The History of Halloween A Reading A Z Level X Leveled Book Word Count: 1,422

Similar documents
The History of Halloween A Reading A Z Level R Leveled Book Word Count: 934

True Halloween 2. The Truth On Halloween halloween was thought to be the most favorable time for divinations concerning marriage, luck,

e-lesson Week starting: 22 nd October 2007

True Halloween 2. True Halloween 2

ONLINE ENGLISH EXERCISES

Designed by: Candie Donner

Halloween spending is a scary amount of money

Trick or Treat UNIT 19 FICTION. #3893 Nonfiction & Fiction Paired Texts 100 Teacher Created Resources

And the Adventist Christian. By Barrington H. Brennen October 21, 2015

Halloween. The Celts. The Catholics

Halloween. October 31 st - the scariest night of the year!

HALLOWEEN: 1) ITS ORIGIN: WHEN DID IT START? 2) WHO FIRST CELEBRATED IT? 3) THE CUSTOMS: FROM WHERE? 4) SHOULD YOU CELEBRATE IT?

#024: CELEBRATE HALLOWEEN JUST LIKE AN AMERICAN

Should Christians Participate in Halloween?

Halloween. Produced by Excellent ESL 4u

EVERYTHING YOU EVER WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT HALLOWEEN BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK

Origin of Halloween (All Hallows Eve) or the Day of All Saints is actually Christian

It s almost Halloween!!!

Halloween. Beginner Level. Holidays & Events

Teacher s Guide. Written by Barri Golbus Produced by Colman Communications Corp.

HALLOWEEN OR ALL SAINTS HOLIDAY. 1. Brainstorming. jack-o-lantern

Ancient Egypt. Ancient Egypt. Visit for thousands of books and materials.

SAMPLE ONLY. It's Halloween! It's Halloween! The moon is full and bright And we shall see what can't be seen On any other night.

S.E.E. Significant Emotional Experience. What pictures can be used to make abstract concepts concrete? View, Preview, Overview, Review

Activty 1. Answer the questions

Hallowe'en! Table of Contents. Expectations Teacher Input Suggestions Hallowe'en Vocabulary List of Resources...

30 WRITING PROMPTS 6 G E N R E S

Spooky Celebration Activity Book 1

New Scores in 2017 National Day Holiday

Blizzards! A Reading A Z Level I Leveled Book Word Count: 250

Discovering Dinosaurs A Reading A Z Level O Leveled Book Word Count: 750

The Supernatural Week #1

Tornadoes A Reading A Z Level J Leveled Book Word Count: 438

Advanced Formatting Options Preamble Commands Line Document body numbers

Introducing Planet Earth

To Halloween, or NOT to Halloween. Oct 29, 2017

People. The Shadow Shadow People. The Shadow People A Reading A Z Level O Leveled Book Word Count: 874 LEVELED BOOK O.

Listening Comprehension Sample 1

Amy's Halloween Secret

TIPS PLANNING FORM FOR INFANTS AND TODDLERS

RELAY QUESTION 1 RELAY QUESTION 2 RELAY QUESTION 4 RELAY QUESTION 3

The Witch Who Was Frightened of Halloween.

M.Carmen Del Moral González FOLKLORE BRITISH FOLKLORE

CELEBRATE HALLOWEEN AND THE DAY OF THE DEAD LESSON PLAN FOR GRADES 3 6

The YOKA Music Program Halloween Carols

Pemberton Hall Program of the Year Spirits of Pemberton

Halloween. October 31

CANYON THE. The Grand Canyon A Reading A Z Level K Leveled Book Word Count: 394 H K N. LEVELED BOOK K Grand

Members Museum late Halloween shadow and light

Chinese New Year. By History.com, adapted by Newsela staff on Word Count 898

REVIEW. Trick R Treat: A Celebration of Halloween Trash. By Hannah Irwin, Macquarie University

Anna and the Magic Coat

THE SATANIC & WITCH CALENDAR Glorious God Ministries, Inc. Apostle Karen Caston

Henry and Mudge under the Yellow Moon. In the fall, Henry and his big dog Mudge took long. walks in the woods. Henry loved looking at the tops of

At no other time of the year were the living more connected with the dead in their imaginations than at Hallowtide.

V Q \ = 7]Z 4IVL 126 Unit 5

PENGUIN READERS. Five Famous Fairy Tales

Name. El Nino. by Cindy Grigg

Lusus Naturae. by Margaret Atwood. - naturae: nature, birth, character

Se siete insegnanti di inglese e state pensando a proporre canzoncine per la festa di Halloween eccovi alcuni brani, con

Why Do Leaves Change Color?

501 S.R. 13, St. Johns, Florida fruitcove.com

Narrator 2: But the magician couldn t go into the cave to get the lamp. Only a boy could get the magic lamp from the cave.

Newsletter. Golden Valley Lodge #616. Upcoming Events. Next meeting: Thursday, October 9, 2014

A goblin lives in our house, in our house, in our house. A goblin lives in our house, all the year round. He bumps, and he jumps, and he thumps, and

Add a 10 x10 pop-up shelter to provide people a dry place to find refuge. Bonus points if it has a wall or two to block some wind.

MYTHOLOGY THE MYTH IS BORN

Lesson 32. The Grain of Wheat. John 12:20-26

Witches Sailing Through The Sky

Isaac Newton Benjamin Franklin Michael Faraday

Halloween / Jack-O'-Lantern : Pattern

Your web browser (Safari 7) is out of date. For more security, comfort and the best experience on this site: Update your browser Ignore

Halloween. October 31

Grade 2 CORRELATION TO THE ONTARIO SOCIAL STUDIES CURRICULUM

DISCOVERY CLASS NEWSLETTER: OCTOBER/NOVEMBER 2017

True Hauntings: Spirits With A Purpose By Hazel M. Denning

DAY 2 ENGLISH FOR EVERYONE E4E

6th Grade. Dependent & Independent Variables

The Old Curiosity Shop

halloween Supplemental Lesson Packet

Disappearing. Moon. The Disappearing. Moon LEVELED READER J. Visit for thousands of books and materials.

DOWNLOAD HALLOWEEN QUIZ QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

WEEKLY BOOKSETS. myon Digital Books about Celebrating Autumn. I See Fall (PreK) - Experience the many joys of fall. (Picture Window Books)

The Little Chicken Named

Conferences Start October 26th -Please or call if you need to make an appointment. Scientific Test on Method and Matter October 27th

Paranormal Niagara Cases of the Mysterious and Macabre

The Legend of Sleepy Hollow

as told by the boys and girls in Kindergarten Pumpkin Delight School

Second grade summer work:

the irish devil 34BF7243F9A33AFA6DC5643ABA1B7060 The Irish Devil 1 / 6

Landon s Pumpkins. Landon s Pumpkins LEVELED BOOK P. Visit for thousands of books and materials.

Our Lady Immaculate Catholic Primary School History and Geography Curriculum Map Would the Bog Baby survive in Liverpool?

THREE GHOST STORIES - FREE PDF EBOOKS ARCHIVE BY PLANET PDF

6th Grade. Translating to Equations. Slide 1 / 65 Slide 2 / 65. Slide 4 / 65. Slide 3 / 65. Slide 5 / 65. Slide 6 / 65

Grade Five Social Studies Assessment Regions/Native Americans

The St. Pius X Friday Quiz

Spider Monkey s Question

both spooky witches wizards fair rather odd

Halloween tree : Assembly Instructions

Table of Contents I m Dreaming of the Great Pumpkin p.2 Have You Seen the Ghost of John? p.3 Great Pumpkin Is Coming To Town p.4 The Wackiest Witch

Transcription:

The History of Halloween A Reading A Z Level X Leveled Book Word Count: 1,422 LEVELED BOOK X Connections Writing Create a Venn diagram comparing how Halloween is celebrated today to how it was celebrated long ago. Then, use the information to write a paragraph. Social Studies Research to learn more about the history of Halloween. Create a timeline outlining the major events. Share your timeline with your class. Visit www.readinga-z.com for thousands of books and materials. Written by Keith and Sarah Kortemartin www.readinga-z.com

Celtic consumers immigrants malicious medieval merchandise Words to Know pranks predictions Puritans supernatural tradition underworld Title page: A hand-colored woodcut shows people bobbing for apples at a Halloween party in Ireland in the 1800s. Page 3: An illustration from the 1890s shows a group of children using their jack-o -lanterns to scare away an adult on Halloween. Photo Credits: Front cover: Rebecca Nelson/Taxi/Getty Images; back cover: Joe Fox/ age fotostock; title page: North Wind Picture Archives/Alamy Stock; page 3: Mary Evans Picture Library Ltd/age fotostock; page 4: Cincinnati Museum Center/Archive Photos/Getty Images; page 5: Frederic J. Brown/AFP/Getty Images; page 6: Carl De Souza/AFP/Getty Images; page 7: Gregory Wrona/Alamy Stock Photo; page 8: Haydn West/REX/Shutterstock; page 10: EGON/Alamy Stock Photo; page 11: Bettmann/Getty Images; page 13 (main): Darryl Brooks/Dreamstime.com; pages 13 (background), 15 (bottom): Jani Bryson/iStock/Thinkstock; page 14: Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis News/ Getty Images; page 15: Two Girls in Halloween costumes, c.1898 (photo)/private Collection/Prismatic Pictures/Bridgeman Images Written by Keith and Sarah Kortemartin Illustration Credits: Page 9: Matthew Forsyth/ Learning A Z www.readinga-z.com Focus Question How has the celebration of Halloween changed throughout the years? The History of Halloween Level X Leveled Book Learning A Z Written by Keith and Sarah Kortemartin All rights reserved. www.readinga-z.com Correlation LEVEL X Fountas & Pinnell Reading Recovery DRA S 40 40

A Fun and Scary Holiday Halloween is a colorful and delicious holiday celebrated mostly in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Ireland, where it first began. On October 31, people dress up in all kinds of costumes, creepy music oozes from Halloween parties and haunted houses, and trickor-treaters pour into the streets, looking for candy. Monsters, ghosts, superheroes, and princesses of all ages celebrate together. Table of Contents A Fun and Scary Holiday... 4 The Celts: Samhain... 6 The Beginnings of Halloween... 7 Costumes and Trick-or-Treating... 8 Jack-o -Lanterns... 9 Traditions of the Past... 11 Halloween Today... 12 Celebrating in a Crowd... 14 A Mix of Old and New... 15 Glossary.... 16 Three girls show off their Halloween costumes in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1929. The History of Halloween Level X 4 3

Modern-day druids perform a blessing at Stonehenge in southern England. A boy shops for his Captain America costume at a costume store store in Montebello, California. Today, Halloween is most popular in the United States, where the holiday plays an enormous role in both culture and business. Halloween is featured in Hollywood movies and popular songs. Halloween means big business for American stores since millions of people buy Halloween candy, costumes, and merchandise every year. The Halloween holiday celebrated today is part of an ancient tradition. It began with the Celtic (KEL-tik) peoples who lived in Great Britain, Ireland, and northern France about two thousand years ago. The Celts: Samhain The Celts celebrated a harvest festival called Samhain (SOW-in) each fall. Samhain had some things in common with our New Year s celebrations as well as the modern Halloween. According to the Celtic calendar, October 31 was the final day of the year. The Samhain celebration on October 31 was a way to say farewell to the old year, close the harvest season, and get ready for winter. The Celtic Samhain festival also had a supernatural side. According to Celtic tradition, on the eve of Samhain, the doorways between the world of the living and the world of the dead were open. As a result, the spirits of people who had died during the previous year could cross over to the underworld. The Celts believed the dead could appear and communicate with the living during this period. To help the dead on their journey, Celts lit bonfires and sacrificed crops and animals. It was also believed that priests could see the future during this festival. The predictions made at Samhain were an important part of planning for the new year. The History of Halloween Level X 6 5

The Beginnings of Halloween Later, as Christianity spread throughout Europe, the Catholic Church tried to replace the old Samhain festival with its own traditions. For example, the Church declared an All Saints Day on November 1; this celebration was also known as All Hallows Day. October 31, the day before All Hallows, came to be called All Hallows Eve, which was later shortened to Halloween. Hundreds of years later, many of the older Celtic traditions remained in this new holiday especially the belief in supernatural activity on the night of October 31. The Halloween traditions we know today are influenced by the Celts, the Catholic Church, and legends from medieval Europe. Catholic churchgoers make a procession through a town in Poland to celebrate All Saints Day. Costumes and Trick-or-Treating The tradition of dressing up in costumes has changed many times over the centuries. Halloween costumes probably began with the Celts, who dressed up like animals at the Samhain bonfires. In medieval England, the costumes took a new twist as people began to dress like supernatural beings in the hope of frightening them away. Many people paraded through towns wearing fairy, witch, and ghost costumes. This practice was called mumming, and people often gave mummers food and drink. This custom echoed the Celtic practice of making sacrifices at Samhain; it was believed that such offerings helped satisfy the spirits so they would go away without making trouble. Today this tradition is known as trick-or-treating. Adults give candy to children, who, if they get a treat, will hopefully move along without performing any malicious tricks. A modern druid wears a stag costume during a Samhain celebration in England. The History of Halloween Level X 8 7

Jack-o -Lanterns Many people create jack-o -lanterns each year at Halloween. Jack-o -lanterns are made by carving faces or designs into a pumpkin, then placing a candle or other light inside the pumpkin to light up the carving. Jack-o -lanterns are a newer Halloween tradition, one of the few that did not originate with the Celtic Samhain. Jack-o - lanterns come from an Irish legend about a man named Stingy Jack. Stingy Jack wasn t just stingy he was cruel, too, and liked to play mischievous tricks on his friends. When Jack died, his spirit was forced to roam in the darkness as punishment for his unpleasant personality. To light his way, he carved a hollow in a turnip and placed a candle inside. Because of this, the Irish referred to him as Jack-of-the-lantern and, later, Jack-o -lantern. The legend of Stingy Jack started one big Halloween tradition. Some people still carve turnips for Halloween. People in Ireland and England used to put candles and coals into turnips, beets, and potatoes, carving scary faces into them to imitate Stingy Jack s terrifying face (or to frighten him away). Irish people moved to North America in huge numbers in the 1800s and brought the jack-o - lantern tradition with them. The tradition of using pumpkins in jack-o - lanterns, however, began in the United States. An American newspaper story and a poem, published separately in 1846, both mentioned people carving faces into pumpkins and placing a candle inside. The rest is history. Pumpkins make excellent jacko -lanterns: they are large enough to be carved in all kinds of elaborate designs, and they are plentiful in the fall. Today, creating and displaying jack-o -lanterns is a beloved Halloween tradition for many families. The History of Halloween Level X 10 9

Traditions of the Past A number of Halloween traditions popular in the past are less well known today. Interestingly, several of these traditions are related to the Celtic custom of fortune-telling at Samhain, which survived in different forms for centuries. For example, sometimes people played games on Halloween night to predict who they might marry. A girl might look into a mirror while holding a candle to see the face of her future husband. Even the classic Halloween party game of bobbing for apples began as a form of fortune-telling. In this game, players attempt to remove an apple from a tub of water using only their mouths. The first person to get an apple out of the tub was supposed to be the first to marry thereafter. Today, fortune-telling has dropped out of many Halloween games, but people might meet a fortune-teller at a Halloween party or haunted house. Children bob for apples at a party in the United States in the early 1900s. Halloween Today The modern Halloween celebration is a fairly recent invention, though it is often mixed with ancient traditions like that of the Samhain bonfire. This is especially true in North America, where the holiday was not widely celebrated until the 1800s. Halloween was frowned upon by many of the first European settlers in the New World; the Puritans, for example, considered Halloween a silly waste of time at best and discouraged people from celebrating it. The holiday became much more popular when huge numbers of Irish immigrants came to the United States in the 1800s, bringing their traditions with them. With the immigrants came jack-o - lanterns and mumming, and gradually more Americans began to celebrate Halloween. Unfortunately, though, as Halloween celebrations became more popular, pranks and vandalism became common on Halloween night. By the 1930s, the pranks had become a major problem. Some city governments addressed the issue by trying to remake Halloween into a family holiday, organizing trick-or-treating events and encouraging children to participate. The initial trick-or-treaters in the 1930s and 1940s received cookies and fruit as well as toys and even pocket change. The History of Halloween Level X 12 11

Candy became a popular offering as trickor-treating became more widespread in the 1950s. However, the tiny, individually wrapped Halloween candy bars common today didn t appear until the 1970s. Although the treats have changed over the years, kids enthusiasm hasn t. In the United States alone, more than 41 million children between the ages of five and fourteen went trick-or-treating in 2014. Where Costume Ideas Come From Other 10.1% Pop culture 13.6% Friends or family 18.1% Online 31.4% In a store 26.8% Fun Halloween Facts Pounds of fresh pumpkin consumed per person in the United States in 2013: 4.2 Percentage of dedicated Halloween fans who begin shopping before September: 5% Total spent on Halloween in the United States in 2015: $6.89 billion Children trick-or-treat at an organized event. Celebrating in a Crowd Halloween s popularity is on the rise. Especially in the United States and Canada, the number of people who celebrate Halloween each year is growing. Some cities are organizing community trick-or-treating events at malls, churches, and community centers. These events help kids pile up lots of candy in a short amount of time, and they also help to keep trick-or-treaters safe from street traffic. The crowds aren t made up of kids alone; adults are celebrating Halloween in increasing numbers, too. In 2015, consumers actually planned to spend more on costumes for adults than on costumes for children. Many adults (especially young adults) participate in the festivities by hosting or attending Halloween parties as well as dressing in costume. Halloween is fun for kids but adults definitely don t want to be left out. The History of Halloween Level X 14 13

A Mix of Old and New Halloween today looks very different from the Halloween celebrations of the 1950s, the 1800s, and the Samhain festival of the ancient Celts; its traditions continue to change, mixing the old with the new. From bonfires to chocolate bars, from coal-filled turnips to candle-lit pumpkins, Halloween is a holiday that changes with the times, providing fun and entertainment for one spooky night each year. Today, Halloween is rich with traditions from several different cultures that people of all ages can enjoy. Do You Know? Two girls dress up for Halloween in the United States in 1898. An entire industry exists around Halloween candy, costumes, and party supplies. A survey in 2015 found that an astonishing 93.7 percent of Halloween shoppers planned to buy Halloween candy. Consumers planned to spend $2.1 billion on candy alone. Shoppers also planned to spend about $28 per household on costumes, and many even planned to buy costumes for their pets. A total of 44.8 percent of people celebrating Halloween planned to decorate their yards. And 31.5 percent of consumers planned either to host a Halloween party or attend one. The average amount spent by people celebrating the holiday was $74.34. Source: National Retail Federation, 2015. Celtic (adj.) consumers (n.) immigrants (n.) Glossary of or relating to people who lived in ancient Ireland, Scotland, Wales, and western Europe (p. 5) people who buy or rent goods or services and use them (p. 14) people who come to live in a new country, especially for the purpose of settling there (p. 12) malicious (adj.) hateful and harmful (p. 8) medieval (adj.) of or relating to the Middle Ages, the time period in European history from AD 500 to 1500 (p. 7) merchandise (n.) items that are bought or sold (p. 5) pranks (n.) tricks or practical jokes (p. 12) predictions (n.) Puritans (n.) guesses about what might happen in the future (p. 6) members of a British Protestant religious group that opposed the Church of England and came to North America seeking religious freedom (p. 12) supernatural (adj.) beyond what can be explained by natural laws; often relating to religion (p. 6) tradition (n.) underworld (n.) a belief or custom that is passed down from year to year and generation to generation (p. 5) the place where dead souls go in some myths (p. 6) The History of Halloween Level X 16 15