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Yule

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

An old illustration showing a traditional Nordic Christmas celebration from the year 1880.

Yule

Yule is an old winter festival that Germanic peoples celebrated long ago. It happened around the winter solstice, the shortest day of the year. People would gather for feasts, share drinks, and make promises together. They also told stories and played games, often about magical beings like trolls and ghosts.

Over time, as Christianity spread, Yule mixed with the Christian holiday of Christmas. Today, the word Yule is still used in some places to talk about the Christmas season. Some people who follow Modern Germanic paganism also celebrate Yule as its own special holiday, separate from Christmas.

Etymology and derived terms

The word 'Yule' comes from old languages. In Middle English, it was written as ȝol, and in Old English as ġēol. Scholars think it might come from a Proto-Germanic word, but they are not sure.

'Yule' is related to words in other languages. For example, in Icelandic, Faroese, and Norwegian Nynorsk, it is jól, and in Danish, Swedish, and Norwegian Bokmål, it is jul. These words all refer to Christmas and the time around it. In Finnish, the word juhla means "celebration" and might be connected. The word 'Yule' was also used for an old midwinter festival before people became Christian. Today, 'Yule' often means Christmas and the days close to it.

Yule months

See also: Early Germanic calendars

Yule is an old festival from the time of the Germanic peoples. It was celebrated in many places. The earliest record of Yule comes from a Gothic calendar from around 350 CE.

Two months named after Yule are described by the English historian Bede. He wrote that the heathen Anglo-Saxons called both December and January Giuli. A 10th century English text calls these months se ǽrra Geola and se æftera Geola, meaning "the earlier" and "the latter Yule month". Bede noted that the heathen English began their year on December 25, the day Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus. They called this night Modranecht.

Old Norse sources also mention two Yule months: Jólmánuðr and Ýlir. After Scandinavia became Christian, the Church introduced a new calendar, but some old traditions continued.

Timing of heathen Yule celebrations

We do not know exactly when people celebrated Yule before Christianity. Scholars still talk about it a lot.

One old record comes from a writer named Procopius. He lived in the 6th century. He wrote about people called the Heruli who lived in a place called Thule. This place may have been around modern Norway. He said they celebrated their biggest festival 20 days after the winter solstice. This is when the sun comes back after 40 nights of darkness. This would be around mid-January today.

Another writer named Bede lived in the 8th century. He said that the Anglo-Saxons had two Yule months linked to the winter solstice. One month came before the solstice and one came after. In their old calendars, the winter solstice was thought to be on December 25. But because they used a different kind of calendar based on the moon, the exact timing would change each year.

Historical Nordic traditions

Blót, feasting and drinking

In medieval Scandinavia, Yule had special ceremonies called blót. During these, animals were given as gifts to gods, and their meat was cooked and shared by everyone. These meals were very important, and people drank ceremonial drinks together.

Feasting was a big part of Yule. Old poems called skaldic poetry sometimes used the word jól to mean a feast. Kings and leaders held big meals during Yule, and everyone shared the food and drinks.

Heitstrenging

People made special promises called Heitstrenging on Yule-Eve. These promises were very serious, and people held hands on special items while making them.

Games and performances

Games were popular during Yule. Different kinds of games were played, like wrestling and tug-of-war. There might have also been performances or plays connected to the festival.

Supernatural visitations

Stories of supernatural visitors during Yule, like mysterious figures or spirits, were common in Northern Europe.

The Wild Host

One famous story was about a group of supernatural beings called the Wild Host. These beings would travel through the land.

Guising

People would dress up in costumes and go from house to house during Yule. These costumed figures would perform and ask for food and drinks. These traditions varied a lot between different places and times.

Old Norse textTranslation
Uti vill jól drekka,
ef skal einn ráða
fylkir enn framlyndi,
ok Freys leik heyja;
ungr leiddisk eldvelli
ok inni (at) sitja,
varma dyngu
eða vöttu dúns fulla
He wants to drink (to?) Yule outside
if he can decide alone,
the fame-seeking ruler
and perform Frey’s leikr;
the young man was tired
of the fireside and sitting indoors
in the warm women’s room
or down-filled cushions

Academic reception

Significance and connection to other events

Scholars see Yule as a festival linked to the winter solstice, when the sun seems to be born again. By the late 1800s, many agreed with this idea. Some later said that ancient Germanic peoples did not understand solstices because the word "solstice" is from Latin. But other words from their languages, like sólhverf ("sun-turning") and solhof ("sun-heightening"), show they noticed these special days. Today, many think these peoples knew about solstices before Christianity came.

Yule has also been seen as a time to honor the dead, celebrate new life, or mark the new year. This time of year was hard, with long, dark nights and fears of unseen dangers. In Scandinavia, people worked to keep their homes safe and families together during the cold, dark months. Customs like the Yule log, Yule boar, and Yule singing may come from older Yule traditions, as Simek suggested.

Existence of pre-Christian Yule

Historian Ronald Hutton wonders if "Yule" named a festival before Christmas. Some think Vikings brought the word "Yule" to England, where it joined Christmas. But the word appears in old writings from around 350 CE and in Scandinavian literature from the 8th century. Most scholars think Yule was an ancient winter celebration in North Germanic communities that later became part of Christmas as Christianity spread. Old stories, like Heimskringla from the 13th century, describe Yule feasts. Even without all the details, it seems likely that Germanic peoples celebrated seasonal festivals before Christian missionaries came.

Contemporary traditions

Relationship with Christmas in Northern Europe

As Christianity spread among Germanic peoples, the festival of Yule mixed with the Christian celebration of Christmas. For example, stories tell of leaders who helped change old traditions into holiday feasts at Yule, Easter, and other special times. In Norway, a leader made a rule so that Yule celebrations happened at the same time as Christmas. This way, old customs were kept but linked to the new Christian holidays.

Today, many people in Northern Europe still use versions of the word "Yule" to mean Christmas. In some languages, "Yule" is the main name for this holiday.

Modern paganism

Different groups today celebrate Yule in various ways. Some people try to follow what they think ancient Germanic traditions were like, while others mix together rituals from many sources.

In a group called Wicca, Yule is celebrated during the winter solstice as a time when the sun is born again. People may gather in small groups called covens to mark this special time, sometimes holding private ceremonies at home. They often meet during festivals like Yule and Samhain, which are linked to Christmas and Halloween.

Images

An ancient manuscript illustration showing the months of the English year from Bede's 'The Reckoning of Time.'
A reconstructed drinking horn from an ancient burial, displayed in the British Museum.
A traditional Yule Goat figure from an 18th-century farm courtyard at Bunge Museum on Gotland, Sweden.
A traditional yule log used in Christmas celebrations.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Yule, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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