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How the Tradition of Sending Christmas Cards Started

Like most people who get swept up in the usual Christmas traditions, you probably send out Christmas cards to your friends and family, but do you know why? This is a quick history of the Christmas card to explain why we send one another Christmas cards to wish people a merry Christmas.

Author: S. Roberts
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Tradition has it that when Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire, it merged the celebration of Christ's nativity (the real date is still unknown) with a Roman holiday whose celebration included the giving of gifts. Gift giving also fitted in with the Christmas beliefs where the giving of gifts echoes the gifts that the three wise men gave Jesus.

However, the practice seems to have come and gone through the ages, once more becoming in fashion about the 1830s or so; "The Night Before Christmas" poem by Moore and "The Christmas Carol" by Dickens date to that period. Traditionally, the giver of gifts is considered to be Saint Nicholas; however each country has their own gift givers.

The first Christmas card was designed by a man named John Calcott Horsely for Sir Henry Cole, the friend who had given him the idea back in 1843. Cole was a civil servant who helped to instigate the Penny Post and the first stamp.

Cole suggested to his friend in 1840 that Horsley design a greetings card after Cole had confided that he was finding himself too busy to write to his friends during the holiday season and hence the invention of the Christmas card.

A thousand copies of the card were printed and sold for one shilling. Printed in black and white the one thousand cards were then coloured by hand. These gifts of small works of art became affordable to nearly everyone and grew in popularity when due to the modern efficiency of the railway system; the half penny postage rate was introduced in 1870. Printed cards soon became the rage in England; then in Germany. But it required an additional thirty years for Americans to take to the idea.

Christmas cards produced in the years that followed tended to be elaborate, often decorated with fabrics such as silk and satin, embossed and often shaped, and were typical of the Victorian taste for excessive detail. Such specimens from the ‘golden age’ of printing are especially prized and can fetch vast sums of money at auction.

Sending and receiving Christmas cards are a holiday tradition that keeps us in the Christmas spirit through the holidays all the way to the New Year.

About Author

SantasPostbag.co.uk is a fantastic Christmas website packed with crafts and things to do. Print your own Christmas cards http://www.santaspostbag.co.uk/make-and-print-your-own-christmas-cards-online-for-free.shtml and get Santa to write a special email to someone you know www.santaspostbag.co.uk/your-letter-from-santa.php

Article Source: http://www.1888articles.com/author-s.-roberts-9024.html

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