Saturnalia: The Reason We Celebrate Christmas in December

Saturnalia was the Roman holiday marking the winter solstice. It was named after the Roman god Saturn, in his aspect of the god of seed and planting. It was originally celebrated on December 17th, but by the late of the late Republic it was celebrated from December 17th to December 23rd.
 The Emperor Augustus tried to limit the time of celebration to three days, but it was expanded to five under the Emperor Caligula.

In the Roman calendar, the Saturnalia was designated a holy day, or holiday, on which religious rites were performed. The Temple of Saturn, the oldest temple in Rome, had been dedicated on the Saturnalia, and the woolen bonds which fettered the feet of the ivory cult statue within were loosened on that day to symbolize the liberation of the god.

It also was a festival day. After sacrifice at the temple, there was a public banquet, which Livy says was introduced in 217 BC. Afterwards, the celebrants shouted "Io, Saturnalia!" at a riotous feast in the temple.

The Saturnalia was the most popular holiday of the Roman year. Catullus describes it as "the best of days," and Seneca complains that the "whole mob has let itself go in pleasures." Pliny the Younger writes that he retired to his room while the rest of the household celebrated. Cicero fled to the countryside. It was an occasion for celebration, visits to friends, and the presentation of gifts, particularly wax candles, perhaps to signify the returning light after the solstice. Homes were decorated with greenery. Candles and lamps chased away the spirits of darkness. 

Aulus Gellius relates in his Attic Nights that he and his Roman compatriots would gather at the baths in Athens, where they were studying, and pose difficult questions to one another on the ancient poets, a crown of laurel being dedicated to Saturn if no-one could answer them.

Related information
  • Saturnalia was celebrated on the winter solstice.
  • The Roman social order was reversed during Saturnalia.
  • Gift giving, feasting, and decorations with greenery were features of Saturnalia.
 
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arent we all forgeting about santa claus?isn;t he the reason we celebrate christmas on december 25th? Isn;t it because he comes christmas eve and we all decided through years to bring family together for that date?just my 2 cents.why believe in a book that really is just a book.I read and loved lord of the rings,it does not mean that mordor is a real place and there is not a ONE RING that can rule it all.the bible is just a book,faily well writen but a book none the same.

Posted on 01/14/2009 at 4:01:52 PM

Yep, Christmas isn't a real holiday!! The Holy Spirit came unto the virgin Mary in the Hebrew month of Elul, which translates to the month we call September. December is only 3 months away from September, and we all know that it takes way longer than 3 months for a baby to develop inside of it's mother. Actually, John the Baptist was the one who was born in December. When the Holy Spirit came unto Mary, her cousin (John's mother) was already six months pregnant. Back in the day when the christian era was getting started, the christians didn't want to go through the trouble of removing the Roman holiday (The Saturnalia) so they just added their's and called it Christmas!! The Messiah's birthday is really June 6th.

Posted on 02/04/2008 at 11:02:31 AM

Oi! The origin of Christmas or many other holidays doesn't matter to what it essentially is today. It's only important to history, and for one's intellect. Christmas should not be considered a pagan holiday rip-off, only the details of it are. Christmas has a fully independent meaning from Saturnalia, which varies among cultures but holds values of pax ad terra et bona animus ad homines. It's important to understand the history of our customs just so that we are not mindless creatures bound to tradition, but this knowledge must be taken with a grain of salt. Traditions and culture develop into new things with time, and the way they got started should be remembered as just that, the beginning, and not the eternity.

Posted on 12/14/2007 at 12:12:40 PM

If Saturn was considered a God then probably it had some connection with our planet Earth since there is a feast called Saturnalia, could it be that Saturn was considered the God sun as the egyptians considered Ra their God sun ? who knows maybe Saturn played a big role in our planet's history and that is why they still remember it as Saturnalia. Maybe it was the sun back then and that is why Saturn's moons show possibilities of liquid water for maybe earth was linked directly to Saturn before the flood.

Posted on 11/19/2007 at 8:11:00 PM

one side note Christ may have been born in the early part of October being the end of harvest. This possibly could be at the begining of the Feast of tabernacles. The census in which Mary and Joseph were required by Rome to take part in, would likely have been after harvest time. Taxes due to Rome would be brought forth at this time. Check out koinia house.org on this. Hope you all get to know Jesus above and beyond anything else.

Posted on 11/15/2007 at 7:11:00 PM

If us christian people we do not celebrate christmas why we celebreat new year if we under the Gregory callendary?

Posted on 10/19/2007 at 12:10:00 PM

Interesting. Thank You fer sharin'. ;-}}>

Posted on 10/09/2007 at 4:10:00 PM

What are you talking about Charmaine and Kastta? Learn some history. Constantine the Roman emporer was a hero to Christians, cult believers in a pagan society who had lived under severe persecution for centuries. He decreed Christianity to be the religion of the empire and that Sun Day (the modern Sunday) be an official day of rest and prayer for Christians. It had been the day to honor the Sun God, Sol Invictus. The festival of Sol Invictus (meaning invincible God - since it was on the winter solstice when the sun refused to succumb to darkness due to the shorter daylight hours)was the actual festival which Christmas supplanted, for it had long since supplanted Saturnalia. Sol Invictus itself was originally an eastern cult monotheistic pagan religion which became popular among the polytheistic pagans of ancient Rome. Considering the fact that Rome started out as completely anti-Christian, would it make sense that the Roman Christians should have simply created an entirely new date, le

Posted on 10/07/2007 at 1:10:00 PM

well-written article

Posted on 05/22/2007 at 7:05:00 PM

I knew about this but you had lots of great info in it.

Posted on 05/21/2007 at 3:05:00 PM

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