Seems
a bit odd saying "Halloween Lore" as Halloween is all lore really. The current name
comes from "All Hallows Eve" but like Christmas the roots of the celebration go
back to Pagan times to the holiday of "Samhain" which signified the end of summer.
The Druids of Ancient Britain, celebrated
Samhain (Sah-ween) on October the 31st (or thereabouts - depending if they
had an auntie to buy them
a diary for Christmas - sorry Yule) November the 1st falls between the Autumn Equinox
and the Winter Solstice (ish). The eve of Samhain, October the 31st was the night
that the lord of death judged the souls of the departed.
For
the Celts in particular, Samhain was the biggest and most significant holiday of
year. The Celts believed that at this time the ghosts of the dead were able to mingle
with the living. The souls of those who had died during the previous year would
travel to the otherworld.
As
might be expected from ancient Pagan festivals, there was much drinking of very
rough brews and chucking away of food and other goodies in a melodramatic manner
to please and appease the gods.
There are rumours of human sacrifices, though
of course no-one has ever found any evidence. The purpose was to ensure that the
following year would produce a good crop and give people a chance to communicate
with departed ancestors and assure prosperity. Some claim that wisdom from ancestors
could be learnt at such times - I'm more sceptical as they kept on drinking those
brews not learning their lesson and I reckon didn't feel too clever come November
the 1st.
In 834 AD a full two centuries after Britain
had embraced Christianity, the Pope ordered that the continuing Pagan rituals that
still continued against attempts to ban them should be Christianised. So spring
fertility rites were absorbed into Easter, Winter Solstice / Yule celebrations were
absorbed into Christmas and Samhain became All Saints Day - a "Hallow" was another
word for a saint and the eve or evening before made it All Hallows Eve, eventually
becoming Halloween.
|
Halloween Customs
|
|
Samhain
was a favourite time for foretelling the future the Druids used
the "sacred apple"
for this, as time has gone on the
Chinese Whispers of tradition has turned this into "bobbing" for
apples - fishing for floating apples in a bowl of water using only
your mouth. (My Granny used to call having a no.2 (ahem -
sorry) "having a bob" - imagine the motion - so as a child I used to
find the concept of bobbing for apples hilarious).
Another variant is to have the
apples suspended on strings from the ceiling and try to catch them in
the mouth as they swing.
|

Death
was always an ever present threat in ancient times
("ancient times" is now
generally agreed by scholars to have been sometime after the late Pleistocene
and just before donkey's-years-ago) so Halloween was a good time to
find out when you're going to die (or preferably when other people were
going to die). Stones in the bonfire ashes were examined for evidence
of the names of those who would die in the coming year. "Hey Beowulf,
guess what?..." |
On a happier note, Halloween was thought
of as being a good time to predict marriages and husbands.
Halloween was sometimes known as "Nutcrack Night" in Britain when girls
would look for signs of their future husbands in the way nuts burned
on the kitchen fire. Other useful foretellers of the future at this
time included cabbages, molten lead, needles, egg whites and hemp -
a good line in BS helped convince other people you knew what you were
seeing. |
If
you hold a mirror on Halloween and walk backwards down the stairs to
the basement (not easy if you don't have one) the face that appears
in the mirror will your next lover
(but why would they be hiding behind you in the basement?)
Another way of getting a glimpse of your future spouse
was believed to be to peel an apple in front of a candle-lit mirror.
|
Each
member of the family should take a clean ivy leaf with no spots or stain
and place them into a glass of water overnight.
If the leaf is still spotless the following morning, at least another
12 months of life are assured, but if the leaf has any spots on it death
will follow in the next year (I'd just refuse to do it). |
Special
foods and meals were often made for the souls of the dead and for deceased
ancestors. In
England "soul cakes" cakes were made for these wandering souls, and
people went "a' soulin" for these at Halloween. |

The main celebration of
Halloween today of course is of trick-or-treating
by the local neighbourhood kids. How
this came about is not entirely clear. In the 16th century there are
records of "guisers" (dis- guisers?) in Scotland young men in costumes
and masks went from door to door with turnip lanterns. Hidden by their
disguise would ask "Please to help the guisers" and were rewarded with
apples, nuts and copper coins.
Another
possibility is that the practice arose in England as a derivative of
children collecting a "Penny for the Guy"
traditionally involving making an effigy of Guy Fawkes who tried to
blow up Parliament in 1605 as part of the "Gunpowder Plot". Money collected
in this way would be spent on fireworks let off on November the 5th
when the "Guy" was burnt on a bonfire.
In any case, trick-or-treating
was taken overseas by British and European emigrants and has particularly
taken root in America. There are reports of trick-or-treat in America
and Australia in the 1940's, it had spread to just about everywhere
in the USA by around 1955.
|
British trick-or-treat is
a more recent phenomenon and rather oddly has been re-exported back
to the UK from the USA. So much
so that many Britons consider it to be an American holiday that for
some reason we are just starting to adopt.
My youngest son first went trick-or-treating
when he was 5 (14 years ago now) with his older brother and a group
of his friends, at that time, they were the only ones in the village
doing it. The numbers increased over the next few years, but were down
again last year, still I'll put out three carved and lit pumpkins to
attract them to come and get their sweeties.
|

The carved
pumpkin or Jack O' Lantern was adapted from the old British practice
of carving out turnips or other vegetables to make lanterns.
Pumpkin carving
is now as essential to Halloween as mistletoe and holly are to Christmas,
though in Britain we tend to throw the pumpkin contents away rather
than make them into pumpkin pie as the Americans do - how many Britons
have even tasted pumpkin pie I wonder?
The Jack O' Lantern story comes from Ireland where a
man called Jack trapped the devil in the branches of an apple tree.
When Jack died, he wasn't allowed into heaven, but then neither would
the devil take him (miserable sod, what a sore loser) instead
he was left to endlessly wander the earth lighting his way with a hollowed
out turnip containing a piece of coal.
|
Catholics still celebrate November 1st as "All Saints Day". |

