Christmas and New Year in the Alps: Ethnocultural Synthesis in the Mountain Chronotope
Introduction: The Festival as an Adaptive System
The Alpine region, encompassing territories of Austria, Switzerland, Germany, Italy, France, and Slovenia, is a unique laboratory for the preservation and transformation of Christmas and New Year's traditions. The isolation of valleys and harsh climatic conditions have contributed to the conservation of deeply archaic, pre-Christian rituals, which later formed a complex syncretism with Catholic and Protestant liturgy. Winter holidays in the Alps are not only a religious event but also a comprehensive adaptive system aimed at symbolically overcoming darkness and cold, ensuring the well-being of the community, and harmonizing human relationships with the mountain nature.
Advent: Time of Purification and Expectation
The period of anticipation of Christmas (Advent) in the Alps is rich in apotropaic (protective) practices aimed at protecting the home and farm during the darkest time of the year.
The Advent wreath with four candles, known worldwide today, has its Alpine origin. It was introduced in the mid-19th century by the Hamburg Protestant theologian Johann Heinrich Wichern, taking as a basis the folk custom of decorating a wheel or wreath of pine. In the Alps, however, there was (and still is) an older ritual called "Rauchnacht" (Rauchnacht, "smoke night") — smoking houses and barns with myrrh and consecrated herbs on certain nights before Christmas (usually December 5-6 and 24). The goal is to expel evil spirits and purify the space. In some regions of Switzerland and Austria, this function was performed by the masked "Nachtumzüge" (Nachtumzüge).
The figure of St. Nicholas (December 6) in the Alps is often accompanied not just by the "Devil" (Knecht Ruprecht), but by a whole retinue of chthonic beings. In the Austrian Tyrol and Salzburg, this is Krampus — a horned, furry creature with chains, symbolizing the unbridled forces of win ...
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