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Seek Halloween handbills, pictures of

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Information:

Halloween (Halloween) for the first of November each year, from the ancient Celtic peoples (Celtic) New Year's festivities, this time is also the time to sacrifice the souls of the dead, in order to avoid the interference of the evil spirits at the same time, but also with food to worship the ancestral spirits and the good spirits in order to pray for a safe passage through the harsh winter is the traditional Western holiday. On that night, children dress up in costumes and masks and go from house to house to collect mungo. It is mainly popular in the English-speaking world, such as the British Isles and North America, followed by Australia and New Zealand. Now, the younger generation in some Asian countries is also beginning to favor "foreign festivals", and on the eve of Halloween, some large foreign-funded supermarkets will set up counters to sell Halloween toys, and vendors will also sell some Halloween-related dolls or models, which has attracted young people's attention.

Hallowmas

"Jack-o-lanterns" (pumpkin lamps) are very cute and extremely simple to make. The pumpkin is hollowed out and carved with smiling eyes and a big mouth, then a candle is inserted into the pumpkin and lit, so that the smiling face can be seen from far away. This is the children's favorite plaything.?  However, the main event of Halloween is still on the table, you have to prepare food to entertain those who come to make trouble, but also to dress up your table for this special holiday. Don't let your guests underestimate you! This night is the most "haunted" time of the year, with all sorts of ghosts, pirates, alien visitors and witches. Pumpkin Lights

The children are out in force. Before the Christian era, the Celts held late-summer ceremonies to thank the gods and the sun for their bounty. Soothsayers of the time lit and practiced witchcraft to ward off the demonic monsters said to be roaming around. Later the Roman harvest festival, celebrated with nuts and apples, merged with the Celtic October 31st. In the Middle Ages, people wore animal-shaped costumes and scary masks in an attempt to ward off the ghosts and goblins in the darkness of the night on the eve of Halloween. Although Christianity later replaced Celtic and Roman religious practices, the early customs have survived. Nowadays, children wear costumes and masks with a sense of humor to Halloween dances, which are often surrounded by walls hung with papier-maché witches, black cats, ghosts and ghouls, and skeletons, and windows and doorways are hung with pumpkin lanterns showing teeth or repulsive faces.  On the eve of Halloween, children carry pumpkin lanterns and dress up in all kinds of weird and wacky costumes, and go door to door asking for candy, saying "trick?or?treat." (meaning give or take, trick or treat.) If you don't want to give the candy, the children will get angry and punish you in all kinds of ways, such as dumping garbage in your The children will be angry and punish you in various ways, such as dumping garbage in your house, etc., until you give them candy.

Halloween

Means "holy night". However, for a variety of reasons, Halloween Eve has turned into one of the most popular and beloved holidays of the year, and many Western players celebrate it with great enthusiasm.  Halloween, which falls on October 31, is actually a holiday that praises autumn, just as Maypole is a holiday that praises spring. The ancient priests of Gaul, Britain and Ireland, the Druids, had a great festival in praise of autumn that began at midnight on October 31 and lasted all day the following day on 1?Halloween Costume Dance Party

January 1st. They believed that on that night their great god of death, Saman, summoned all the ghosts of those who had died that year, and that these evil spirits were to be punished by being consigned to life as beasts of burden. Surely the mere thought of such a ghostly gathering was enough to frighten the simple-minded fools of the day. So they lit bonfires in the sky and kept a close watch on the evil spirits.  That's how the saying that there were witches and ghosts everywhere on the night before Halloween began. It is still believed to be true today in certain isolated parts of Europe. The ancient Romans also had a festival on November 1 that was used to honor their goddess Pomona. They roasted nuts and apples in front of a roaring bonfire. Our own Halloween Eve seems to be a blend of the ancient Romans' holiday with that of the Druids. Halloween Eve activities turned out to be very simple and mostly took place in churches. But throughout Europe, people saw the night before Halloween as a great opportunity to have fun, tell ghost stories and scare each other. So people stopped using the holiday to celebrate the fall light and made it a holiday for gods and monsters, witches and ghosts.?

Trick or treat?  An interesting aspect of Halloween is "Trick?or?treat," a custom that did not originate in Ireland, but in the Christian churches of Europe in the ninth century. At that time, November 2 was known to Christians as? "ALL?SOULS?DAY" (All Souls Day). On this day, believers traveled from village to village in the backwoods of the countryside begging for "soul cakes" made of flour and raisins. It is said that the families who donate the cakes believe in the prayers of the monks of the church and expect to receive God's blessing for their deceased loved ones to enter heaven as soon as possible. The tradition of begging from house to house has evolved into a game in which children carrying pumpkin lanterns go from house to house begging for candy. When they meet, the children, dressed as ghosts and goblins, invariably threaten to "trick or treat," and the hosts, naturally, do not dare to slow down and say, "Please eat! Please eat!" At the same time, they put the candies into the big pockets that the children carry with them. There is also a custom that every family puts a lot of pumpkin lamps in front of the door, and if they don't treat (don't give candies), the children trample one of them. , the children would trample one of his pumpkin lamps.?  There are also stories of pumpkins being carved out as lanterns. This again originates from ancient Ireland. The story goes that a man named Jack was a drunkard and a prankster. One day, Jack tricked the devil into a tree, then carved a cross on the stump to intimidate the devil so that he would not dare to come down, and then Jack made a pact with the devil, so that the devil promised to cast a spell so that Jack would never commit a crime as a condition for him to come down from the tree. When Jack died, his soul could neither go to heaven nor hell, so his spirit had to rely on a small candle to guide him between heaven and earth.  In the old Irish legend, this small candle is placed in a hollowed out turnip, called "Jack?LANTERNS", and the old turnip lamp evolved to today, is made of pumpkin Jack-O-Lantern? It is said that the Irish to the United States soon, that is to say, found that the pumpkin, whether from the source and carving are better than the turnip, so the pumpkin has become a Halloween pet.