Tuesday, 25 November 2014

When Christmas Was Banned!



http://www.amazon.co.uk/Christmas-Past-carol-Ann-lewis/dp/1497304466/ref=sr_1_32_twi_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1416906183&sr=8-32&keywords=christmas+past



Can you imagine the government of today suddenly announcing that Christmas is banned?  This is what happened during the rule of Oliver Cromwell.

In the late 1500's Phillip Stubbes, an English pamphleteer and Puritan wrote 'The Anatomie of Abuses in England' and in it commented, amongst other subjects, on Christmas.
More mischief is then committed than in all the year, what masking and mumming whereby robbery, whoredom, murder and whatnot is committed. What dicing and carding, what eating and drinking, what banqueting and feasting is then used more than in all the year besides to the great dishonour of God and impoverishing of the realm”

The 25th December in the time of the Stuarts was a public holiday. All places of work were closed, church services were held, presents were exchanged and there was drinking, singing, eating, stage plays and dancing. Afterwards for the next eleven days, masses were held, the working day was shorter and festivities culminated on Twelfth Night with a feast.
However by the mid 1500s England had broken away from the Catholic Church and had become Protestant. Christmas was a Catholic feast day and Protestant leaders began to reject Catholic feast days and Saints days. Some, such as John Calvin and John Knox preferred to only celebrate where it specifically said so in the Bible. The views of those Protestant leaders was that Christmas was a remnant of the Catholic Church and not wanted anymore. There was no mention in the Bible to celebrate on 25th December and no mention at all of spending the day eating and drinking too much. Their conclusion was there should be stricter observance of Sunday and Easter, Christmas and the Saints days should be banned
When Oliver Cromwell came to power in 1644 with his Puritan forces steps were taken to curb the excesses of Christmas. In Scotland football, snowballing and carol singing had already been banned in 1583 and so the same was tried in England as it was thought the celebration of Christmas was threatening core Christian beliefs. Any activity thought to be associated with celebrating Christmas was against the law, even going to church, though there is no sign Oliver Cromwell personally enforced this.
A new Directory of Public Worship was created by parliament with help from church ministers to reorganise worship. It would be the only form of worship allowed in England and Wales. Only if there was biblical justification could be a festival be held and since, up until the reign of Henry VIII England had been a Catholic country, to end all feast days and saints days meant there probably wasn’t much left.
In 1649 Cromwell had King Charles I executed and for the next four years England was ruled by Parliament. Then on 20 April 1653 Oliver Cromwell expelled Parliament and made himself Lord Protector.

Cromwell was a Puritan and Puritans frowned upon pointless enjoyment. They lived their lives according to the Bible and believed a person must work hard in order to get into Heaven. As a result of beliefs Cromwell ordered all playhouses to be shut, sport was banned, inns were closed and people found working on the Sabbath were put into the stocks. No swearing was allowed, colourful clothes were banned. Women wore long black dresses with white aprons and head dresses. There was no make up. Men also had to dress in black and have short hair.
By now Christmas was an ordinary working day, shops and markets were open and people were fined if they went to church. Soldiers even patrolled the streets in London seizing any food deemed to be for Christmas.
In 1656 legislation was passed that made Sunday a day of rest and also the Catholic element of Christmas, 'Mass', was replaced with 'tide'.
The banning of Christmas was incredibly unpopular with people who felt the government had no right to be interfering with their beliefs. Riots took place and lives were lost in places such as London and Norwich between those who supported Christmas and those who didn’t.
In 1660 the monarchy was restored and all legislation banning Christmas was dropped and people were free to celebrate Christmas again.
However even though people had secretly celebrated Christmas as best they could, or caused a public disturbance by rioting, people did eventually stop celebrating it altogether for fear of being fined. For around fifteen years Christmas was not celebrated. As a result traditions began to die out. There were no more Lords of Misrule, no singing in the streets, no feasting, houses could not be publicly decorated. The inns and theatres were closed so the mummers and carol singers had nowhere to call. No gifts were exchanged, no nativities. Just another day. Christmas really wouldn’t be celebrated again properly again until Victorian times.

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