ESL Forum:
Techniques and methods
in Language Teaching
Games, activities
and teaching ideas
Grammar and
Linguistics
Teaching material
Concerning
worksheets
Concerning
powerpoints
Concerning online
exercises
Make suggestions,
report errors
Ask for help
Message board
|
ESL forum >
Message board > Origins of The Candy cane!
Origins of The Candy cane!
Redbull
|
Origins of The Candy cane!
|
It was not long after Europeans began using Christmas trees that special decorations were used to adorn them. Food items, such as candies and cookies, were used predominately and straight white candy sticks were one of the confections used as ornamentation. Legend has it that during the 17th century, craftsmen created the white sticks of candy in the shape of shephreds � crooks at the suggestion of the choirmaster at the Cologne Cathedral in Germany.
The candy treats were given to children to keep them quiet during ceremonies at the living creche, or Nativity scene, and the custom of passing out the candy crooks at such ceremonies soon spread throughout Europe. |
According to the National Confectioner �s Association, in 1847 German immigrant August Imgard used the candy cane to decorate a Christmas tree in Wooster, Ohio. More than 50 years later, Bob McCormack of Albany, Georgia supposedly made candy canes as treats for family, friends and local shopkeepers. McCormack �s brother-in-law, Catholic priest Gregory Keller, invented a machine in the 1950s that automated the production of candy canes, thus eliminating the usual laborious process of creating the treats and the popularity of the candy cane grew.
More recent explanations of the candy cane �s symbolism hold that the color white represents Christ �s purity, the red the blood he shed, and the presence of three red stripes the Holy Trinity. While factual evidence for these notions does not exist, they have become increasingly common and at times are even represented as fact. Regardless, the candy cane remains a favorite holiday treat and decoration.
REDBULL GIVES YOU WINGS YOU KNOW. |
17 Dec 2010
|
|
|
Yolandaprieto
|
How interesting the things you tell us every day, I �m learning a lot about traditions. Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
Yolanda |
17 Dec 2010
|
|
|
magneto
|
Thank you for sharing these stories with us, Redbull!
|
17 Dec 2010
|
|
Vivilui
|
Really interesting facts! Tnx!!! |
17 Dec 2010
|
|
|