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  2. What Is Christmas and Why Do We Celebrate It? - AOL

    www.aol.com/christmas-why-celebrate-153015374.html

    Christmas is always celebrated in America on the 25th of December, but the day of the week rotates. Here are the days of the week Christmas falls on for the next five years: Saturday, December 25 ...

  3. All About the Complex History of Christmas - AOL

    www.aol.com/complex-history-christmas-140527640.html

    For a time, the religious faithful coming to America did not celebrate Christmas at all, wanting to separate themselves from Britain and show reverence to the Bible by not celebrating on Dec. 25.

  4. Christmas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas

    The prominence of Christmas Day increased gradually after Charlemagne was crowned Emperor on Christmas Day in 800. [38] King Edmund the Martyr was anointed on Christmas in 855 and King William I of England was crowned on Christmas Day 1066. [39] The coronation of Charlemagne on Christmas of 800 helped promote the popularity of the holiday.

  5. Christmas in the American Civil War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_in_the_American...

    The process of Christmas becoming a national holiday in the U.S. began when Representative Burton Chauncey Cook of Illinois introduced a bill in the U.S. Congress after the U.S. Civil War (1861–1865). It passed in both houses of Congress, and President Ulysses S. Grant signed it on June 28, 1870.

  6. Holiday History: Why Do We Put Up and Decorate Trees?

    www.aol.com/holiday-history-why-put-decorate...

    As TIME Magazine reported, it is widely believed that in the Middle Ages, modern-day Germany revealed the first real Christmas trees. After all, "In 1419, a guild in Freiburg put up a tree ...

  7. Christmas and holiday season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_and_holiday_season

    As the economic impact involving the anticipatory lead-up to Christmas Day grew in America and Europe into the 19th and 20th centuries, the term "Christmas season" began to also encompass the liturgical Advent season, [9] the period of preparation observed in Western Christianity from the fourth Sunday before Christmas Day until the night of ...

  8. Santa Claus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santa_Claus

    Folklorist Margaret Baker maintains that "the appearance of Santa Claus or Father Christmas, whose day is the 25th of December, owes much to Odin, the old blue-hooded, cloaked, white-bearded Giftbringer of the north, who rode the midwinter sky on his eight-footed steed Sleipnir, visiting his people with gifts.

  9. 30 Christmas Traditions From Around the World - AOL

    www.aol.com/30-christmas-traditions-around-world...

    In Ireland, two relatively new annual Christmastime traditions are the Late Late Toy Show, which has aired since 1975, and the Christmas Day swim, which began some 40 years ago, according to the ...