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The Origins of
Wedding Traditions
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| Weddings can be incredibly complicated events
guest lists, catering, planning. In the rush of it all,
a bride is often at the mercy of friends, relatives, coordinators
and etiquette books as to the "proper" traditions
to have at her Big Event. And since a bride gets married only
once or twice in her lifetime, shes usually
not the expert when it comes to all the traditions, customs,
and trends in a wedding. |
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| Most brides want their wedding to be recognizable as
a wedding complete with a dress that lets guests know shes
the bride, and a ceremony and traditions that make the whole day feel
"official." For some women, this is easy. They decide to
go "traditional all the way." For others, they would prefer
to select only those traditions that add personal significance to
the Big Event. Regardless, its interesting to discover the colorful
origins of our modern day wedding customs. |
| Heres a highlight of some wedding traditions.
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Rings
The wedding ring probably originated from Egypt over four thousand
years ago. To the Egyptians, the wedding ring circle symbolized eternity.
While diamonds are by far the stone of choice in wedding and engagement
rings today, their popularity and availability is relatively recent
(about 100 years old). Engagement rings have long been used as a symbol
of marital intent. In fact, some engagement rings were given at an
infant girls birth to signify the promise of a future marriage.
In times when marriages represented economic unions or exchange of
ownership, the acceptance of an engagement ring was a contractually
binding irreversible action! Rings are worn on the third finger of
the left hand due to a mistaken notion that a vein ran directly from
that finger to the heart. A ring on that finger would therefore be
closest to the heart. |
Dress & Veil
Bridal dresses have been worn in a rainbow of colors through the centuries.
The tradition of a white dress (advertising virginity) has been en
vogue for over 150 years. More common (and practical) was wearing
a fine dress that could be worn at other occasions. The veil is originally
a sign of obedience and submissiveness (such as seen in Muslim cultures).
Folklore has it that the veil was also a clever way to disguise a
bride who was recently captured. During the Medieval period, this
custom developed into covering the bridal couple with a veil during
the ceremony. |
Witnesses
During Medieval times, sexual union was considered a necessary condition
of a marriage. Therefore, witnesses originally acted as witnesses
to the post-ceremony consummation that took place that evening. |
Best Man
Popular legend has it that the Best Man was the grooms partner
in crime when a bride was abducted. He helped to abduct her, and later
hid their whereabouts to disgruntled kinsmen. |
The Bride to the Left
Having a bride to the left of the groom frees his right hand to draw
his sword (Ive never seen that happen) to fend off the Bad Guys. |
Cake
During Roman times, wheat and later, cake crumbs were thrown at brides
(and grooms) to bless them with fertility. The cakes were, at first,
biscuits or scones. These were made by the guests and piled high during
the festivities. A clever French baker created the decorated multi-tiered
cake from the "piled high" concept. |
Flower Toss
In a gesture of sharing the good fortune, the bride tosses flowers
(a symbol of fertility and frailty) to unmarried maidens. |
Garter Toss
The garter toss is remnant of the times when the wedding guests would
follow the bridal couple to the room where the consummation would
take place. In rowdiness, guests would paw at the bridal couple, cheering
them onto the pending "act of sexual union." It was up to
the Best Man to chase the guests away. Lucky would be the guest who
actually stole a piece of clothing from the bride or groom! In time,
a piece of clothing (such as the garter) was thrown at the lively
mob to appease their bawdy appetite. No longer do we openly celebrate
the consummation, but we still cheer on the offering of the garter.
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Rice Toss
Rice, birdseed, wheat, cake crumbs, and other seeds and nuts have
been thrown at bridal couples ever since Roman times to symbolize
fertility. |
Old Shoes Tied to the Get-away Car
Believe it or not, old shoes were once thrown at a bride as
a symbol of fertility, since feet (and therefore shoes) were
a phallic symbol. |
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Honeymoon
In Medieval times of bride-capture, the groom would hide with his
new bride for a period of one month (one moon cycle). The term "honey"
refers to the wine of newlyweds meade which is
made from honey. |
P.S.
Origin of the Word bridal -- from "brides ale,"
a special brew |
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