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St. Martin's Day

Saint Martin's Day or Martinmas, sometimes historically called Old Halloween or Old Hallowmas Eve,[1][2] is the feast day of Saint Martin of Tours and is celebrated in the liturgical year on 11 November. In the Middle Ages and early modern period, it was an important festival in many parts of Europe, particularly Germanic-speaking regions. In these regions, it marked the end of the harvest season and beginning of winter.[3] and the "winter revelling season". Traditions include feasting on 'Martinmas goose' or 'Martinmas beef', drinking the first wine of the season, and mumming. In some German and Dutch-speaking towns, there are processions of children with lanterns (Laternelaufen), sometimes led by a horseman representing St Martin. The saint was also said to bestow gifts on children. In the Rhineland, it is also marked by lighting bonfires.

St Martin's Day Kermis by Peeter Baltens (16th century), shows peasants celebrating by drinking the first wine of the season, and a horseman representing the saint

Martin of Tours (died 397) was a Roman soldier who was baptized as an adult and became a bishop in Gaul. He is best known for the tale whereby he cut his cloak in half with his sword, to give half to a beggar who was dressed in only rags in the depth of winter. That night Martin had a vision of Jesus Christ wearing the half-cloak.[4][5]

Customs

 
A tradition on St Martin's Eve or Day is to share a goose for dinner.

Traditionally, in many parts of Europe, St Martin's Day marked the end of the harvest and the beginning of winter. The feast coincides with the end of the Octave of Allhallowtide.

Feasting and drinking

Martinmas was traditionally when livestock were slaughtered for winter provision.[6] It may originally have been a time of animal sacrifice, as the Old English name for November was Blōtmōnaþ ('sacrifice month').[7]

Goose is eaten at Martinmas in most places. There is a legend that St Martin, when trying to avoid being ordained bishop, hid in a pen of geese whose cackling gave him away. Once a key medieval autumn feast, a custom of eating goose on the day spread to Sweden from France. It was primarily observed by the craftsmen and noblemen of the towns. In the peasant community, not everyone could afford this, so many ate duck or hen instead.[8]

In winegrowing regions of Europe, the first wine was ready around the time of Martinmas. Although there was no mention of a link between St Martin and winegrowing by Gregory of Tours or other early hagiographers, St Martin is widely credited in France with helping to spread winemaking throughout the region of Tours (Touraine) and facilitating vine-planting. The old Greek tale that Aristaeus discovered the advantage of pruning vines after watching a goat has been appropriated to St Martin.[9] He is credited with introducing the Chenin blanc grape, from which most of the white wine of western Touraine and Anjou is made.[9]

Bonfires and lanterns

Bonfires are lit on St Martin's Eve in the Rhineland region of Germany. In the fifteenth century, these bonfires were so numerous that the festival was nicknamed Funkentag (spark day).[7] In the nineteenth century it was recorded that young people danced around the fire and leapt through the flames, and that the ashes were strewn on the fields to make them fertile.[7] Similar customs were part of the Gaelic festival Samhain (1 November).

In some German and Dutch-speaking towns, there are nighttime processions of children carrying paper lanterns or turnip lanterns and singing songs of St Martin.[7] These processions are known in German as Laternelaufen.

Gift-bringers

In parts of Flanders and the Rhineland, processions are led by a man on horseback representing St Martin, who may give out apples, nuts, cakes or other sweets for children.[7] Historically, in Ypres, children hung up stockings filled with hay on Martinmas Eve, and awoke the next morning to find gifts in them. These were said to have been left by St Martin as thanks for the fodder provided for his horse.[7]

In the Swabia and Ansbach regions of Germany, a character called Pelzmärten ('pelt Martin' or 'skin Martin') appeared at Martinmas until the 19th century. With a black face and wearing a cow bell, he ran about frightening children, and he dealt out blows as well as nuts and apples.[7]

Eve of St Martin's Lent

In the 6th century, church councils began requiring fasting on all days, except Saturdays and Sundays, from Saint Martin's Day to Epiphany (elsewhere, the Feast of the Three Wise Men for the stopping of the star over Bethlehem)[10] on January 6 (56 days). An addition to and an equivalent to the 40 days fasting of Lent, given its weekend breaks, this was called Quadragesima Sancti Martini (Saint Martin's Lent, or literally "the fortieth of").[11] This is rarely observed now. This period was shortened to begin on the Sunday before December and became the current Advent within a few centuries.[12]

Celebrations by culture

Germanic

Austrian

In Austria, St Martin's Day is celebrated the same way as in Germany. The nights before and on the night of 11 November, children walk in processions carrying lanterns, which they made in school, and sing Martin songs.[citation needed] Martinloben is celebrated as a collective festival. Events include art exhibitions, wine tastings, and live music. Martinigansl (roasted goose) is the traditional dish of the season.[13]

Dutch and Flemish

Celebrating children in the Zaanstreek (1961)

In the Netherlands, on the evening of 11 November, children go door to door (mostly under parental supervision) with lanterns made of hollowed-out sugar beet or, more recently, paper, singing songs such as "Sinte(re) Sinte(re) Maarten", to receive sweets or fruit in return. In the past, poor people would visit farms on 11 November to get food for the winter. In the 1600s, the city of Amsterdam held boat races on the IJ, where 400 to 500 light craft, both rowing boats and sailboats, took part with a vast crowd on the banks. St Martin is the patron saint of the city of Utrecht, and St Martin's Day is celebrated there with a big lantern parade.[citation needed]

In Flanders, the Dutch-speaking part of Belgium, St Martin's Eve is celebrated on the evening of 10 November, mainly in West Flanders and around Ypres. Children go through the streets with paper lanterns and candles, and sing songs about St Martin. Sometimes, a man dressed as St Martin rides on a horse in front of the procession.[14] The children receive presents from either their friends or family as supposedly coming from St Martin.[citation needed] In some areas, there is a traditional goose meal.[citation needed]

In Wervik, children go from door to door, singing traditional "Séngmarténg" songs, sporting a hollow beetroot with a carved face and a candle inside called "Bolle Séngmarténg"; they gather at an evening bonfire. At the end the beetroots are thrown into the fire, and pancakes are served.[citation needed]

English

Martinmas was widely celebrated on 11 November in medieval and early modern England. In his study "Medieval English Martinmesse: The Archaeology of a Forgotten Festival", Martin Walsh describes Martinmas as a festival marking the end of the harvest season and beginning of winter.[6] He suggests it had pre-Christian roots.[6] Martinmas ushered in the "winter revelling season" and involved feasting on the meat of livestock that had been slaughtered for winter provision (especially 'Martlemas beef'), drinking, storytelling, and mumming.[6] It was a time for saying farewell to travelling ploughmen, who shared in the feast along with the harvest-workers.[6]

According to Walsh, Martinmas eventually died out in England as a result of the English Reformation, the emergence of Guy Fawkes Night (5 November), as well as changes in farming and the Industrial Revolution.[6] Today, 11 November is Remembrance Day.

German

 
St. Martin's procession with children carrying paper lanterns in West Germany in 1949
Martin's procession and Martin's bonfire, Konz, Germany, Rhineland-Palatinate 2016

A widespread custom in Germany is to light bonfires, called Martinsfeuer, on St Martin's Eve. In recent years, the processions that accompany those fires have been spread over almost a fortnight before Martinmas (Martinstag). At one time, the Rhine River valley would be lined with fires on the eve of Martinmas. In the Rhineland, Martin's day is celebrated traditionally with a get-together during which a roasted suckling pig is shared with the neighbours.

The nights before and on the eve itself, children walk in processions called Laternelaufen, carrying lanterns, which they made in school, and sing St Martin's songs. Usually, the walk starts at a church and goes to a public square. A man on horseback representing St Martin accompanies the children. When they reach the square, Martin's bonfire is lit and Martin's pretzels are distributed.[15]

In the Rhineland, the children also go from house to house with their lanterns, sing songs and get candy in return. The origin of the procession of lanterns is unclear. To some, it is a substitute for the Martinmas bonfire, which is still lit in a few cities and villages throughout Europe. It formerly symbolized the light that holiness brings to the darkness, just as St Martin brought hope to the poor through his good deeds. Even though the bonfire tradition is gradually being lost, the procession of lanterns is still practiced.[16]

A Martinsgans ("St Martin's goose"), is typically served on St Martin's Eve following the procession of lanterns. "Martinsgans" is usually served in restaurants, roasted, with red cabbage and dumplings.[16]

The traditional sweet of Martinmas in the Rhineland is Martinshörnchen, a pastry shaped in the form of a croissant, which recalls both the hooves of St Martin's horse and, by being the half of a pretzel, the parting of his mantle. In some areas, these pastries are instead shaped like men (Stutenkerl or Weckmänner).

St Martin's Day is also celebrated in German Lorraine and Alsace, which border the Rhineland and are now part of France. Children receive gifts and sweets. In Alsace, in particular the Haut-Rhin mountainous region, families with young children make lanterns out of painted paper that they carry in a colourful procession up the mountain at night. Some schools organise these events, in particular schools of the Rudolf Steiner (Waldorf education) pedagogy. In these regions, the day marks the beginning of the holiday season.[citation needed] In the German speaking parts of Belgium, notably Eupen and Sankt Vith, processions similar to those in Germany take place.[citation needed]

German American

In the United States, St. Martin's Day celebrations are uncommon, but are typically held by German American communities.[17] Many German restaurants feature a traditional menu with goose and Glühwein (a mulled red wine). St Paul, Minnesota celebrates with a traditional lantern procession around Rice Park. The evening includes German treats and traditions that highlight the season of giving.[18] In Dayton, Ohio the Dayton Liederkranz-Turner organization hosts a St Martin's Family Celebration on the weekend before with an evening lantern parade to the singing of St Martin's carols, followed by a bonfire.[19]

Swedish

St Martin's Day or St Martin's Eve (Mårtensafton) was an important medieval autumn feast in Sweden. In early November, geese are ready for slaughter, and on St Martin's Eve it is tradition to have a roast goose dinner. The custom is particularly popular in Scania in southern Sweden, where goose farming has long been practised, but it has gradually spread northwards. A proper goose dinner also includes svartsoppa (a heavily spiced soup made from geese blood) and apple charlotte.[20]

Slavic

Croatian

In Croatia, St. Martin's Day (Martinje, Martinovanje) marks the day when the must traditionally turns to wine. The must is usually considered impure and sinful, until it is baptised and turned into wine. The baptism is performed by someone who dresses up as a bishop and blesses the wine; this is usually done by the host. Another person is chosen as the godfather of the wine.

Czech

A Czech proverb connected with the Feast of St. Martin – Martin přijíždí na bílém koni (transl. "Martin is coming on a white horse") – signifies that the first half of November in the Czech Republic is the time when it often starts to snow. St. Martin's Day is the traditional feast day in the run-up to Advent. Restaurants often serve roast goose as well as young wine from the recent harvest known as Svatomartinské víno, which is similar to Beaujolais nouveau as the first wine of the season. Wine shops and restaurants around Prague pour the first of the St. Martin's wines at 11:11 a.m. Many restaurants offer special menus for the day, featuring the traditional roast goose.[21]

Polish

 
Procession of Saint Martin in Poznań, 2006

In Poland, 11 November is National Independence Day. St. Martin's Day (Dzień Świętego Marcina) is celebrated mainly in the city of Poznań where its citizens buy and eat considerable amounts of croissants filled with almond paste with white poppy seeds, the Rogal świętomarciński or St. Martin's Croissants. Legend has it that this centuries-old tradition commemorates a Poznań baker's dream which had the saint entering the city on a white horse that lost its golden horseshoe. The next morning, the baker whipped up horseshoe-shaped croissants filled with almonds, white poppy seeds and nuts, and gave them to the poor. In recent years, competition amongst local patisseries has become fierce. The product is registered under the European Union Protected Designation of Origin and only a limited number of bakers hold an official certificate. Poznanians celebrate the festival with concerts, parades and a fireworks show on Saint Martin's Street. Goose meat dishes are also eaten during the holiday.[22]

Slovene

The biggest event in Slovenia is the St. Martin's Day celebration in Maribor which marks the symbolic winding up of all the wine growers’ endeavours. There is the ceremonial "christening" of the new wine, and the arrival of the Wine Queen. The square Trg Leona Štuklja is filled with musicians and stalls offering autumn produce and delicacies.[23]

Celtic

Irish

In some parts[24] of Ireland, on the eve of St. Martin's Day (Lá Fhéile Mártain in Irish), it was tradition to sacrifice a cockerel by bleeding it. The blood was collected and sprinkled on the four corners of the house.[25][24] Also in Ireland, no wheel of any kind was to turn on St. Martin's Day, because Martin was said by some people[24] to have been thrown into a mill stream and killed by the wheel and so it was not right to turn any kind of wheel on that day. A local legend in Co. Wexford says that putting to sea is to be avoided as St. Martin rides a white horse across Wexford Bay bringing death by drowning to any who see him.[26]

Welsh

In Welsh mythology the day is associated with the Cŵn Annwn, the spectral hounds who escort souls to the otherworld (Annwn). St Martin's Day was one of the few nights the hounds would engage in a Wild Hunt, stalking the land for criminals and villains.[27] The supernatural character of the day in Welsh culture is evident in the number omens associated with it. Marie Trevelyan recorded that if the hooting of an owl was heard on St Martin's Day it was seen as a bad omen for that district. If a meteor was seen, then there would be trouble for the whole nation.[28]

Latvian

Mārtiņi (Martin's) is traditionally celebrated by Latvians on 10 November, marking the end of the preparations for winter, such as salting meat and fish, storing the harvest and making preserves. Mārtiņi also marks the beginning of masquerading and sledding, among other winter activities.

Maltese

 
A Maltese "Borża ta' San Martin"

St. Martin's Day (Jum San Martin in Maltese) is celebrated in Malta on the Sunday nearest to 11 November. Children are given a bag full of fruits and sweets associated with the feast, known by the Maltese as Il-Borża ta' San Martin, "St. Martin's bag". This bag may include walnuts, hazelnuts, almonds, chestnuts, dried or processed figs, seasonal fruit (like oranges, tangerines, apples and pomegranates) and "Saint Martin's bread roll" (Maltese: Ħobża ta' San Martin). In old days, nuts were used by the children in their games.

There is a traditional rhyme associated with this custom:

Ġewż, Lewż, Qastan, Tin

Kemm inħobbu lil San Martin.

(Walnuts, Almonds, Chestnuts, Figs

I love Saint Martin so much.)

A feast is celebrated in the village of Baħrija on the outskirts of Rabat, including a procession led by the statue of Saint Martin. There is also a fair, and a show for local animals. San Anton School, a private school on the island, organises a walk to and from a cave especially associated with Martin in remembrance of the day.

Portuguese and Galician

In Portugal, St. Martin's Day (Dia de São Martinho) is commonly associated with the celebration of the maturation of the year's wine, being traditionally the first day when the new wine can be tasted. It is celebrated, traditionally around a bonfire, eating the magusto, chestnuts roasted under the embers of the bonfire (sometimes dry figs and walnuts), and drinking a local light alcoholic beverage called água-pé (literally "foot water", made by adding water to the pomace left after the juice is pressed out of the grapes for wine – traditionally by stomping on them in vats with bare feet, and letting it ferment for several days), or the stronger jeropiga (a sweet liquor obtained in a very similar fashion, with aguardente added to the water). Água-pé, though no longer available for sale in supermarkets and similar outlets (it is officially banned for sale in Portugal), is still generally available in small local shops from domestic production.[citation needed]

Leite de Vasconcelos regarded the magusto as the vestige of an ancient sacrifice to honor the dead and stated that it was tradition in Barqueiros to prepare, at midnight, a table with chestnuts for the deceased family members to eat.[29] The people also mask their faces with the dark wood ashes from the bonfire.[citation needed] A typical Portuguese saying related to Saint Martin's Day:

É dia de São Martinho;
comem-se castanhas, prova-se o vinho.
(It is St. Martin's Day,
we'll eat chestnuts, we'll taste the wine.)

This period is also quite popular because of the usual good weather period that occurs in Portugal in this time of year, called Verão de São Martinho (St. Martin's Summer). It is frequently tied to the legend since Portuguese versions of St. Martin's legend usually replace the snowstorm with rain (because snow is not frequent in most parts of Portugal, while rain is common at that time of the year) and have Jesus bringing the end of it, thus making the "summer" a gift from God.[citation needed]

St Martin's Day is widely celebrated in Galicia. It is the traditional day for slaughtering fattened pigs for the winter. This tradition has given way to the popular saying "A cada cerdo le llega su San Martín from Galician A cada porquiño chégalle o seu San Martiño ("Every pig gets its St Martin"). The phrase is used to indicate that wrongdoers eventually get their comeuppance.

Sicilian

In Sicily, November is the winemaking season. On the day Sicilians eat anise, hard biscuits dipped into Moscato, Malvasia or Passito. l'Estate di San Martino (Saint Martin's Summer) is the traditional reference to a period of unseasonably warm weather in early to mid November, possibly shared with the Normans (who founded the Kingdom of Sicily) as common in at least late English folklore. The day is celebrated in a special way in a village near Messina and at a monastery dedicated to Saint Martin overlooking Palermo beyond Monreale.[30] Other places in Sicily mark the day by eating fava beans.[citation needed]

In art

Pieter Bruegel the Elder's physically largest painting is The Wine of Saint Martin's Day, which depicts the saint giving charity.

There is a closely similar painting by Peeter Baltens, which can be seen here.

See also

References

  1. ^ Bulik, Mark (1 January 2015). The Sons of Molly Maguire: The Irish Roots of America's First Labor War. Fordham University Press. p. 43. ISBN 9780823262243.
  2. ^ Carlyle, Thomas (11 November 2010). The Works of Thomas Carlyle. Cambridge University Press. p. 356. ISBN 9781108022354.
  3. ^ George C. Homans, English Villagers of the Thirteenth Century, 2nd ed. 1991, "The Husbandman's year" p355f.
  4. ^ Sulpicius Severus (397). De Vita Beati Martini Liber Unus [On the Life of St. Martin]. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  5. ^ Dent, Susie (2020). Word Perfect: Etymological Entertainment For Every Day of the Year. John Murray. ISBN 978-1-5293-1150-1.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Walsh, Martin (2000). "Medieval English Martinmesse: The Archaeology of a Forgotten Festival". Folklore. 111 (2): 231–249. doi:10.1080/00155870020004620. S2CID 162382811.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Miles, Clement A. (1912). Christmas in Ritual and Tradition. Chapter 7: All Hallow Tide to Martinmas. Reproduced by Internet Sacred Text Archive.
  8. ^ "St Martin's Day – or 'Martin Goose'" Lilja, Agneta. Sweden.se magazine-format website
  9. ^ a b For instance, in Hugh Johnson, Vintage: The Story of Wine 1989, p 97.
  10. ^ per Matthew 2:1–2:12
  11. ^ Philip H. Pfatteicher, Journey into the Heart of God (Oxford University Press 2013 ISBN 978-0-19999714-5)
  12. ^ "Saint Martin's Lent". Encyclopædia Britannica. Britannica. Retrieved 4 December 2013.
  13. ^ "Autumn Feast of St. Martin", Austrian Tourism Board
  14. ^ Thomson, George William. Peeps At Many Lands: Belgium, Library of Alexandria, 1909
  15. ^ "St. Martin’s Day traditions honor missionary", Kaiserlautern American, 7 November 2008
  16. ^ a b "Celebrating St. Martin's Day on November 11", German Missions in the United States 2012-01-06 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ German traditions in the US for St. Martin's Day
  18. ^ "St. Martin's Day", St. Paul Star Tribune, November 5, 2015
  19. ^ "St. Martin's Day Family Celebration". Dayton Liederkranz-Turner. Retrieved 2021-11-02.
  20. ^ "Mårten Gås", Sweden.SE
  21. ^ "St. Martin’s Day specials at Prague restaurants", Prague Post, 11 November 2011
  22. ^ "St. Martin's Day Celebrations"
  23. ^ "St. Martin’s Day Celebrations in Maribor", Slovenian Tourist Board
  24. ^ a b c Marion McGarry (11 November 2020). "Why blood sacrifice rites were common in Ireland on 11 November". RTE. Retrieved 13 November 2020. Opinion: Blood sacrifices involving pigs, sheep or geese were practiced in Ireland well into living memory on Martinmas. ... the custom extended from North Connacht, down to Kerry, and across the midlands and was rarer in Ulster or on the east coast. ... some say the saint met his death by being crushed between two wheels
  25. ^ Súilleabháin, Seán Ó (2012). Miraculous Plenty; Irish Religious Folktales and Legends. Four Courts Press. pp. 183-191 and 269. ISBN 978-0-9565628-2-1.
  26. ^ "A Wexford Legend - St Martin's Eve".
  27. ^ Matthews, John; Matthews, Caitlín (2005). The Element Encyclopedia of Magical Creatures. HarperElement. p. 119. ISBN 978-1-4351-1086-1.
  28. ^ Trevelyan, Marie (1909). Folk Lore And Folk Stories Of Wales. p. 13. ISBN 9781497817180.
  29. ^ Leite de Vasconcelos, Opúsculos Etnologia — volumes VII, Lisboa, Imprensa Nacional, 1938
  30. ^ Gangi, Roberta. "The Joys of St Martin's Summer", Best of Sicily Magazine, 2010

External links

  Media related to St. Martin's Day at Wikimedia Commons

  • How to make a St. Martin's Day lantern
  • UK History of Martinmas
  • St. Martin's Day in Germany
  • St. Martin of Tours
  • Alice's Medieval Feasts & Fasts

martin, saint, martin, martinmas, sometimes, historically, called, halloween, hallowmas, feast, saint, martin, tours, celebrated, liturgical, year, november, middle, ages, early, modern, period, important, festival, many, parts, europe, particularly, germanic,. Saint Martin s Day or Martinmas sometimes historically called Old Halloween or Old Hallowmas Eve 1 2 is the feast day of Saint Martin of Tours and is celebrated in the liturgical year on 11 November In the Middle Ages and early modern period it was an important festival in many parts of Europe particularly Germanic speaking regions In these regions it marked the end of the harvest season and beginning of winter 3 and the winter revelling season Traditions include feasting on Martinmas goose or Martinmas beef drinking the first wine of the season and mumming In some German and Dutch speaking towns there are processions of children with lanterns Laternelaufen sometimes led by a horseman representing St Martin The saint was also said to bestow gifts on children In the Rhineland it is also marked by lighting bonfires St Martin s Day Kermis by Peeter Baltens 16th century shows peasants celebrating by drinking the first wine of the season and a horseman representing the saint Martin of Tours died 397 was a Roman soldier who was baptized as an adult and became a bishop in Gaul He is best known for the tale whereby he cut his cloak in half with his sword to give half to a beggar who was dressed in only rags in the depth of winter That night Martin had a vision of Jesus Christ wearing the half cloak 4 5 Contents 1 Customs 1 1 Feasting and drinking 1 2 Bonfires and lanterns 1 3 Gift bringers 1 4 Eve of St Martin s Lent 2 Celebrations by culture 2 1 Germanic 2 1 1 Austrian 2 1 2 Dutch and Flemish 2 1 3 English 2 1 4 German 2 1 5 German American 2 1 6 Swedish 2 2 Slavic 2 2 1 Croatian 2 2 2 Czech 2 2 3 Polish 2 2 4 Slovene 2 3 Celtic 2 3 1 Irish 2 3 2 Welsh 2 4 Latvian 2 5 Maltese 2 6 Portuguese and Galician 2 7 Sicilian 3 In art 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksCustoms Edit A tradition on St Martin s Eve or Day is to share a goose for dinner Traditionally in many parts of Europe St Martin s Day marked the end of the harvest and the beginning of winter The feast coincides with the end of the Octave of Allhallowtide Feasting and drinking Edit Martinmas was traditionally when livestock were slaughtered for winter provision 6 It may originally have been a time of animal sacrifice as the Old English name for November was Blōtmōnath sacrifice month 7 Goose is eaten at Martinmas in most places There is a legend that St Martin when trying to avoid being ordained bishop hid in a pen of geese whose cackling gave him away Once a key medieval autumn feast a custom of eating goose on the day spread to Sweden from France It was primarily observed by the craftsmen and noblemen of the towns In the peasant community not everyone could afford this so many ate duck or hen instead 8 In winegrowing regions of Europe the first wine was ready around the time of Martinmas Although there was no mention of a link between St Martin and winegrowing by Gregory of Tours or other early hagiographers St Martin is widely credited in France with helping to spread winemaking throughout the region of Tours Touraine and facilitating vine planting The old Greek tale that Aristaeus discovered the advantage of pruning vines after watching a goat has been appropriated to St Martin 9 He is credited with introducing the Chenin blanc grape from which most of the white wine of western Touraine and Anjou is made 9 Bonfires and lanterns Edit Bonfires are lit on St Martin s Eve in the Rhineland region of Germany In the fifteenth century these bonfires were so numerous that the festival was nicknamed Funkentag spark day 7 In the nineteenth century it was recorded that young people danced around the fire and leapt through the flames and that the ashes were strewn on the fields to make them fertile 7 Similar customs were part of the Gaelic festival Samhain 1 November In some German and Dutch speaking towns there are nighttime processions of children carrying paper lanterns or turnip lanterns and singing songs of St Martin 7 These processions are known in German as Laternelaufen Gift bringers Edit See also Companions of Saint Nicholas In parts of Flanders and the Rhineland processions are led by a man on horseback representing St Martin who may give out apples nuts cakes or other sweets for children 7 Historically in Ypres children hung up stockings filled with hay on Martinmas Eve and awoke the next morning to find gifts in them These were said to have been left by St Martin as thanks for the fodder provided for his horse 7 In the Swabia and Ansbach regions of Germany a character called Pelzmarten pelt Martin or skin Martin appeared at Martinmas until the 19th century With a black face and wearing a cow bell he ran about frightening children and he dealt out blows as well as nuts and apples 7 Eve of St Martin s Lent Edit In the 6th century church councils began requiring fasting on all days except Saturdays and Sundays from Saint Martin s Day to Epiphany elsewhere the Feast of the Three Wise Men for the stopping of the star over Bethlehem 10 on January 6 56 days An addition to and an equivalent to the 40 days fasting of Lent given its weekend breaks this was called Quadragesima Sancti Martini Saint Martin s Lent or literally the fortieth of 11 This is rarely observed now This period was shortened to begin on the Sunday before December and became the current Advent within a few centuries 12 Celebrations by culture EditGermanic Edit Austrian Edit In Austria St Martin s Day is celebrated the same way as in Germany The nights before and on the night of 11 November children walk in processions carrying lanterns which they made in school and sing Martin songs citation needed Martinloben is celebrated as a collective festival Events include art exhibitions wine tastings and live music Martinigansl roasted goose is the traditional dish of the season 13 Dutch and Flemish Edit source source source source source source track Celebrating children in the Zaanstreek 1961 In the Netherlands on the evening of 11 November children go door to door mostly under parental supervision with lanterns made of hollowed out sugar beet or more recently paper singing songs such as Sinte re Sinte re Maarten to receive sweets or fruit in return In the past poor people would visit farms on 11 November to get food for the winter In the 1600s the city of Amsterdam held boat races on the IJ where 400 to 500 light craft both rowing boats and sailboats took part with a vast crowd on the banks St Martin is the patron saint of the city of Utrecht and St Martin s Day is celebrated there with a big lantern parade citation needed In Flanders the Dutch speaking part of Belgium St Martin s Eve is celebrated on the evening of 10 November mainly in West Flanders and around Ypres Children go through the streets with paper lanterns and candles and sing songs about St Martin Sometimes a man dressed as St Martin rides on a horse in front of the procession 14 The children receive presents from either their friends or family as supposedly coming from St Martin citation needed In some areas there is a traditional goose meal citation needed In Wervik children go from door to door singing traditional Sengmarteng songs sporting a hollow beetroot with a carved face and a candle inside called Bolle Sengmarteng they gather at an evening bonfire At the end the beetroots are thrown into the fire and pancakes are served citation needed English Edit Martinmas was widely celebrated on 11 November in medieval and early modern England In his study Medieval English Martinmesse The Archaeology of a Forgotten Festival Martin Walsh describes Martinmas as a festival marking the end of the harvest season and beginning of winter 6 He suggests it had pre Christian roots 6 Martinmas ushered in the winter revelling season and involved feasting on the meat of livestock that had been slaughtered for winter provision especially Martlemas beef drinking storytelling and mumming 6 It was a time for saying farewell to travelling ploughmen who shared in the feast along with the harvest workers 6 According to Walsh Martinmas eventually died out in England as a result of the English Reformation the emergence of Guy Fawkes Night 5 November as well as changes in farming and the Industrial Revolution 6 Today 11 November is Remembrance Day German Edit St Martin s procession with children carrying paper lanterns in West Germany in 1949 source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Martin s procession and Martin s bonfire Konz Germany Rhineland Palatinate 2016 A widespread custom in Germany is to light bonfires called Martinsfeuer on St Martin s Eve In recent years the processions that accompany those fires have been spread over almost a fortnight before Martinmas Martinstag At one time the Rhine River valley would be lined with fires on the eve of Martinmas In the Rhineland Martin s day is celebrated traditionally with a get together during which a roasted suckling pig is shared with the neighbours The nights before and on the eve itself children walk in processions called Laternelaufen carrying lanterns which they made in school and sing St Martin s songs Usually the walk starts at a church and goes to a public square A man on horseback representing St Martin accompanies the children When they reach the square Martin s bonfire is lit and Martin s pretzels are distributed 15 In the Rhineland the children also go from house to house with their lanterns sing songs and get candy in return The origin of the procession of lanterns is unclear To some it is a substitute for the Martinmas bonfire which is still lit in a few cities and villages throughout Europe It formerly symbolized the light that holiness brings to the darkness just as St Martin brought hope to the poor through his good deeds Even though the bonfire tradition is gradually being lost the procession of lanterns is still practiced 16 A Martinsgans St Martin s goose is typically served on St Martin s Eve following the procession of lanterns Martinsgans is usually served in restaurants roasted with red cabbage and dumplings 16 The traditional sweet of Martinmas in the Rhineland is Martinshornchen a pastry shaped in the form of a croissant which recalls both the hooves of St Martin s horse and by being the half of a pretzel the parting of his mantle In some areas these pastries are instead shaped like men Stutenkerl or Weckmanner St Martin s Day is also celebrated in German Lorraine and Alsace which border the Rhineland and are now part of France Children receive gifts and sweets In Alsace in particular the Haut Rhin mountainous region families with young children make lanterns out of painted paper that they carry in a colourful procession up the mountain at night Some schools organise these events in particular schools of the Rudolf Steiner Waldorf education pedagogy In these regions the day marks the beginning of the holiday season citation needed In the German speaking parts of Belgium notably Eupen and Sankt Vith processions similar to those in Germany take place citation needed German American Edit In the United States St Martin s Day celebrations are uncommon but are typically held by German American communities 17 Many German restaurants feature a traditional menu with goose and Gluhwein a mulled red wine St Paul Minnesota celebrates with a traditional lantern procession around Rice Park The evening includes German treats and traditions that highlight the season of giving 18 In Dayton Ohio the Dayton Liederkranz Turner organization hosts a St Martin s Family Celebration on the weekend before with an evening lantern parade to the singing of St Martin s carols followed by a bonfire 19 Swedish Edit St Martin s Day or St Martin s Eve Martensafton was an important medieval autumn feast in Sweden In early November geese are ready for slaughter and on St Martin s Eve it is tradition to have a roast goose dinner The custom is particularly popular in Scania in southern Sweden where goose farming has long been practised but it has gradually spread northwards A proper goose dinner also includes svartsoppa a heavily spiced soup made from geese blood and apple charlotte 20 Slavic Edit Croatian Edit In Croatia St Martin s Day Martinje Martinovanje marks the day when the must traditionally turns to wine The must is usually considered impure and sinful until it is baptised and turned into wine The baptism is performed by someone who dresses up as a bishop and blesses the wine this is usually done by the host Another person is chosen as the godfather of the wine Czech Edit A Czech proverb connected with the Feast of St Martin Martin prijizdi na bilem koni transl Martin is coming on a white horse signifies that the first half of November in the Czech Republic is the time when it often starts to snow St Martin s Day is the traditional feast day in the run up to Advent Restaurants often serve roast goose as well as young wine from the recent harvest known as Svatomartinske vino which is similar to Beaujolais nouveau as the first wine of the season Wine shops and restaurants around Prague pour the first of the St Martin s wines at 11 11 a m Many restaurants offer special menus for the day featuring the traditional roast goose 21 Polish Edit Procession of Saint Martin in Poznan 2006 In Poland 11 November is National Independence Day St Martin s Day Dzien Swietego Marcina is celebrated mainly in the city of Poznan where its citizens buy and eat considerable amounts of croissants filled with almond paste with white poppy seeds the Rogal swietomarcinski or St Martin s Croissants Legend has it that this centuries old tradition commemorates a Poznan baker s dream which had the saint entering the city on a white horse that lost its golden horseshoe The next morning the baker whipped up horseshoe shaped croissants filled with almonds white poppy seeds and nuts and gave them to the poor In recent years competition amongst local patisseries has become fierce The product is registered under the European Union Protected Designation of Origin and only a limited number of bakers hold an official certificate Poznanians celebrate the festival with concerts parades and a fireworks show on Saint Martin s Street Goose meat dishes are also eaten during the holiday 22 Slovene Edit The biggest event in Slovenia is the St Martin s Day celebration in Maribor which marks the symbolic winding up of all the wine growers endeavours There is the ceremonial christening of the new wine and the arrival of the Wine Queen The square Trg Leona Stuklja is filled with musicians and stalls offering autumn produce and delicacies 23 Celtic Edit Irish Edit In some parts 24 of Ireland on the eve of St Martin s Day La Fheile Martain in Irish it was tradition to sacrifice a cockerel by bleeding it The blood was collected and sprinkled on the four corners of the house 25 24 Also in Ireland no wheel of any kind was to turn on St Martin s Day because Martin was said by some people 24 to have been thrown into a mill stream and killed by the wheel and so it was not right to turn any kind of wheel on that day A local legend in Co Wexford says that putting to sea is to be avoided as St Martin rides a white horse across Wexford Bay bringing death by drowning to any who see him 26 Welsh Edit In Welsh mythology the day is associated with the Cŵn Annwn the spectral hounds who escort souls to the otherworld Annwn St Martin s Day was one of the few nights the hounds would engage in a Wild Hunt stalking the land for criminals and villains 27 The supernatural character of the day in Welsh culture is evident in the number omens associated with it Marie Trevelyan recorded that if the hooting of an owl was heard on St Martin s Day it was seen as a bad omen for that district If a meteor was seen then there would be trouble for the whole nation 28 Latvian Edit Martini Martin s is traditionally celebrated by Latvians on 10 November marking the end of the preparations for winter such as salting meat and fish storing the harvest and making preserves Martini also marks the beginning of masquerading and sledding among other winter activities Maltese Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources St Martin s Day news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message A Maltese Borza ta San Martin St Martin s Day Jum San Martin in Maltese is celebrated in Malta on the Sunday nearest to 11 November Children are given a bag full of fruits and sweets associated with the feast known by the Maltese as Il Borza ta San Martin St Martin s bag This bag may include walnuts hazelnuts almonds chestnuts dried or processed figs seasonal fruit like oranges tangerines apples and pomegranates and Saint Martin s bread roll Maltese Ħobza ta San Martin In old days nuts were used by the children in their games There is a traditional rhyme associated with this custom Ġewz Lewz Qastan TinKemm inħobbu lil San Martin Walnuts Almonds Chestnuts FigsI love Saint Martin so much A feast is celebrated in the village of Baħrija on the outskirts of Rabat including a procession led by the statue of Saint Martin There is also a fair and a show for local animals San Anton School a private school on the island organises a walk to and from a cave especially associated with Martin in remembrance of the day Portuguese and Galician Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources St Martin s Day news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In Portugal St Martin s Day Dia de Sao Martinho is commonly associated with the celebration of the maturation of the year s wine being traditionally the first day when the new wine can be tasted It is celebrated traditionally around a bonfire eating the magusto chestnuts roasted under the embers of the bonfire sometimes dry figs and walnuts and drinking a local light alcoholic beverage called agua pe literally foot water made by adding water to the pomace left after the juice is pressed out of the grapes for wine traditionally by stomping on them in vats with bare feet and letting it ferment for several days or the stronger jeropiga a sweet liquor obtained in a very similar fashion with aguardente added to the water Agua pe though no longer available for sale in supermarkets and similar outlets it is officially banned for sale in Portugal is still generally available in small local shops from domestic production citation needed Leite de Vasconcelos regarded the magusto as the vestige of an ancient sacrifice to honor the dead and stated that it was tradition in Barqueiros to prepare at midnight a table with chestnuts for the deceased family members to eat 29 The people also mask their faces with the dark wood ashes from the bonfire citation needed A typical Portuguese saying related to Saint Martin s Day E dia de Sao Martinho comem se castanhas prova se o vinho It is St Martin s Day we ll eat chestnuts we ll taste the wine This period is also quite popular because of the usual good weather period that occurs in Portugal in this time of year called Verao de Sao Martinho St Martin s Summer It is frequently tied to the legend since Portuguese versions of St Martin s legend usually replace the snowstorm with rain because snow is not frequent in most parts of Portugal while rain is common at that time of the year and have Jesus bringing the end of it thus making the summer a gift from God citation needed St Martin s Day is widely celebrated in Galicia It is the traditional day for slaughtering fattened pigs for the winter This tradition has given way to the popular saying A cada cerdo le llega su San Martin from Galician A cada porquino chegalle o seu San Martino Every pig gets its St Martin The phrase is used to indicate that wrongdoers eventually get their comeuppance Sicilian Edit In Sicily November is the winemaking season On the day Sicilians eat anise hard biscuits dipped into Moscato Malvasia or Passito l Estate di San Martino Saint Martin s Summer is the traditional reference to a period of unseasonably warm weather in early to mid November possibly shared with the Normans who founded the Kingdom of Sicily as common in at least late English folklore The day is celebrated in a special way in a village near Messina and at a monastery dedicated to Saint Martin overlooking Palermo beyond Monreale 30 Other places in Sicily mark the day by eating fava beans citation needed In art EditPieter Bruegel the Elder s physically largest painting is The Wine of Saint Martin s Day which depicts the saint giving charity There is a closely similar painting by Peeter Baltens which can be seen here See also EditSt Catherine s DayReferences Edit Bulik Mark 1 January 2015 The Sons of Molly Maguire The Irish Roots of America s First Labor War Fordham University Press p 43 ISBN 9780823262243 Carlyle Thomas 11 November 2010 The Works of Thomas Carlyle Cambridge University Press p 356 ISBN 9781108022354 George C Homans English Villagers of the Thirteenth Century 2nd ed 1991 The Husbandman s year p355f Sulpicius Severus 397 De Vita Beati Martini Liber Unus On the Life of St Martin Retrieved 2 November 2021 Dent Susie 2020 Word Perfect Etymological Entertainment For Every Day of the Year John Murray ISBN 978 1 5293 1150 1 a b c d e f Walsh Martin 2000 Medieval English Martinmesse The Archaeology of a Forgotten Festival Folklore 111 2 231 249 doi 10 1080 00155870020004620 S2CID 162382811 a b c d e f g Miles Clement A 1912 Christmas in Ritual and Tradition Chapter 7 All Hallow Tide to Martinmas Reproduced by Internet Sacred Text Archive St Martin s Day or Martin Goose Lilja Agneta Sweden se magazine format website a b For instance in Hugh Johnson Vintage The Story of Wine 1989 p 97 per Matthew 2 1 2 12 Philip H Pfatteicher Journey into the Heart of God Oxford University Press 2013 ISBN 978 0 19999714 5 Saint Martin s Lent Encyclopaedia Britannica Britannica Retrieved 4 December 2013 Autumn Feast of St Martin Austrian Tourism Board Thomson George William Peeps At Many Lands Belgium Library of Alexandria 1909 St Martin s Day traditions honor missionary Kaiserlautern American 7 November 2008 a b Celebrating St Martin s Day on November 11 German Missions in the United States Archived 2012 01 06 at the Wayback Machine German traditions in the US for St Martin s Day St Martin s Day St Paul Star Tribune November 5 2015 St Martin s Day Family Celebration Dayton Liederkranz Turner Retrieved 2021 11 02 Marten Gas Sweden SE St Martin s Day specials at Prague restaurants Prague Post 11 November 2011 St Martin s Day Celebrations St Martin s Day Celebrations in Maribor Slovenian Tourist Board a b c Marion McGarry 11 November 2020 Why blood sacrifice rites were common in Ireland on 11 November RTE Retrieved 13 November 2020 Opinion Blood sacrifices involving pigs sheep or geese were practiced in Ireland well into living memory on Martinmas the custom extended from North Connacht down to Kerry and across the midlands and was rarer in Ulster or on the east coast some say the saint met his death by being crushed between two wheels Suilleabhain Sean o 2012 Miraculous Plenty Irish Religious Folktales and Legends Four Courts Press pp 183 191 and 269 ISBN 978 0 9565628 2 1 A Wexford Legend St Martin s Eve Matthews John Matthews Caitlin 2005 The Element Encyclopedia of Magical Creatures HarperElement p 119 ISBN 978 1 4351 1086 1 Trevelyan Marie 1909 Folk Lore And Folk Stories Of Wales p 13 ISBN 9781497817180 Leite de Vasconcelos Opusculos Etnologia volumes VII Lisboa Imprensa Nacional 1938 Gangi Roberta The Joys of St Martin s Summer Best of Sicily Magazine 2010External links Edit Media related to St Martin s Day at Wikimedia Commons How to make a St Martin s Day lantern UK History of Martinmas St Martin s Day in Germany St Martin of Tours Alice s Medieval Feasts amp Fasts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Martin 27s Day amp oldid 1145573483, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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