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Halloween

Halloween. Origins and Traditions 起源及傳統. Origins. Halloween began two thousand years ago in Ireland, England, and Northern France with the ancient religion of the Celts 凱爾特人 (Paganism 異教徒 ). They celebrated their New Year on November 1 st.

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Halloween

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  1. Halloween Origins and Traditions 起源及傳統

  2. Origins • Halloween began two thousand years ago in Ireland, England, and Northern France with the ancient religion of the Celts凱爾特人 (Paganism異教徒).

  3. They celebrated their NewYear on November 1st. • This day marked(標記) the beginning of the dark, cold winter, a time of year that was often associated(關聯) with human death.

  4. Samhain (sow-in) • On the night of October 31, they celebrated Samhain, when it was believed that the ghosts of the dead (亡魂)returned to earth.

  5. Costumes • People thought that they would encounter ghosts if they left their homes…

  6. So they wore costumes. • This way, the ghosts couldn’t recognize(認出) them!

  7. The Christian Influence • As the influence of Christianity(基督教) spread into Celtic lands, in the 7th century, Pope(教宗) Boniface IV introduced(引入) All Saints‘ Day, a time to honor(榮耀) saints(聖徒) and martyrs(殉道者), to replace the Pagan festival of Samhain. It was observed on May 13th.

  8. A change of date • In 834, Pope Gregory III movedAll Saint's Dayfrom May 13th to Nov. 1st. Oct. 31st thus became All Hallows' Eve ('hallow' means 'saint').

  9. All Souls Day November 2nd, called All Souls Day, isthe day set apart in the Roman Catholic Church(羅馬天主教廷) for the commemoration(紀念) of the dead(死者).

  10. Trick-or-treating began with the poor in the 15th century… • During the All Souls Day festival in England, poor people would beg for(乞討) “soul cakes,” made out of square pieces of bread with currants(無核小葡萄乾). • Families would give soul cakes in return for a promise to pray for the family’s relatives.

  11. then children… • The practice, which was referred to as “going a-souling” was eventually taken up by children who would visit the houses in their neighborhood and be given ale(麥芽啤酒), food, and money.

  12. Today: • Children still go from house-to-house, but instead of ale, food, and money, they get candy.

  13. With Irish Immigration… • In 1848, millions of Irish emigrants(移民) poured into America as a result of the potato famine(難民). They brought with them their traditions of Halloween.

  14. Halloween came to America. • They called Halloween Oidche Shamhna (`Night of Samhain'), as their ancestors had, and kept the traditional observances.

  15. The Jack-O-Lantern • The Irish used to carry turnips(大頭菜) with candles in them to light their way at night and to scare away ghosts.

  16. When they arrived in America they found that pumpkins were both plentiful and easier to carve than turnips.

  17. Now, Jack-O-Lanterns are used for decorating people’s homes.

  18. People have recently started carving less traditional Jack-O-Lanterns

  19. Today people go to parties…

  20. Take their kids trick-or-treating.…

  21. And eat lots of candy!

  22. If you don’t give candy toa trick-or-treater…

  23. This could happen to you!

  24. Bibliography www.wilstar.com/holidays/hallown.htm www.historychannel.com/halloween http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_Souls_Day#Pagan_roots www.fni.com/heritage/oct97/historyhall

  25. The End Happy Halloween!

  26. This powerpoint was kindly donated to www.worldofteaching.com http://www.worldofteaching.com is home to over a thousand powerpoints submitted by teachers. This is a completely free site and requires no registration. Please visit and I hope it will help in your teaching.

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