Happy Thanksgiving! If you live in the USA, you're most likely getting ready to celebrate a Thanksgiving supper with friends and family this Thursday. (Canadians, of course, already celebrated a national Thanksgiving holiday in October.)
But though Thanksgiving
may seem like a purely North American observance, it has its roots in ancient European harvest
traditions as well as religious rites that go back to the Protestant
Reformation. The Puritans even brought their own blend of solemn prayers of
thanksgiving and harvest feasts to the New World when they sailed to America on the Mayflower.
English harvest
festivals date back thousands of years and many of the customs that started in antiquity are still practiced in some isolated areas of the United Kingdom. Called Harvest Home or Ingathering, these celebrations include songs, sermons, games and
decorations using flowers and ribbons. And of course, there is a bounteous feast celebrating the fruits of the harvest.
One popular British harvest festival
tradition is fashioning a corn dolly out of the last sheaf of corn. The corn
dolly was often used in the centerpiece on the harvest table. The dolly might be sprinkled with water as a rain charm, and then kept through the winter and saved until the spring planting.
A Yorkshire spiral corn dolly. Corn dollies can be woven into different shapes, and as this wheat dolly shows, materials besides corn sheaves can be used. |
I like to imagine Regency boys and
girls making corn dollies and playing with them. You might want to make this fun activity part of your Thanksgiving/harvest festival traditions, too.
Along with pumpkin pie, of course!
Images courtesy of Pixabay and Wikimedia Commons
Again, who knew? Thanks for educating me on another interesting topic, Maureen. Those corn dollies are very pretty, aren't they? xo Jennifer
ReplyDelete