Articles related to "The Shortest Day Of The Year"Winter Solstice is the shortest day of the year, generally thought to fall on the 21st December. But what are the origins of this magical day, and how is it celebrated?
Many festivals are keepers of time: they mark the seasons. But what determines the seasons?
Holiday street markets, religious processions, nativity scenes, joyous traditional folk customs and music performances blend into a non-stop Spanish Christmas festival.
Disney's animation classic, "Fantasia", has put on film one of the most terrifyingly imagined witches' sabbats ever.
Clava Cairns is a peaceful ancient setting of prehistoric passage graves and standing stones near Inverness.
Ancient cultures, so many of them dependent upon agriculture, celebrated major festivals on or around the day of the Winter Solstice.
The modern version of Christmas is an amalgam of many pagan traditions from early civilizations, especially that of the ancient Romans.
Chickadees, though common, are always welcome visitors to backyard birdfeeders. An understanding of their needs and behaviors will help draw them to your property.
The early Christians absorbed certain pagan practices into observances of Christmas.
There is a time for every season under heaven, according to the Bible. A New Zealand Maori festival pays tribute to nature's bounty and cycles of darkness and light.
Yule is the name for the pagan festival which celebrates the Winter Solstice and many present day customs originate from those traditions.
Understanding and incorporating diverse holidays into your winter traditions.
Water therapies in Japan, which focus on inner balance, include the traditional home bath, the communal bath, tea ceremonies, aromatherapy and waterfall treatments.
Why do we sing "Auld Lang Syne" at midnight each New Year's Eve as we bid the old year goodbye and welcome in the new? What do the words really mean?
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