Holidays in Italy

How to celebrate Christmas in Italy

Before the onset of the new 2018, nothing was left. Already in full swing is preparing for the most celebrated and favorite holiday of the year. Festive Christmas trees have been standing on the streets for a long time, Santas and Snow Maidens are walking, and children are waiting for gifts. However, before the New Year, the Catholic Church is preparing to celebrate Christmas - one of the most revered holidays in the church calendar.

For Italians, the New Year is not such an important celebration as Christmas, which comes on December 25th. In no country is this holiday celebrated as in this believing country. Moreover, it is worth considering that the Pope first of all addresses the inhabitants of Italy, and only then to the rest of the world.

The day before Christmas

At a festive Christmas table, Italians sit on the evening of December 24 - on the eve of the holiday. Believers Italians consider it their duty to defend the Christmas service, which begins at exactly midnight and lasts about two hours. Residents of Rome and the Vatican rush to St. Peter's Square, where the pope holds the mass.

By Christmas, every temple in Italy must certainly be decorated with figures of angels, as well as a small manger with a figure of the baby Jesus Christ.

Family dinner

The Italians have this saying: “Celebrate Christmas with your family, and New Year with anyone you want” (Natale con tuoi, Capodanno con chi vuoi). Therefore, by December 25, Italians come to their parents in order to get together for one big family dinner.

Residents of Italy will never sit at the festive table without being sure that the whole house sparkles with cleanliness. At the end of December, they carry out general cleaning, brushing every speck of dust on tables and dressers.

They don’t eat meat at Christmas in Italy, so most dishes are fish. This trend is especially observed in the southern regions of the country. At the festive table you can find dishes such as fried cod, eel or perch, pasta with seafood. In Rome, one of the most popular dishes is capitole, a fried or baked eel with caviar.

However, on December 25, when it is already possible to eat meat, fried sausages, baked lamb, lasagna, artichokes and other dishes appear on the Christmas table. It is noteworthy that the Italians have their own beliefs about food at a festive dinner on Christmas. So, the inhabitants of a sunny country are sure that lentils should certainly be on the Christmas table. According to signs, the more lentils you eat on this day, the richer you will become next year. One of the most popular dishes for Christmas is turkey, which is baked with nuts, potatoes, apples and chestnuts.

As for the festive dessert, usually this is the so-called Panettone cake, decorated with fruits, chocolate and other sweets. Legend has it that a young man, Tony, fell in love with the beautiful daughter of a baker, to whom he got a job as an apprentice, to be closer to his lover. Later, the guy, inspired by love and inspiration, baked a pie in the form of a dome. Tony's cake (pane di Toni) was very popular among the townspeople. And to this day, he is invariably present at a gala dinner with almost every family.

Christmas gifts to Italian children are distributed by the local Santa Claus - Babbo Natale. Usually, children receive toys, books as a gift, and adults, as a rule, useful things for the home.

Watch the video: How do Italian People Celebrate Christmas? (April 2024).

Popular Posts

Category Holidays in Italy, Next Article

The coming to power of Octavian Augustus - 2: how did Anthony and Octavian share power?
Story

The coming to power of Octavian Augustus - 2: how did Anthony and Octavian share power?

In the first issue, we told readers about the new difficulties that confronted Octavian, and the fun holiday of life that unexpectedly fell to Anthony. While Mark was having a great time in Egypt with Cleopatra, the “son of Caesar” was solving the sudden problems with his brother. Lucius Anthony, having entered Rome and showered in the capital, retreated to the north, hoping to gain supporters there and to oppose Octavian already as it should, but not with small forces, but did not have time.
Read More
Spartacus Rebellion - Issue 2
Story

Spartacus Rebellion - Issue 2

In the last issue, 78 hefty foreheads left the prison and, having joyfully robbed the surrounding rich estates, decided to keep the defenses on Vesuvius. The local forces of law and order in the person of the praetor Claudius, sighing, broke away from blissful idleness and began to forcefully resolve the issue with unbridled slaves.
Read More
Spartacus Rebellion - Issue 5
Story

Spartacus Rebellion - Issue 5

In the previous issue, Spartak with the help of speed and tenacity took over two consular armies, but Crixus, his comrade, did not master this feat and died the death of the brave. The senate, in sorrow and hopelessness, appointed the chief responsible for resolving the gladiator issue of a citizen named Mark Licinius Crassus. At the time of the events described, the aforementioned Roman was already 43 years old, and most of all he was known for the multi-valued amounts on accounts in Swiss banks.
Read More
Spartacus Rebellion - Issue 6
Story

Spartacus Rebellion - Issue 6

In the last issue, the scythe did find on the stone - Rome opposed the insolence and numerical superiority of the runaway slaves with cold calculation and the iron legions of Crassus. Having solved the problems with the fighting spirit of his troops, Mark Licinius unceasingly drove the enemy back to the south, now and then entering into small skirmishes with the Thracian troops lagging behind or vigilant.
Read More