~ Shared from Edinburgh City Libraries, 26 Oct., 2022
Did Scotland invent Halloween?
Did you
know Scotland celebrated Halloween thousands of years ago? Of course, it
wasn't called that back then. Samhain (pronounced 'sow-in') was a Gaelic or Pagan
festival marking the end of the harvest season which, of course, fell at the
end of October. The name roughly translates as 'summer's end' and the
festival was celebrated and mentioned in Celtic literature over two thousand
years ago. Halloween
colours - i.e. orange - stem from the fact that the event was originally held
to mark the shift in seasons and the arrival of Autumnal colours in the
foliage. Until
relatively recently, ‘trick or treat’ was unknown in Scotland. Instead,
children dressed up and pretended to be evil spirits and went ‘guising’ (or
'galoshin'). Children arriving at a house so ‘disguised’ would receive an
offering to ward off evil. As well as dressing up, they would also perform a
party trick – a song or a dance, or recite a poem, before they were offered a
treat which could be fruit, nuts or more commonly nowadays, sweets. Looking
through the pages of the British Newspaper Archive which is available
to use for free from all our libraries, we have found some articles that show
how Halloween was celebrated across Scotland through the years. In this
article, from the Edinburgh Evening News on 5 November 1874 we know that even
Queen Victoria joined in celebrations at Balmoral. Edinburgh Evening News, 5 November 1874 Looking
for something to wear? Look no further! Here the Courier and Advertiser
advertises children's party frocks and cloaks for sale at Henderson MacKay's
of Dundee. The Courier and Advertiser, 25 October 1938 No
Halloween party would be complete without 'dooking' for apples. There's not a
pumpkin in sight in this photo from the Aberdeen Press and Journal in 1929. Aberdeen Press and Journal, 1 November 1929 Why don't you delve into the pages of the British Newspaper Archive and see what you can find? We've used articles from Scottish newspapers, but there are millions of pages to explore covering all of Britain and Ireland. |