Camp
Internet's Global Gardening Studies are open to all Camp Expedition
Teams. RAIN's Youth Technology Corps members are Expedition Team Leaders
for Communities taking part.
Teaching Plan for Lesson 2:
The History of Christmas Trees
Part Two
A decorated tree is an important part of
the festive season traditions.
The official colours of red and green originate
with the red apples that once hung on the green Paradeisbaum, or paradise
tree, that was part of 14th century religious pageantry.
Most decorations
we hang on trees today have a long history and once had very specific
religious associations.
Desired Learning Outcome:
1.) To develop in children
a sense of the tradition and religious significance of Christmas tree
ornaments and to gain a sense of the long history of the tree itself.
Background: - 14th century "Miracle Plays" held annually on December 24th
required stage props of apple trees.
In colder climates this led to the
use of decorated evergreens. - The traditional red and green seasonal
colours developed from these plays and stage props. - Over time, foods
were added as decorations on the trees. - Gradually, metal ornaments replaced
some of the edible decoration.
Teaching Suggestions:
1.) Have the older
children read the Lesson two, part two, The History of Christmas Trees,
(page 10) or summarize the information for younger children. The discussion
might precede or follow an art assignment to draw or paint a Christmas
tree.
2.) Ask the children if they have ever considered the historic associations
of the Christmas tree.
3.) Show the children sample decorations or ask
them to draw the types of decorations they might hang on their tree or
use to decorate their homes.
Suggested Questions:
1.) Describe the kind
of decorations people might hang on Christmas trees.
2.) Tell the class
about your favourites. Explain how their shape might be related to ancient
decorations.
3.) Explain what the lights on a Christmas tree make you
think of.
4.) Explain the significance of stars to the festive season.
5.) Discuss what kinds of food might be hung on a Christmas tree. Suggested
Hand-out for Take Home: Christmas Tree Care
STUDENTS' Lesson 2:
The History of Christmas Trees
Part 2
In the fourteenth century, when hardly
anyone knew how to read, churches held "miracle plays" to tell the people
in villages and towns stories from the Bible. Special plays were held
at special times of the year, in accordance with the early Christian Calendar
of Saints. The play that was held every December 24, which was Adam and
Eve's Day, was about the Garden of Eden. The play showed how Eve was tempted
by the serpent, how she picked the apple from the forbidden tree and how
the couple was expelled from Paradise. The time of year that the play
was held created a problem for the actors and the organizers of the play.
How do you find an apple tree with
needles on it in the middle of the winter?
In Germany, someone solved
the problem by cutting down an evergreen tree, probably a spruce or pine,
and tying apples onto it. As well, the tree was hung with round white
wafers to remind the audience that even though Adam and Eve were expelled
from Paradise, the birth of the baby Jesus Christ would bring redemption.
The idea of a Christmas tree hung with apples amused people in Germany
so much that before long many families were setting up Paradeisbaum, or
Paradise trees, in their own homes. The custom persisted long after the
miracle plays were no longer performed. Ever since, red and green, the
colours of apples hanging on a pine tree, have been the official colours
of the festive season.
As the years passed the trees were loaded with
many more things to eat in addition to apples. Gilded nuts and gingerbread
cookies were hidden in the tree while marzipan candies, shaped like fruits
and vegetables, were hung from the boughs.
Brightly decorated eggshells, cut in
half and filled with tiny candies, were set in the tree like birdnests.
So many sweets were hung from the tree that some people called it "the
sugar tree". On the Twelfth Night of Christmas, January 6, when it was
believed that the Magi arrived in Bethlehem bearing gifts, the tree was
shaken and the children finally were allowed to eat the sweets that fell
from the tree. The wafers once hung on the Paradise tree were replaced
with cookies in the form of hearts, bells, angels and stars. With time,
perhaps because so many decorations were eaten before the tree was taken
down, the cookies were replaced with decorations made out of thin, painted
metal. When families in colder climates combined the decorations on the
Paradeisbaum with the candles on a conifer tree, they created the Christmas
tree that is still found in homes today.