This year we Yanks get a taste of Boxing
Day. Since Christmas fell on a Sunday this
year, today is a legal holiday—just like Boxing Day in Britain and the scattered
remnants of her former Empire where
December 26 is a treasured tradition
and a legal holiday. It traditionally falls on the day after Christmas, December 26. We
will even share one of the biggest activities of the day—shopping. For some years the
day after Christmas has been the busiest of the year in brick and mortar stores where gift recipients hit the refund and exchange desks and spend the
gift cards they got.
The celebration in the British Isles
has its roots with the aristocracy, gentry, and wealthy townsmen
and their households. The master
would give presents to his servants and staff, who would also have the day
off work. Sometimes the master’s
family would even serve meals to
their inferiors! Needless to say, this custom was very popular among the servants, and
sometimes observed resentfully by
those unaccustomed to either manual labor or generosity.
It is also a remnant of an ancient
tradition that may—or may not—go back to the Roman celebrations of Saturnalia
and Sol Invictus, when there was
a carnival-like turn around with slaves lording over masters for a
day. The tradition continued into the Middle Ages on into Elizabethan times, where it took on the
wild excesses of street revelry.
That revelry doomed the whole season when Oliver
Cromwell and his Puritans took
over. Eventually, Boxing Day restored a controlled dollop of the old festival. The Church
of England gave a religious cover
to the day as St. Stephen’s Day. Stephen was the Deacon of Jerusalem the earliest days of Christianity known for his charities
to the poor. He was also the first Christian martyr, stoned to death
for allegedly preaching the Trinity
in the Temple.
The familiar carol Good King Wenceslas is a St.
Stephen’s Day song meant for street begging. In Ireland, the day is still
officially called St. Stephen’s Day.
It is also known there as Wren’s Day. Boys in homemade hats and costumes
carry a caged wren—or sometime a dead one pierced by a holly
sprig—proclaiming it the king of the birds and begging for
treats. Once a fading country custom,
in the cities men now re-enact it—often on a pub crawl.
In the Bank
Holidays Act of 1871, Parliament recognized Boxing Day as a Bank Holiday—an officially
recognized public holiday. While time off from work was not originally mandatory, but has become nearly universal.
The holiday spread across the Empire
and is still official in Canada,
Australia, New Zealand, and other Commonwealth
countries. In South Africa it was re-named The
Day of Goodwill in 1994.
Today small gifts are still given trades
people and service workers, but
in Britain the day has become all about
shopping. It is the biggest shopping day of the year and
has been compared to American Black
Friday, the day after Thanksgiving. Stores mark the day with huge sales.
It is also a day of sport.
Football—that’s soccer Americans—and Rugby leagues hold full schedules of games,
teams usually playing their most serious rivals. There are also prestige horse races and the country
gentry mount fox hunts—these days
due to a bitterly resented law, sans
fox.
The toffs are no longer
allowed to chase real fox, but still get to ride to the hounds chasing a scented
bait.
So for my friends across the Pond and around the world who celebrate, happy
Boxing Day!
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