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What is Boxing Day all about?

Why do we celebrate Boxing Day?

Boxing Day takes place on December 26 and is only celebrated in a few countries. It was started in the UK about 800 years ago, during the Middle Ages.

It was the day when the alms box, collection boxes for the poor often kept in churches, were traditionally opened so that the contents could be distributed to poor people. Some churches still open these boxes on Boxing Day.

In Holland, some collection boxes were made out of a rough pottery called ‘earthenware’ and were shaped like pigs. Perhaps this is where we get the term ‘Piggy Bank’!

The Christmas Carol, Good King Wenceslas, is set on Boxing Day and is about a King in the Middle Ages who brings food to a poor family.

It was also traditional that servants got the day off to celebrate Christmas with their families on Boxing Day. Before World War II, it was common for working people (such as milkmen and butchers) to travel round their delivery places and collect their Christmas box or tip. This tradition has now mostly stopped and any Christmas tips, given to people such as postal workers and newspaper delivery children, are not normally given or collected on Boxing Day.

Boxing Day has now become another public holiday in countries such as the UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. It is also the traditional day that Pantomimes started to play. There are also often sports played on Boxing Day , especially horse racing and football matches! South Africa will take on England this year in a Boxing Day Test Match.

It’s also the day when shops traditionally had big sales after Christmas in the UK (like Black Friday in the USA).

December 26 is also St Stephen’s Day. Just to confuse things, there are two St Stephens in history! The first St Stephen was a very early follower of Jesus and was the first Christian Martyr (a person who dies for their religious beliefs). He was stoned to death by Jews who didn’t believe in Jesus.

The second St Stephen was a Missionary, in Sweden, in the 800s. He loved all animals but particularly horses (perhaps why there is traditionally horse racing on Boxing Day). He was also a martyr and was killed by pagans in Sweden. In Germany there was a tradition that horses would be ridden around the inside of the church during the St Stephen’s Day service!

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