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According to pagan traditions the god Loki in envy killed the handsome god Balder with a dart made from the mistletoe; all other plants having vowed not to harm Balder; the mistletoe, having been overlooked, was therefore used. According to this pagan tradition the mistletoe dart was plucked out of Balder's fatal wound and given to the goddess of love, Freya. From this, came the custom that a man may kiss a woman if he sees her under the mistletoe. Also in ancient times pagans would hang both the mistletoe and wreaths of holly in windows and doorways for their supposed curative and protective powers, to keep witches and evil spirits from entering.

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16y ago
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12y ago

Quite a while back, possibly a pagan/Celtic/Scandinavian thing, the mistletoe was seen as a fertility herb and aphrodisiac. Women would wear it around their middle, hoping that it would lend its magical powers to their fertility. This was believed about it due to its being alive in the winter in otherwise dead-looking trees, which you can understand pre-scientific people could get excited about. I bet its ability to spring up out of nowhere and be born on a tree 'magically' would have also added to the belief.

Aparently, because of its sacred properties, if enemies ever passed under it they had to lay down their swords for a day and leave each other alone. It's fair to assume this led to it becoming a sign of friendship and good will. There's also the idea that if two people in love kiss under it, they are committing to each other and will be happy together too. Aw.

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13y ago

Scandanavians associated the plant with Frigga, their goddess of love, and it may be from this that we derive the custom of kissing under the mistletoe. Those who kissed under the mistletoe had the promise of happiness and good luck in the following year.

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13y ago

We are all familiar with at least a portion of the mysterious mistletoe's story: namely, that a lot of kissing under the mistletoe has been going on for ages. Few, however, realize that mistletoe's botanical story earns it the classification of "parasite." Fewer still are privy to the convoluted history behind the tradition of kissing under the mistletoe. And its literary history is a forgotten footnote for all but the most scholarly.Here were kept up the old games of hoodman blind, shoe the wild mare, hot cockles, steal the white loaf, bob apple, and snap dragon; the Yule-clog and Christmas candle were regularly burnt, and the mistletoe with its white berries hung up, to the imminent peril of all the pretty housemaids.

So Washington Irving, in "Christmas Eve," relates the typical festivities surrounding the Twelve Days of Christmas, including kissing under the mistletoe (Washington Irving, The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent). Irving continues his Christmas passage with a footnote:

"The mistletoe is still hung up in farm-houses and kitchens at Christmas, and the young men have the privilege of kissing the girls under it, plucking each time a berry from the bush. When the berries are all plucked the privilege ceases."

We moderns have conveniently forgotten the part about plucking the berries (which, incidentally, are poisonous), and then desisting from kissing under the mistletoe when the berries run out!

Along with the Christmas holly, laurel, rosemary,yews, boxwood bushes and, of course, theChristmas tree, mistletoe is an evergreen displayed during the Christmas season and symbolic of the eventual rebirth of vegetation that will occur in spring. But perhaps more than any other of the Christmas evergreens, it is a plant of which we are conscious only during the holidays. One day we're kissing under the mistletoe, and next day we've forgotten all about it (the plant, that is, not the kisses).

When the Christmas decorations come down, mistletoe fades from our minds for another year, receding into the mists of mythology, rituals and enigma. Particularly in regions where the plant is not native (or is rare), most people do not even realize that mistletoe does not grow on the ground, but rather on trees as a parasitic shrub. That's right: as unromantic as it sounds, kissing under the mistletoe means embracing under a parasite....

The variety common in Europe was imbued with religious significance by its ancient denizens. We find the source of "kissing under the mistletoe" in Celtic rituals and Norse mythology. In Gaul, the land of the Celts, for instance, the Druids considered it a sacred plant. It was believed to have medicinal qualities and mysterious supernatural powers. The following reflections from the Roman natural historian, Pliny the Elder is part of a longer Latin passage on the subject, dealing with a Druidic religious ritual:Here we must mention the reverence felt for this plant by the Gauls. The Druids -- for thusly are their priests named - hold nothing more sacred than the mistletoe and the tree that bears it, as long as that tree be an oak.... Mistletoe is very rarely encountered; but when they do find some, they gather it, in a solemn ritual....

After preparing for a sacrifice and a feast under the oak, they hail the mistletoe as a cure-all and bring two white bulls there, whose horns have never been bound before. A priest dressed in a white robe climbs the oak and with a golden sickle cuts the mistletoe, which is caught in a white cloak. Then they sacrifice the victims, begging the god, who gave them the mistletoe as a gift, to make it propitious for them. They believe that a potion prepared from mistletoe will make sterile animals fertile, and that the plant is an antidote for any poison. Such is the supernatural power with which peoples often invest even the most trifling things (Natural History, XVI, 249-251; translation by David Beaulieu).

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13y ago

Well the original story was how St. Nicholas met his his first love. They kissed ands mated underneath a mistle toe bush.

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Q: How did the tradition of kissing under the mistletoe develop?
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How did the tradition of kissing under the missletoe develop?

it is said that when you kiss under the mistletoe it may bring good luck. people recognized mistletoe as good luck.


When did kissing under the mistletoe tradition begin?

1888


Why don't you remove kissing under mistletoe?

because it is a tradition.


What countrydid the tradition of kissing under the mistletoe come from?

france


Where does the tradition of kissing under mistletoe come from?

ancient Norse mythology


Was kissing under the mistletoe a tradition that started from Norse folklore?

no, because it was started in Poland


What romantic tradition did England save while others parished?

Kissing under the mistletoe.


If two boys are under a mistletoe would they have to kiss?

No, of course not, unless they just wanted to. Kissing under the mistletoe is a fun tradition. Nobody HAS to kiss anyone.


How did kissing come about?

Kissing in what you do when you have favorable emotions to or for someone or something.


Who and when created a kiss under the misletoe brings good luck?

The custom of hanging up mistletoe is said to stem from the ancient Druid tradition of laying down arms and exchanging greetings when under the mistletoe. The custom of kissing under the mistletoe is attributed to the English, who, after every kiss, plucked a berry from the bunch and discarded it. When the berries were gone, tradition called for the kissing to stop.


What European country revived kissing under the mistletoe?

Ireland revived the practice of kissing under the mistletoe.


Is Kissing under the mistletoe a tradition that started from Norse folklore?

no dummy its just what people do weirdos so why you ask that huh