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Some very interesting facts there Tink - thanks for taking the trouble to look it up. It seems there are at least a couple of origins of Boxing Day here in UK. "Beginning in the Middle Ages, Boxing Day was known as St. Stephen's Day in honour of the first Christmas martyr. Although unknown in the United States, Boxing Day is still observed in Britain, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia. It's called "Boxing Day" because on the day after Christmas, the well-off boxed up gifts to give to their servants and trades people, while the churches opened their charity boxes to the poor." So Boxing Day is the day Good King Wenseslas looked out ....... Evidently in Canada, Boxing Day is the equivalent of the USA's "Black Friday". |
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*confuzzled* |
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I bet our transatlantic cousins think "crackers" are those dry salty biscuits that you eat with cheese! Christmas crackers in UK are like these:- http://images.google.co.uk/imgres?im...icial%26sa%3DG and contain your paper hat, a joke or motto and a small novelty or gift (more expensive ones are also available with more expensive gifts inside - even real jewellery!) |
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