don't

3 Christmas traditions that may have pagan roots, and 4 that (probably) don’t

It’s often claimed that many of today’s Christmas traditions derive from the pre-Christian observances of pagan cults suppressed by Roman authorities. The story goes that, after Christianity became the state religion of the Roman Empire in the fourth century, zealous imperial authorities sought to impose the new faith on the empire’s millions of inhabitants by co-opting their established pagan traditions — including the date when a new festival was celebrated.

But it seems that the pagan influence on some Christmas traditions may have been overstated. Here is a look at seven Christmas traditions and their origins.

12 Days of Christmas

(Image credit: Following Hadrian, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons)

In Christianity, the “Twelve days of Christmas” — now mostly famous as a carol — referred to the time it took the “magi” (also known as the “wise men” or “magic kings”) to arrive at the birthplace of Jesus. At least three magi (some sects say there were 12), who were supposedly astrologers from distant lands, followed a new star to Bethlehem. They were the first to see the baby after his family and some local shepherds, and so the magi’s arrival represented the manifestation of Christ to people who were not Jewish — an important religious allegory. As a result, “Three Kings Day” or “Epiphany” at the end of the 12 days was once a major festival throughout Christian Europe, but today it is big only in Spain.

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