Halloween and Martinstag in Austria and Germany 
 

  Halloween comes to Germany via Yahoo Deutschland and other German
  online services. The German reads: "The most hair-raising and gruesome
  gifts for Halloween..." Graphic: Yahoo.de

Halloween may not be a traditional German celebration, but almost every German 
youngster knows about it. For adults as well, over the last decade or so 
Halloween has become increasingly popular in Europe, and particularly in 
Germany. It is now common to see pumpkin (Kürbis) and jack-o’-lantern 
decorations in Austria and Germany by mid-October.

Probably as a result of the long post-war presence of Americans in Germany, and 
Halloween depictions in Hollywood movies and on television, Halloween has 
become a popular celebration in German-speaking Europe. It’s an American 
holiday imported from Ireland and now exported back to Europe. The Mardi Gras / 
Fasching / Karneval aspects of Halloween also have a special appeal to 
Europeans.

Only in certain regions or neighborhoods do German youngsters actually go 
trick-or-treating (“Süßes oder Saures!”). But while trick-or-treating may be 
rare, Halloween has become a very “cool” party theme for young and old. A web 
search in German turns up many German-language Halloween sites — many of them 
for party outfitters. More and more German department stores carry 
Halloween-related items in October. Hamburg’s House of Horror specialty store, 
which opened for business in 1996, does a brisk business around Halloween.


The Pumpkin Festival in Austria


 
Jack-o'-lanterns at the Retz Kürbisfest in Austria.
PHOTO: Wolfgang Zajc (kuerbisfest.at) 
Around Halloween, the Austrian towns of Retz and Pulkau, not far from Vienna, 
hold an annual Kürbisfest (pumpkin festival), complete with pumpkins, parties, 
and a Halloween-Umzug (Halloween parade). The region around Retz has also 
become known for its annual pumpkin harvest. Known as Bluza in the regional 
dialect, the pumpkin becomes the centerpiece of ein Fest für die ganze Familie, 
a festival for the entire family.

WEB > Kürbisfest im Retzer Land (in German, with photos: October 23-24, 2010)

Halloween Activities and Events in Berlin
In Berlin and other big German cities, Halloween has become an excuse for all 
sorts of parties and even marketing events. In 2008 Berlin’s Legoland Discovery 
Centre decided to stretch out the Halloween celebration for six weeks! From 
Oct. 1 to Nov. 14 most of the store sports a Halloween theme and decorations. 
In the two weeks before Halloween, Berlin school children get out for “fall 
vacation” and there are all sorts of parties and excursions built around and 
leading up to Halloween. Then there’s the usual spate of horror films on TV and 
in cinemas. A live production of the cult classic Rocky Horror Picture Show 
opens at a Berlin theater on October 31 (in English with German narration) 
before going on to other German-speaking cities. 

Martinstag - November 11
There is an old traditional German custom that has much in common with 
Halloween: Martinstag (St. Martin’s Day, Martinsmas). The Catholic Martinstag 
observance on November 11 includes costumes and a lantern procession for 
children. Also known as Martini in Austria and Bavaria, the feast day of Martin 
of Tours is celebrated in many parts of Europe, including even some Protestant 
regions. According to legend, Martin cut his red cloak in half to share with a 
beggar during a snowstorm. The traditional baked goose (Martinsgans) meal on 
Martinstag is based on another part of the legend. Feeling unworthy of becoming 
a bishop, Martin hid in a stable filled with geese. The noise made by the geese 
betrayed his location, and the people of Tours had him consecrated as a bishop.

In parts of Austria, Germany, and Switzerland the Martinstag observance is a 
children’s affair. Carrying paper lanterns they have made in school, the young 
children take part in an evening procession, sometimes led by a rider on a 
white horse, emulating St. Martin and his red cloak. Sometimes the lantern 
procession ends with a Martinsfeuer (bonfire).


The Candy Corn Connection
There is at least one direct German-American Halloween connection. Following 
the American Civil War, Gustav and Albert Goelitz traveled to Illinois to join 
an uncle who had emigrated in 1834. After Gustav’s death, his two eldest sons 
revived the candy business that he and Albert had founded. The story goes that 
the Goelitz Confectionery Co. invented the popular Halloween confection known 
as Candy Corn in the 1880s. Records indicate that Goelitz was making candy corn 
by 1900. That firm's successor, today's Herman Goelitz, Inc. of Fairfield, 
California, is best known as the maker of Jelly Belly jelly bean candy. (For 
more about Goelitz, see the company’s website: Goelitz Company History.)

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Personally, Righ Fang Girl was most interested inthe Goelitz Candy Company. It 
just isn't Halloween without a mound of sweet Candy Corn, to rot my fangs! But, 
hey, it's only once a year!


"Remember, remember,
the fifth of November,
Gunpowder, treason and plot.
We see no reason why
Gunpowder treason
Should ever be forgot!"

Words to Guy Fawkes Rhyme "

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