Today, Halloween conjures up images of candy, outlandish costumes, family activities, haunted houses, and ghostly spooky fun. But, where did Halloween begin? How did Halloween come about? You may not realize is that this festive holiday actually has ancient origins featuring beliefs in spirits roaming the night, the dead crossing over to the “otherworld,” rituals, and sacrifices. Are you properly creeped out, yet? Good. Let’s continue…
The history of Halloween is muddled and piecing together the truth will never be complete. However, we start with the druids.
Halloween began in Ireland about 2,000 years ago by the ancient Celts. The Celts often followed the teachings of their pagan priests, who were known as Druids. Druids were macabre masters of anything occult, including witchcraft, satanism, and anything that paid tribute to ghouls and evil spirits. Some discoveries suggest that the Druids participated in human sacrifice and even cannibalism.
Halloween was first known as Samhain (pronouned Saah-Wen) and was celebrated on November 1 instead of October 31.
Today, we dress up in costume during Halloween as a fun way to deviate from our regular garb. What other time will you have an excuse to look like a vampire or a bottle of hot sauce? But the Celts didn’t always dress in costume for celebration — they dressed up to save themselves from possession and sacrifice. If Celts weren’t isolating themselves in their homes, they would roam the streets in masks and costumes in hopes that the Druids — and potential demons — would mistake them for evil spirits. For the Celts who decided to remain in their homes during Samhain, they would leave various “treats” outside their doors in order to appease any spirits and keep them at bay.
While honoring the dead during what has been described as “a covenant with death, and with hell,” the Druids would also perform human sacrifices which could extend to children, making Samhain a day of pure terror. A report from National Geographic confirmed that several pieces of evidence suggest that Druids practiced rituals that involved massive human sacrifice and cannibalism. “First-century historian Pliny the Elder went further, suggesting the Celts practiced ritual cannibalism, eating their enemies’ flesh as a source of spiritual and physical strength.” Not your typical trick-or-treat fare.
The Christians — particularly those who practiced Catholicism — were obviously unhappy with the practices and attempted to hamper Samhain by claiming the holiday as their own, along with skewing the traditions in a decidedly less macabre direction. The Roman Catholic Church created a holiday called All Saints Day to honor all Christian Saints. It would later be coined the All Hallows’ during the eighth century. According to history, the day before All Hallows’ was eventually referred to as All Hallows’ Eve, which was eventually shortened to Halloween, which has become a commercialized version of All Hallows’ Eve since .
During the 19th century, throngs of Irish and Scottish immigrants flooded the United States, bringing with them the traditions that had been celebrated during All Saints’ Day or All Hallows’. According to the Gadsden Times,
The history of Halloween seems mostly forgotten today, and spookiness during Halloween is coupled mostly with laughs and raucous fun, as families and adults enjoy things like haunted hayrides, corn mazes, pumpkin patches, and the like. This year when you don a mask or costume in celebration of October 31, take solace in the fact that we now wear these types of garb for fun as opposed to mingling with spirits the way the Celts and the Druids did. Or maybe….
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