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Yule

Yule (also called Jul, jól or joulu) is a winter festival historically observed by the Germanic peoples that was incorporated into Christmas during the Christianisation of the Germanic peoples. In present times adherents of some new religious movements (such as Modern Germanic paganism) celebrate Yule independently of the Christian festival. Scholars have connected the original celebrations of Yule to the Wild Hunt, the god Odin, and the heathen Anglo-Saxon Mōdraniht ("Mothers' Night"). The term Yule and cognates are still used in English and the Scandinavian languages as well as in Finnish and Estonian to describe Christmas and other festivals occurring during the winter holiday season. Furthermore, some present-day Christmas customs and traditions such as the Yule log, Yule goat, Yule boar, Yule singing, and others may have connections to older pagan Yule traditions.

Yule
Hauling a Yule log in 1832
Also calledYuletide, Yulefest
Observed byVarious Northern Europeans, Germanic peoples, Heathens, Wiccans, atheistic Satanists
TypeCultural, Germanic pagan, modern pagan
SignificanceWinter festival
DateSee § Date of observance
FrequencyAnnual
Related toMidwinter, Christmastide, Christmas

Etymology edit

The modern English noun Yule descends from Old English ġēol, earlier geoh(h)ol, geh(h)ol, and geóla, sometimes plural.[1] The Old English ġēol or ġēohol and ġēola or ġēoli indicate the 12-day festival of "Yule" (later: "Christmastide"), the latter indicating the month of "Yule", whereby ǣrra ġēola referred to the period before the Yule festival (December) and æftera ġēola referred to the period after Yule (January). Both words are cognate with Gothic 𐌾𐌹𐌿𐌻𐌴𐌹𐍃 (jiuleis); Old Norse, Icelandic, Faroese and Norwegian Nynorsk jól, jol, ýlir; Danish, Swedish, and Norwegian Bokmål jul, and are thought to be derived from Proto-Germanic *jehwlą-.[2][3] Whether the term existed exterior to the Germanic languages remains uncertain, though numerous speculative attempts have been made to find Indo-European cognates outside the Germanic group, too.[a] The compound noun Yuletide ('Yule-time') is first attested from around 1475.[4]

The word is conjectured in an explicitly pre-Christian context primarily in Old Norse, where it is associated with Old Norse deities. Among many others (see List of names of Odin), the long-bearded god Odin bears the name Jólnir ('the Yule one'). In Ágrip, composed in the 12th century, jól is interpreted as coming from one of Odin's names, Jólnir, closely related to Old Norse jólnar, a poetic name for the gods. In Old Norse poetry, the word is found as a term for 'feast', e.g. hugins jól (→ 'a raven's feast').[5]

It has been thought that Old French jolif (→ French joli), which was borrowed into English in the 14th century as 'jolly', is itself borrowed from Old Norse jól (with the Old French suffix -if; compare Old French aisif "easy", Modern French festif = fest "feast" + -if), according to the Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology[6] and several other French dictionaries of etymology.[7][8] But the Oxford English Dictionary sees this explanation for jolif as unlikely.[9] The French word is first attested in the Anglo-Norman Estoire des Engleis, or "History of the English People", written by Geoffrey Gaimar between 1136 and 1140.[8]

Germanic paganism edit

Attestations edit

Months, heiti and kennings edit

 
Illustration of an ancient Nordic Yule festival (Die Gartenlaube, 1880)

Yule is attested early in the history of the Germanic peoples; in a Gothic language calendar of the 5–6th century CE it appears in the month name fruma jiuleis, and, in the 8th century, the English historian Bede wrote that the Anglo-Saxon calendar included the months geola or giuli corresponding to either modern December or December and January.[10]

While the Old Norse month name ýlir is similarly attested, the Old Norse corpus also contains numerous references to an event by the Old Norse form of the name, jól. In chapter 55 of the Prose Edda book Skáldskaparmál, different names for the gods are given; one is "Yule-beings" (Old Norse: jólnar). A work by the skald Eyvindr skáldaspillir that uses the term is then quoted: "again we have produced Yule-being's feast [mead of poetry], our rulers' eulogy, like a bridge of masonry".[11] In addition, one of the numerous names of Odin is Jólnir, referring to the event.[12]

Heitstrenging edit

Both Helgakviða Hjörvarðssonar and Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks provide accounts of the custom of heitstrenging. In these sources, the tradition takes place on Yule-evening and consists of people placing their hands on a pig referred to as a sonargöltr before swearing solemn oaths. In the latter text, some manuscripts explicitly refer to the pig as holy, that it was devoted to Freyr and that after the oath-swearing it was sacrificed.[13]

Saga of Hákon the Good edit

The Saga of Hákon the Good credits King Haakon I of Norway who ruled from 934 to 961 with the Christianization of Norway as well as rescheduling Yule to coincide with Christian celebrations held at the time. The saga says that when Haakon arrived in Norway he was a confirmed Christian, but since the land was still altogether heathen and the people retained their pagan practices, Haakon hid his Christianity to receive the help of the "great chieftains". In time, Haakon had a law passed establishing that Yule celebrations were to take place at the same time as the Christians celebrated Christmas, "and at that time everyone was to have ale for the celebration with a measure of grain, or else pay fines, and had to keep the holiday while the ale lasted."[14]

Haakon planned that when he had solidly established himself and held power over the whole country, he would then "have the gospel preached". According to the saga, the result was that his popularity caused many to allow themselves to be baptized, and some people stopped making sacrifices. Haakon spent most of this time in Trondheim. When Haakon believed that he wielded enough power, he requested a bishop and other priests from England, and they came to Norway. On their arrival, "Haakon made it known that he would have the gospel preached in the whole country." The saga continues, describing the different reactions of various regional things.[14]

A description of heathen Yule practices is provided (notes are Hollander's own):

Old Norse text[15] Hollander translation[16]
Þat var forn siðr, þá er blót skyldi vera, at allir bœndr skyldu þar koma sem hof var ok flytja þannug föng sín, þau er þeir skyldu hafa, meðan veizlan stóð. At veizlu þeirri skyldu allir menn öl eiga; þar var ok drepinn allskonar smali ok svá hross; en blóð þat alt, er þar kom af, þá var kallat hlaut, ok hlautbollar þat, er blóð þat stóð í, ok hlautteinar, þat var svá gert sem stöklar; með því skyldi rjóða stallana öllu saman, ok svá veggi hofsins utan ok innan, ok svá stökkva á mennina; en slátr skyldi sjóða til mannfagnaðar. Eldar skyldu vera á miðju gólfi í hofinu ok þar katlar yfir; ok skyldi full um eld bera. En sá er gerði veizluna ok höfðingi var, þá skyldi hann signa fullit ok allan blótmatinn. It was ancient custom that when sacrifice was to be made, all farmers were to come to the heathen temple and bring along with them the food they needed while the feast lasted. At this feast all were to take part of the drinking of ale. Also all kinds of livestock were killed in connection with it, horses also; and all the blood from them was called hlaut [sacrificial blood], and hlautbolli, the vessel holding the blood; and hlautteinar, the sacrificial twigs [‌aspergills‌]. These were fashioned like sprinklers, and with them were to be smeared all over with blood the pedestals of the idols and also the walls of the temple within and without; and likewise the men present were to be sprinkled with blood. But the meat of the animals was to be boiled and served as food at the banquet. Fires were to be lighted in the middle of the temple floor, and kettles hung over the fires. The sacrificial beaker was to be borne around the fire, and he who made the feast and was chieftain, was to bless the beaker as well as all the sacrificial meat.

The narrative continues that toasts were to be drunk. The first toast was to be drunk to Odin "for victory and power to the king", the second to the gods Njörðr and Freyr "for good harvests and for peace", and third, a beaker was to be drunk to the king himself. In addition, toasts were drunk to the memory of departed kinsfolk. These were called minni.[16]

Academic reception edit

Significance and connection to other events edit

Scholar Rudolf Simek says the pagan Yule feast "had a pronounced religious character" and that "it is uncertain whether the Germanic Yule feast still had a function in the cult of the dead and in the veneration of the ancestors, a function which the mid-winter sacrifice certainly held for the West European Stone and Bronze Ages." The traditions of the Yule log, Yule goat, Yule boar (Sonargöltr, still reflected in the Christmas ham), Yule singing, and others possibly have connections to pre-Christian Yule customs, which Simek says "indicates the significance of the feast in pre-Christian times."[17]

Scholars have connected the month event and Yule period to the Wild Hunt (a ghostly procession in the winter sky), the god Odin (who is attested in Germanic areas as leading the Wild Hunt and bears the name Jólnir), and increased supernatural activity, such as the Wild Hunt and the increased activities of draugar—undead beings who walk the earth.[18]

Mōdraniht, an event focused on collective female beings attested by Bede as having occurred among the heathen Anglo-Saxons when Christians celebrated Christmas Eve, has been seen as further evidence of a fertility event during the Yule period.[19]

Date of observance edit

The exact dating of the pre-Christian Yule celebrations is unclear and debated among scholars. Snorri in Hákonar saga góða describes how the three-day feast began on "Midwinter Night", however this is distinct from the winter solstice, occurring approximately one month later. Andreas Nordberg proposes that Yule was celebrated on the full moon of the second Yule month in the Early Germanic calendar (the month that started on the first new moon after the winter solstice), which could range from 5 January to 2 February in the Gregorian calendar. Nordberg positions the Midwinter Nights from 19 to 21 January in the Gregorian calendar, falling roughly in the middle of Nordberg's range of Yule dates. In addition to Snorri's account, Nordberg's dating is also consistent with the account of the great blót at Lejre by Thietmar of Merseburg.[20]

Contemporary traditions edit

Relationship with Christmas in Northern Europe edit

In modern Germanic language-speaking areas and some other Northern European countries, yule and its cognates denote the Christmas holiday season. In addition to yule and yuletide in English,[21] examples include jul in Sweden, Denmark, and Norway, jól in Iceland and the Faroe Islands, joulu in Finland, Joelfest in Friesland, Joelfeest in the Netherlands and jõulud in Estonia.[citation needed]

Modern paganism edit

As contemporary pagan religions differ in both origin and practice, these representations of Yule can vary considerably despite the shared name. Some Heathens, for example, celebrate in a way as close as possible to how they believe ancient Germanic pagans observed the tradition, while others observe the holiday with rituals "assembled from different sources."[22] Heathen celebrations of Yule can also include sharing a meal and gift-giving.[citation needed]

In most forms of Wicca, this holiday is celebrated at the winter solstice as the rebirth of the Great horned hunter god,[23] who is viewed as the newborn solstice sun. The method of gathering for this sabbat varies by practitioner. Some have private ceremonies at home,[24] while others do so with their covens:

Generally meeting in covens, which anoint their own priests and priestesses, Wiccans chant and cast or draw circles to invoke their deities, mainly during festivals like Samhain and Yule, which coincide with Halloween and Christmas, and when the moon is full.[25]

LaVeyan Satanism edit

Some members of the Church of Satan and other LaVeyan Satanist groups celebrate Yule at the same time as the Christian holiday in a secular manner.[26]

See also edit

  • Dísablót, an event attested from Old Norse sources as having occurred among the pagan Norse
  • Julebord, the modern Scandinavian Christmas feast
  • Koliada, a Slavic winter festival
  • Lohri, a Punjabi winter solstice festival
  • Saturnalia, an ancient Roman winter festival in honour of the deity Saturn
  • Yaldā Night, an Iranian festival celebrated on the "longest and darkest night of the year."
  • Nardoqan, the birth of the sun, is an ancient Turkic festival that celebrates the winter solstice.

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ For a brief overview of the proposed etymologies, see Orel (2003:205).

Citations edit

  1. ^ OED Online (2022).
  2. ^ Bosworth & Toller (1898:424); Hoad (1996:550); Orel (2003:205).
  3. ^ "jol". Bokmålsordboka | Nynorskordboka. from the original on 12 March 2017. Retrieved 11 March 2017.
  4. ^ Barnhart (1995:896).
  5. ^ Vigfússon (1874:326).
  6. ^ Hoad (1993)
  7. ^ Dictionnaire historique de la langue française (sous la direction d'Alain Rey), édition Le Robert, t. 2, 2012, p. 1805ab
  8. ^ a b "JOLI : Etymologie de JOLI". www.cnrtl.fr. from the original on 24 August 2022. Retrieved 24 August 2022.
  9. ^ "jolly, adj. and adv. 16 October 2023 at the Wayback Machine" OED Online, Oxford University Press, December 2019. Accessed 9 December 2019.
  10. ^ Simek (2007:379).
  11. ^ Faulkes (1995:133).
  12. ^ Simek (2007:180–181).
  13. ^ Kovářová (2011:195–196).
  14. ^ a b Hollander (2007:106).
  15. ^ "Saga Hákonar góða – heimskringla.no". heimskringla.no. from the original on 16 October 2023. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
  16. ^ a b Hollander (2007:107).
  17. ^ Simek (2007:379–380).
  18. ^ Simek (2007:180–181, 379–380) and Orchard (1997:187).
  19. ^ Orchard (1997:187).
  20. ^ Nordberg, Andreas (2006). "Jul, disting och förkyrklig tideräkning". Acta Academiae Regiae Gustavi Adolphi. 91: 155–156. from the original on 14 March 2023. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
  21. ^ OED Online (2022).
  22. ^ Hutton (2008).
  23. ^ Buescher (2007).
  24. ^ Kannapell (1997).
  25. ^ La Ferla (2000).
  26. ^ Escobedo (2015).

Works cited edit

  • Barnhart, Robert K. (1995). The Barnhart Concise Dictionary of Etymology. HarperCollins. ISBN 0062700847.
  • Bosworth, Joseph; Toller, T. Northcote (1898). An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Buescher, James (15 December 2007). . Lancaster Online. Archived from the original on 29 December 2007. Retrieved 21 December 2007.
  • Escobedo, Tricia (11 December 2015). "5 things you didn't know about Satanists". CNN. from the original on 7 March 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2019. So for the Yule holiday season we enjoy the richness of life and the company of people whom we cherish, as we will often be the only ones who know where the traditions really came from!
  • Faulkes, Anthony, ed. (1995). Edda. Translated by Anthony Faulkes. Everyman. ISBN 0-460-87616-3.
  • Hoad, T. F. (1993). English Etymology. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-283098-8.
  • Hoad, T. F. (1996). The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-283098-8.
  • Hollander, Lee M., ed. (2007). Heimskringla: History of the Kings of Norway. Translated by Lee M. Hollander. Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-73061-8.
  • Hutton, Ronald (December 2008). "Modern Pagan Festivals: A Study in the Nature of Tradition". Folklore. Taylor & Francis. 119 (3): 251–273. doi:10.1080/00155870802352178. JSTOR 40646468. S2CID 145003549.
  • Kannapell, Andrea (21 December 1997). "Celebrations; It's Solstice, Hanukkah, Kwannza: Let There Be Light!". The New York Times. from the original on 31 July 2009. Retrieved 21 December 2007.
  • Kovářová, Lenka (2011). The Swine in Old Nordic Religion and Worldview. S2CID 154250096.
  • La Ferla, Ruth (13 December 2000). "Like Magic, Witchcraft Charms Teenagers". The New York Times. from the original on 28 December 2007. Retrieved 21 December 2007.
  • OED Online (December 2022). "yule, n.". Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. from the original on 27 December 2022. Retrieved 27 December 2022.
  • Orchard, Andy (1997). Dictionary of Norse Myth and Legend. Cassell. ISBN 0-304-34520-2.
  • Orel, Vladimir (2003). A Handbook of Germanic Etymology. Leiden: Brill Publishers. p. 205. ISBN 90-04-12875-1.
  • Simek, Rudolf (2007). Dictionary of Northern Mythology. Translated by Angela Hall. D. S. Brewer. ISBN 978-0-85991-513-7.
  • Vigfússon, Guðbrandur (1874). An Icelandic-English Dictionary: Based on the Ms. Collections of the Late Richard Cleasby. Clarendon Press. OCLC 1077900672.

External links edit

  •   Quotations related to Yule at Wikiquote
  •   Media related to Yule at Wikimedia Commons

yule, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, about, ancient, pagan, festival, modern, revivals, christian, festival, christmas, joulu, redirects, here, album, joulu, album, also, called, jól, joulu, winter, festival, historically, observed, germanic, peop. For other uses see Yule disambiguation This article is about the ancient pagan festival and its modern revivals For the Christian festival see Christmas Joulu redirects here For the album see Joulu album Yule also called Jul jol or joulu is a winter festival historically observed by the Germanic peoples that was incorporated into Christmas during the Christianisation of the Germanic peoples In present times adherents of some new religious movements such as Modern Germanic paganism celebrate Yule independently of the Christian festival Scholars have connected the original celebrations of Yule to the Wild Hunt the god Odin and the heathen Anglo Saxon Mōdraniht Mothers Night The term Yule and cognates are still used in English and the Scandinavian languages as well as in Finnish and Estonian to describe Christmas and other festivals occurring during the winter holiday season Furthermore some present day Christmas customs and traditions such as the Yule log Yule goat Yule boar Yule singing and others may have connections to older pagan Yule traditions YuleHauling a Yule log in 1832Also calledYuletide YulefestObserved byVarious Northern Europeans Germanic peoples Heathens Wiccans atheistic SatanistsTypeCultural Germanic pagan modern paganSignificanceWinter festivalDateSee Date of observanceFrequencyAnnualRelated toMidwinter Christmastide ChristmasThis article contains Gothic characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of letters Contents 1 Etymology 2 Germanic paganism 2 1 Attestations 2 1 1 Months heiti and kennings 2 1 2 Heitstrenging 2 1 3 Saga of Hakon the Good 2 2 Academic reception 2 2 1 Significance and connection to other events 2 2 2 Date of observance 3 Contemporary traditions 3 1 Relationship with Christmas in Northern Europe 3 2 Modern paganism 3 3 LaVeyan Satanism 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Notes 5 2 Citations 5 3 Works cited 6 External linksEtymology editThe modern English noun Yule descends from Old English ġeol earlier geoh h ol geh h ol and geola sometimes plural 1 The Old English ġeol or ġeohol and ġeola or ġeoli indicate the 12 day festival of Yule later Christmastide the latter indicating the month of Yule whereby ǣrra ġeola referred to the period before the Yule festival December and aeftera ġeola referred to the period after Yule January Both words are cognate with Gothic 𐌾𐌹𐌿𐌻𐌴𐌹𐍃 jiuleis Old Norse Icelandic Faroese and Norwegian Nynorsk jol jol ylir Danish Swedish and Norwegian Bokmal jul and are thought to be derived from Proto Germanic jehwla 2 3 Whether the term existed exterior to the Germanic languages remains uncertain though numerous speculative attempts have been made to find Indo European cognates outside the Germanic group too a The compound noun Yuletide Yule time is first attested from around 1475 4 The word is conjectured in an explicitly pre Christian context primarily in Old Norse where it is associated with Old Norse deities Among many others see List of names of Odin the long bearded god Odin bears the name Jolnir the Yule one In Agrip composed in the 12th century jol is interpreted as coming from one of Odin s names Jolnir closely related to Old Norse jolnar a poetic name for the gods In Old Norse poetry the word is found as a term for feast e g hugins jol a raven s feast 5 It has been thought that Old French jolif French joli which was borrowed into English in the 14th century as jolly is itself borrowed from Old Norse jol with the Old French suffix if compare Old French aisif easy Modern French festif fest feast if according to the Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology 6 and several other French dictionaries of etymology 7 8 But the Oxford English Dictionary sees this explanation for jolif as unlikely 9 The French word is first attested in the Anglo Norman Estoire des Engleis or History of the English People written by Geoffrey Gaimar between 1136 and 1140 8 Germanic paganism editAttestations edit Months heiti and kennings edit nbsp Illustration of an ancient Nordic Yule festival Die Gartenlaube 1880 Yule is attested early in the history of the Germanic peoples in a Gothic language calendar of the 5 6th century CE it appears in the month name fruma jiuleis and in the 8th century the English historian Bede wrote that the Anglo Saxon calendar included the months geola or giuli corresponding to either modern December or December and January 10 While the Old Norse month name ylir is similarly attested the Old Norse corpus also contains numerous references to an event by the Old Norse form of the name jol In chapter 55 of the Prose Edda book Skaldskaparmal different names for the gods are given one is Yule beings Old Norse jolnar A work by the skald Eyvindr skaldaspillir that uses the term is then quoted again we have produced Yule being s feast mead of poetry our rulers eulogy like a bridge of masonry 11 In addition one of the numerous names of Odin is Jolnir referring to the event 12 Heitstrenging edit Both Helgakvida Hjorvardssonar and Hervarar saga ok Heidreks provide accounts of the custom of heitstrenging In these sources the tradition takes place on Yule evening and consists of people placing their hands on a pig referred to as a sonargoltr before swearing solemn oaths In the latter text some manuscripts explicitly refer to the pig as holy that it was devoted to Freyr and that after the oath swearing it was sacrificed 13 Saga of Hakon the Good edit The Saga of Hakon the Good credits King Haakon I of Norway who ruled from 934 to 961 with the Christianization of Norway as well as rescheduling Yule to coincide with Christian celebrations held at the time The saga says that when Haakon arrived in Norway he was a confirmed Christian but since the land was still altogether heathen and the people retained their pagan practices Haakon hid his Christianity to receive the help of the great chieftains In time Haakon had a law passed establishing that Yule celebrations were to take place at the same time as the Christians celebrated Christmas and at that time everyone was to have ale for the celebration with a measure of grain or else pay fines and had to keep the holiday while the ale lasted 14 Haakon planned that when he had solidly established himself and held power over the whole country he would then have the gospel preached According to the saga the result was that his popularity caused many to allow themselves to be baptized and some people stopped making sacrifices Haakon spent most of this time in Trondheim When Haakon believed that he wielded enough power he requested a bishop and other priests from England and they came to Norway On their arrival Haakon made it known that he would have the gospel preached in the whole country The saga continues describing the different reactions of various regional things 14 A description of heathen Yule practices is provided notes are Hollander s own Old Norse text 15 Hollander translation 16 THat var forn sidr tha er blot skyldi vera at allir bœndr skyldu thar koma sem hof var ok flytja thannug fong sin thau er their skyldu hafa medan veizlan stod At veizlu theirri skyldu allir menn ol eiga thar var ok drepinn allskonar smali ok sva hross en blod that alt er thar kom af tha var kallat hlaut ok hlautbollar that er blod that stod i ok hlautteinar that var sva gert sem stoklar med thvi skyldi rjoda stallana ollu saman ok sva veggi hofsins utan ok innan ok sva stokkva a mennina en slatr skyldi sjoda til mannfagnadar Eldar skyldu vera a midju golfi i hofinu ok thar katlar yfir ok skyldi full um eld bera En sa er gerdi veizluna ok hofdingi var tha skyldi hann signa fullit ok allan blotmatinn It was ancient custom that when sacrifice was to be made all farmers were to come to the heathen temple and bring along with them the food they needed while the feast lasted At this feast all were to take part of the drinking of ale Also all kinds of livestock were killed in connection with it horses also and all the blood from them was called hlaut sacrificial blood and hlautbolli the vessel holding the blood and hlautteinar the sacrificial twigs aspergills These were fashioned like sprinklers and with them were to be smeared all over with blood the pedestals of the idols and also the walls of the temple within and without and likewise the men present were to be sprinkled with blood But the meat of the animals was to be boiled and served as food at the banquet Fires were to be lighted in the middle of the temple floor and kettles hung over the fires The sacrificial beaker was to be borne around the fire and he who made the feast and was chieftain was to bless the beaker as well as all the sacrificial meat The narrative continues that toasts were to be drunk The first toast was to be drunk to Odin for victory and power to the king the second to the gods Njordr and Freyr for good harvests and for peace and third a beaker was to be drunk to the king himself In addition toasts were drunk to the memory of departed kinsfolk These were called minni 16 Academic reception edit Significance and connection to other events edit Scholar Rudolf Simek says the pagan Yule feast had a pronounced religious character and that it is uncertain whether the Germanic Yule feast still had a function in the cult of the dead and in the veneration of the ancestors a function which the mid winter sacrifice certainly held for the West European Stone and Bronze Ages The traditions of the Yule log Yule goat Yule boar Sonargoltr still reflected in the Christmas ham Yule singing and others possibly have connections to pre Christian Yule customs which Simek says indicates the significance of the feast in pre Christian times 17 Scholars have connected the month event and Yule period to the Wild Hunt a ghostly procession in the winter sky the god Odin who is attested in Germanic areas as leading the Wild Hunt and bears the name Jolnir and increased supernatural activity such as the Wild Hunt and the increased activities of draugar undead beings who walk the earth 18 Mōdraniht an event focused on collective female beings attested by Bede as having occurred among the heathen Anglo Saxons when Christians celebrated Christmas Eve has been seen as further evidence of a fertility event during the Yule period 19 Date of observance edit The exact dating of the pre Christian Yule celebrations is unclear and debated among scholars Snorri in Hakonar saga goda describes how the three day feast began on Midwinter Night however this is distinct from the winter solstice occurring approximately one month later Andreas Nordberg proposes that Yule was celebrated on the full moon of the second Yule month in the Early Germanic calendar the month that started on the first new moon after the winter solstice which could range from 5 January to 2 February in the Gregorian calendar Nordberg positions the Midwinter Nights from 19 to 21 January in the Gregorian calendar falling roughly in the middle of Nordberg s range of Yule dates In addition to Snorri s account Nordberg s dating is also consistent with the account of the great blot at Lejre by Thietmar of Merseburg 20 Contemporary traditions editRelationship with Christmas in Northern Europe edit In modern Germanic language speaking areas and some other Northern European countries yule and its cognates denote the Christmas holiday season In addition to yule and yuletide in English 21 examples include jul in Sweden Denmark and Norway jol in Iceland and the Faroe Islands joulu in Finland Joelfest in Friesland Joelfeest in the Netherlands and joulud in Estonia citation needed Modern paganism edit As contemporary pagan religions differ in both origin and practice these representations of Yule can vary considerably despite the shared name Some Heathens for example celebrate in a way as close as possible to how they believe ancient Germanic pagans observed the tradition while others observe the holiday with rituals assembled from different sources 22 Heathen celebrations of Yule can also include sharing a meal and gift giving citation needed In most forms of Wicca this holiday is celebrated at the winter solstice as the rebirth of the Great horned hunter god 23 who is viewed as the newborn solstice sun The method of gathering for this sabbat varies by practitioner Some have private ceremonies at home 24 while others do so with their covens Generally meeting in covens which anoint their own priests and priestesses Wiccans chant and cast or draw circles to invoke their deities mainly during festivals like Samhain and Yule which coincide with Halloween and Christmas and when the moon is full 25 LaVeyan Satanism edit Some members of the Church of Satan and other LaVeyan Satanist groups celebrate Yule at the same time as the Christian holiday in a secular manner 26 See also edit nbsp Holidays portalDisablot an event attested from Old Norse sources as having occurred among the pagan Norse Julebord the modern Scandinavian Christmas feast Koliada a Slavic winter festival Lohri a Punjabi winter solstice festival Saturnalia an ancient Roman winter festival in honour of the deity Saturn Yalda Night an Iranian festival celebrated on the longest and darkest night of the year Nardoqan the birth of the sun is an ancient Turkic festival that celebrates the winter solstice References editNotes edit For a brief overview of the proposed etymologies see Orel 2003 205 Citations edit OED Online 2022 Bosworth amp Toller 1898 424 Hoad 1996 550 Orel 2003 205 jol Bokmalsordboka Nynorskordboka Archived from the original on 12 March 2017 Retrieved 11 March 2017 Barnhart 1995 896 Vigfusson 1874 326 Hoad 1993 Dictionnaire historique de la langue francaise sous la direction d Alain Rey edition Le Robert t 2 2012 p 1805ab a b JOLI Etymologie de JOLI www cnrtl fr Archived from the original on 24 August 2022 Retrieved 24 August 2022 jolly adj and adv Archived 16 October 2023 at the Wayback Machine OED Online Oxford University Press December 2019 Accessed 9 December 2019 Simek 2007 379 Faulkes 1995 133 Simek 2007 180 181 Kovarova 2011 195 196 a b Hollander 2007 106 Saga Hakonar goda heimskringla no heimskringla no Archived from the original on 16 October 2023 Retrieved 26 March 2023 a b Hollander 2007 107 Simek 2007 379 380 Simek 2007 180 181 379 380 and Orchard 1997 187 Orchard 1997 187 Nordberg Andreas 2006 Jul disting och forkyrklig tiderakning Acta Academiae Regiae Gustavi Adolphi 91 155 156 Archived from the original on 14 March 2023 Retrieved 26 March 2023 OED Online 2022 Hutton 2008 Buescher 2007 Kannapell 1997 La Ferla 2000 Escobedo 2015 Works cited edit Barnhart Robert K 1995 The Barnhart Concise Dictionary of Etymology HarperCollins ISBN 0062700847 Bosworth Joseph Toller T Northcote 1898 An Anglo Saxon Dictionary Oxford Oxford University Press Buescher James 15 December 2007 Wiccans pagans ready to celebrate Yule Lancaster Online Archived from the original on 29 December 2007 Retrieved 21 December 2007 Escobedo Tricia 11 December 2015 5 things you didn t know about Satanists CNN Archived from the original on 7 March 2019 Retrieved 6 March 2019 So for the Yule holiday season we enjoy the richness of life and the company of people whom we cherish as we will often be the only ones who know where the traditions really came from Faulkes Anthony ed 1995 Edda Translated by Anthony Faulkes Everyman ISBN 0 460 87616 3 Hoad T F 1993 English Etymology Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 283098 8 Hoad T F 1996 The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 283098 8 Hollander Lee M ed 2007 Heimskringla History of the Kings of Norway Translated by Lee M Hollander Austin University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 73061 8 Hutton Ronald December 2008 Modern Pagan Festivals A Study in the Nature of Tradition Folklore Taylor amp Francis 119 3 251 273 doi 10 1080 00155870802352178 JSTOR 40646468 S2CID 145003549 Kannapell Andrea 21 December 1997 Celebrations It s Solstice Hanukkah Kwannza Let There Be Light The New York Times Archived from the original on 31 July 2009 Retrieved 21 December 2007 Kovarova Lenka 2011 The Swine in Old Nordic Religion and Worldview S2CID 154250096 La Ferla Ruth 13 December 2000 Like Magic Witchcraft Charms Teenagers The New York Times Archived from the original on 28 December 2007 Retrieved 21 December 2007 OED Online December 2022 yule n Oxford English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 27 December 2022 Retrieved 27 December 2022 Orchard Andy 1997 Dictionary of Norse Myth and Legend Cassell ISBN 0 304 34520 2 Orel Vladimir 2003 A Handbook of Germanic Etymology Leiden Brill Publishers p 205 ISBN 90 04 12875 1 Simek Rudolf 2007 Dictionary of Northern Mythology Translated by Angela Hall D S Brewer ISBN 978 0 85991 513 7 Vigfusson Gudbrandur 1874 An Icelandic English Dictionary Based on the Ms Collections of the Late Richard Cleasby Clarendon Press OCLC 1077900672 External links edit nbsp Quotations related to Yule at Wikiquote nbsp Media related to Yule at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yule amp oldid 1193822143, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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