Monsters and goblins and ghosts. Oh, my! 
Are you wondering why pint-sized ghouls and goblins are wandering the  
streets and ringing strangers' doorbells; why your significant other is  
pestering 
you to dress up as _Sonny_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/sonny-cher)  to her 
_Cher_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/sonny-cher)  at a masquerade ball; why 
goosebumps and  shivers are in the air; and why chocolates seem to come only in 
miniature  sizes this time of year? Well, when digging for the roots of the 
modern  Halloween, there are three words to keep in mind: 
_Samhain_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/samhain) . The _Celts_ 
(http://www.answers.com/topic/celt)  of modern-day Ireland and the UK two and a 
 half 
millennia ago braced themselves for winter with this festival, which  is 
pronounced 
"sowen," literally means "summer's end" and falls on  November 1. It heralds 
the beginning of the dark, cold half of the year.  (Its counterpart was 
_Beltane_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/beltane) , which kicked off the warm, 
light 
half of  the year on May 1.) The harvest was gathered in to protect against the 
 wintry blast of the faeries' breath, and Samhain was an occasion for  
thanksgiving, sacrifices, divination and prayers. In each home the  hearth-fire 
was 
extinguished the night before and relit on Samhain from  the central bonfires 
of the priestly _Druids_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/druid) . 
_Pomona_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/pomona-3) . She is the Roman goddess 
of fruit  trees and the symbol of abundance. There was a festival dedicated to 
her  worship at the end of autumn, around the time of the big harvest. When 
the  Romans arrived in Britain, in the first century, they melded their customs 
 
with those of the Celts whom they conquered. 
_Feralia_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/feralia) . This is the ancient Roman 
festival  of the dead, which was held on February 21 with prayers and 
sacrifices on  behalf of the deceased. The customs of this day were also 
blended by 
the  Romans with those of Samhain. Feralia was superseded in the Christian  
Church by _All Saints Day_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/all-saints-day) , also 
known as All Hallow's Day or  Hallowmas, observed on May 13. In the eighth 
century, _Pope Gregory III_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/pope-gregory-iii)  
changed the date to November 1  (though it is still marked in springtime, on 
the 
Sunday after _Pentecost_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/pentecost) , by the 
Eastern Orthodox Church). All  Saint's Day was followed by _All Soul's Day_ 
(http://www.answers.com/topic/all-souls-day) , established by _Saint Odilo of 
Cluny_ 
(http://www.answers.com/topic/saint-odilo-of-cluny)  on November 2 to remember  
the souls awaiting release from _Purgatory_ 
(http://www.answers.com/topic/purgatory) . Halloween is a contraction for  
"Hallow's even" — the evening of All 
Hallow's Day, i.e., October 31. 
The customs that are the modern face of Halloween are deeply rooted in  the 
mists of history as well: 
_Jack-o'-lantern_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/jack-o-lantern-1) . 
Originally a turnip, this  carved vegetable with a candle inside was used by a 
poor 
Irish soul named  Jack to light his way as he wandered for eternity, denied 
entrance to both  Heaven and Hell — Heaven because of his habitual stinginess 
and 
Hell  because he had, while still alive, forced the devil into a pact that 
would  spare Jack from ever going to Hell. Boy, did he live (or rather die) to  
regret it! The Irish brought this custom to the US in the 1840s but found  it 
more convenient to use pumpkins than their traditional turnip, rutabaga  or 
gourd. 
_Bobbing for apples_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/bobbing-for-apples) . 
Bobbing for apples on  Halloween (the time of the apple harvest) may have been 
inspired by the  Celtic fables about heroes who journeyed across water seeking 
the magical  apple tree on the mythical isle of _Avalon_ 
(http://www.answers.com/topic/avalon-1) . There is a more accepted theory: that 
the  Celts (taking a 
leaf from the Romans who worshipped Pomona, the goddess of  fruit and 
abundance) played a parlor game on Samhain in which unmarried  people would try 
to 
bite into an apple in water or on a string; the first  to succeed was thought 
to 
be the first to marry. 
_Trick or treating_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/trick-or-treat-3) . This 
resembles the All  Soul's Day practice called "going a-souling" in which poor 
people would  beg door-to-door. In exchange for a gift of soulcakes, the 
soulers 
would  promise to say a prayer for the dead. It's possible, though, that the  
practice developed independently in the US in the 20th century, especially  
the part where children threaten a trick if they don't get a treat. (This  may 
have been around the time manufacturers came up with fun-sized candy  bars.) 
_Costumes_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/halloween-costume) . The Celts wore 
disguises, usually  made of animal skins, during their Samhain celebrations, 
possibly to  conceal themselves from the spirits who were afoot at the time. So 
those  Catwoman and Spider-man outfits may be most true to the ancient roots 
of  the practice. 
_Ghost stories_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/ghost-story) . The Celts 
believed that during  Samhain, the boundaries between this world and the 
otherworld 
became  blurred and the spirits of those who had departed walked the earth. 
Those  beliefs survive to this day in the form of ghost stories and 
divinations: 
 asking for helpful hints or guides to the future from those who have  second 
sight. 
There are two other holidays that share thematic elements with  Halloween or 
have common ancestors: 
_Guy Fawkes Day_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/guy-fawkes-day) . This day, 
held in Britain on  November 5, commemorates the foiling of the _Gunpowder 
Plot_ 
(http://www.answers.com/topic/gunpowder-plot)  in 1605 (an attempt by _Guy 
Fawkes_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/guy-fawkes)  and some fellow Catholics to 
blow up  _King James I_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/james-i)  and 
Parliament). However, its focus  on bonfires, as well as its calendar date, are 
reminiscent of Samhain. The  custom of children begging for "a penny for the 
guy" is 
similar to  trick-or-treating, as well. 
_The Day of the Dead_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/day-of-the-dead)  (El Dia 
de los Muertos).  Contrary to what one might think, this 3,000-year-old 
_Aztec_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/aztec)  holiday is actually a joyous 
celebration.  It is held on November 1 and 2, primarily in Mexico and other 
parts of  
Central America, and features visits to graveyards to leave flowers and  
lighted candles in honor of the dead. The souls of children are believed  to 
visit 
earth on November 1, with adults's souls following the next  day. 
Facts and  Figures 
(courtesy of the _US Census Department press  release for Halloween_ 
(http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/releases/archives/facts_for_features_special_e
ditions/007465.html) ; all data is for the US) 
    *   The first city to officially celebrate Halloween was _Anoka, 
Minnesota_ (http://www.answers.com/topic/anoka-minnesota) , in 1921.  
    *   Illinois led the country in pumpkin production last year with 497  m
illion pounds. It was followed by California, Ohio and Pennsylvania,  which 
each produced over 100 million pounds. A total of 1.1 billion  pounds was 
produced in 2005 for a value of over $106 million.  
    *   There are 36.1 million potential trick-or-treaters: children aged  
5-13. There are 108 million households for them to visit.  
    *   California is the prime location for chocolate and cocoa  
manufacturing establishments, with 136 as of 2004. Pennsylvania is next  with 
122. The 
countrywide total is 1,241, and they employ 43,322 people  and ship $12.5 
billion worth of goods.  
    *   California is also tops in non-chocolate confectionary manufacturing  
establishments (76), out of a total of 515 such establishments, which  have 
22,234 employees who ship $7.2 billion worth of goods.  
    *   Per capita consumption of candy was 26 pounds in 2005, much of it  
during Halloween time. That must make it more challenging for Americans  to fit 
into the outfits provided by the 2,497 formal wear and costume  rental 
establishents that operated in 2004.






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