Revolutions - 1.14a Supplemental- The War on Christmas
Episode Date: December 25, 2013After the Puritans came to power they tried to abolish Christmas. Seriously. ...
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and welcome to revolutions.
Supplemental, the War on Christmas.
As you know, the triumph of Parliament over the king in the first Civil War
put a bunch of Puritans in power.
This bunch of Puritans wasted no time trying to implement a whole series of religious reforms
designed to roll back not only Archbishop Lodge's recent innovations to the Church of England,
but also anything that struck them as an ungodly relic of Catholicism.
And one ungodly relic of Catholicism that had been bugging them for a long time
were the big holidays on the religious calendar, Easter, Wits' Sun, and of course Christmas.
Now that they were in a position to do something about it,
the Puritans got together in the mid-1640s and decided to try and abolish Christmas.
During the 17th century, Christmas was observed by having everyone take a day off, close up their shops, and head down to church to hear a nice sermon.
But beyond that, the people of England also enjoyed the full 12 days of Christmas, an extended period of midwinter festivities, celebrated by drinking and dancing and eating delicious pies and more drinking and gift-giving and gambling and more drinking.
and as much as Puritans didn't like things that smacked of popery, they really didn't like things that smacked of a good time.
This is when I break out H.L. Mencken's famous definition of Puritanism as the haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy.
If you combine fun and popery, well, then you've got something that the Puritans would very much like to kill Stone Dead.
As soon as the king was driven out of London at the start of the first civil civil,
war, calls immediately started going out for Parliament to stop observing Christmas. But even in London,
the heart of the Puritan parliamentary cause, the attempt to abolish this very popular holiday
met with open resistance. In 1643, which would be just after the Solem League and Covenant was
signed, some Puritan shopkeepers in the city tried to stay open on Christmas Day, but they were
met by a mob of angry apprentices who tried to rabble, rabble them back.
into closing. Life, as an apprentice, was hard enough without a bunch of joyless zealots trying
to steal one of their few bits of fun. But the alliance with the Scots meant that the push against
Christmas only picked up steam from there. The next year, Christmas coincidentally fell on the same
day as a regular monthly fast, and Parliament announced that people ought to observe the latter
rather than the former. Shortly thereafter, a new directory of worship was published that struck
Christmas from the calendar, not that anyone actually read the new directory of worship.
After the defeat of Charles at Naseby in 1646, the attacks on Christmas intensified further.
But again, popular pushback led to confrontations in the street. And again, not from Puritan mobs
trying to force merchants to stay open, but from commoner mobs trying to force Puritan shopkeepers
to stay closed. I think it's safe to say that the attempt to abolish Christmas
was not exactly the most popular thing Parliament ever tried to do.
The fight over Christmas was actually a big enough deal
that there was a running battle in the popular media
all through the 1640s about it.
By popular media, I mean not just the presses,
but also in plays and songs designed to rally commoners
to one side or the other.
The arguments in favor were about maintaining old traditions
and celebrating the birthday of the Savior,
I mean, what's so bad about that,
and noting the good charity work done during the Christmas season.
The arguments against Christmas were that there was no basis for it in Scripture.
We don't even know if it was Jesus' birthday and its rank popery.
Opponents of Christmas also started noticing the eerie alignment of Christmas
with the Roman's old celebration of Saturnalia.
So this wasn't just about fighting a Catholic celebration, it was about fighting a downright pagan celebration.
Everything came to a head in 1647, which is, let's see,
right before the Second Civil War.
And if you will recall, the Second Civil War in England was defined by what?
A series of popular uprising scattered across the country, right?
Well, I didn't talk about this at the time,
but the Puritan War on Christmas played a role in sparking those uprisings.
With Parliament now in control, and the natives getting restless,
the attempt to suppress Christmas exacerbated existing tensions,
and there were riots in Norwich and Ipswich,
where, and I'm just going to pass this along since it was reported at the time, though who knows if it was actually true, a guy named Christmas was actually killed.
In London, the Lord Mayor and his deputies attempted to remove some public decorations, and they were met by an angry mob.
But by far the biggest uprising was down in Canterbury, ancient home of England's senior archbishop.
Puritans on the county council outlawed any celebration of, quote,
that darling of rude and licentious behavior called Christmas, unquote.
But the locals were really not on board with this, and they gathered for their Christmas
sermon anyway. Things quickly got out of hand, no doubt partly due to the fact that someone
started giving away free beer to anyone who set up a holly bush outside their front door.
The mayor's house was attacked, the crowd started chanting pro-royalist slogans,
and by the end of the day the rioters actually controlled the city government.
Troops had to be called in to reassert parliamentary command of the city.
So this was, of course, all a prelude to the uprisings that were about to sweep England,
especially in the eastern counties, and sparked the Second Civil War.
So obviously, there is more going on here than just a deeply felt attachment to Christmas.
But Parliament was not doing itself any favors.
The Christmas riots of 1647 turned out to be the most vocal and violent pushback,
and during the Commonwealth era, both sides settled into a kind of stalemate.
In 1650, the Council of State recommended increasing penalties for those who observed Christmas.
In 1652, the Rump ordered shops to stay open and businesses to be protected from streetmobs.
In 1656, the second protector at Parliament met on Christmas Day to debate a bill on how to stop celebrations in London,
and the next year, they recommended to the mayor of London that he do a better job policing the homestead.
holiday. All of which tells us two things. First, there was an active group in government who
really, really wanted to do away with Christmas. And second, that no one was listening to them.
An ironic result of this stalemate was that it wound up promoting exactly the kind of drunken merry
making that the Puritans were so fundamentally opposed to. You see, it was a pretty simple thing
to make sure that the churches were closed so no one could go down and hear a Christmas sermon,
but it was super hard to make a shopkeeper stay open if he didn't want to.
So on Christmas Day, all the churches would be locked up, and all the shops would be locked up,
so what were you supposed to do?
Well, I can tell you, the taverns are open.
Come the restoration, Christmas was restored to its place along with the monarchy,
and it has stayed there ever since.
people can adapt to all kinds of change, big and small, temporary and permanent, but just seriously,
don't mess with the holidays unless you want a riot on your hands.
