趣談?dòng)幕簽槭裁词フQ節(jié)要戴紙帽子
趣談?dòng)幕簽槭裁词フQ節(jié)要戴紙帽子
圣誕節(jié)戴紙帽子是英國特有的圣誕習(xí)俗。圣誕節(jié)當(dāng)天,全英國的家庭都會(huì)坐在餐桌前,吃一頓傳統(tǒng)的圣誕大餐。同時(shí),無論年齡老幼,所有人都會(huì)在頭上戴一頂彩色紙做成的紙帽子。據(jù)說,就連伊莉莎白女王在這一天也會(huì)戴紙帽子哦!
為什么英國人圣誕節(jié)要戴紙帽子?
圣誕節(jié)當(dāng)天,全英國的家庭都會(huì)坐在餐桌前,吃一頓傳統(tǒng)的圣誕大餐,塞滿了各種餡料的烤火雞。無論年齡老幼,所有人都會(huì)在頭上戴一頂彩色紙做成的紙帽子。據(jù)說,就連伊莉莎白女王也會(huì)戴紙帽子哦!
那為什么會(huì)有這個(gè)古怪的傳統(tǒng)呢?戴紙帽子的傳統(tǒng)來源于哪里?答案就在另一項(xiàng)圣誕傳統(tǒng)活動(dòng)——圣誕拉炮!
圣誕拉炮是用硬紙板做的紙筒,再用色彩鮮艷的彩紙包裹在外面,兩端擰緊。在拉炮里會(huì)有一個(gè)爆竹,當(dāng)兩個(gè)人拉動(dòng)拉炮兩端時(shí),拉炮里的兩條浸漬紙就會(huì)發(fā)生摩擦,發(fā)出“嘣”的響聲。
拉炮里會(huì)裝有紙做的皇冠、寫在紙上的名言或笑話,還會(huì)有一些小禮物。
圣誕拉炮成為英國傳統(tǒng)的歷史可以追溯到維多利亞時(shí)期,約在19世紀(jì)50年代早期,倫敦的一個(gè)糖果商湯姆-史密斯把寫有名言的紙片放在了他售賣的糖果包裝里,包裝方式就是在糖果外用紙將兩頭擰緊。
到了20世紀(jì)初,紙帽子也被放到了圣誕拉炮里。很快,拉炮就成了英國人過圣誕節(jié)的傳統(tǒng)習(xí)俗。現(xiàn)在,所有的英國家庭至少都會(huì)準(zhǔn)備一盒拉炮留到圣誕節(jié)時(shí)來拉響。
Why do the British wear paper hats at Christmas lunch?
All over Britain on Christmas Day, families can be found sitting around their dining tables enjoying a traditional lunch of roast turkey with all the trimmings - and all, regardless of age, wearing coloured paper hats. It is rumoured that even the Queen wears her paper hat over lunch!
So why this quaint tradition? Where do these paper hats come from? The answer is the Christmas Cracker.
A Christmas Cracker is a cardboard paper tube, wrapped in brightly coloured paper and twisted at both ends. There is a banger inside the cracker, two strips of chemically impregnated paperthat react with friction so that when the cracker is pulled apart by two people, the cracker makes a bang.
Inside the cracker there is a paper crown made from tissue paper, a motto or joke on a slip of paper and a little gift.
Christmas crackers are a British tradition dating back to Victorian times when in the early 1850s, London confectioner Tom Smith started adding a motto to his sugared almond bon-bons which he sold wrapped in a twisted paper package.
The paper hat was added to the cracker in the early 1900s. The cracker was soon adopted as a traditional festive custom and today virtually every household has at least one box of crackers to pull over Christmas.