The day after Christmas, December 26th, is known as Boxing Day in the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth of Nations.
Boxing Day is recognized as a public or bank holiday that provides time off for non-essential employees, according to National Today, an online holiday calendar.
The origin of the day is reportedly unknown, but historians believe the term was registered in the Oxford English Dictionary in 1833 and referenced in Charles Dickens’ novel The Pickwick Papers in 1836. I found
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Boxing Day may have already been an established tradition before these 19th-century pop culture moments, according to History.com, the digital news source for the A+E network’s History channel.
History.com reports that researchers are split on two theories about the potential origins of Boxing Day.
The first theory is that Boxing Day may have started when British aristocrats distributed small gifts, money, and Christmas dinner leftovers to their domestic servants and employees after the holiday festivities were over. suggests.
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“These boxes were essentially holiday bonuses,” writes History.com. Report.
According to National Geographic, Boxing Day is a fundraiser for churches to collect alms (money or food) to help those in need throughout the Advent season, which usually runs from November 30th to December 24th. It may have evolved out of the box. .
“The clergy distributed the contents of the box to the poor on December 26, which is also the feast day of St. Stephen, the first Christian martyr and a man known for his philanthropy,” says History. com reports.
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Today, Boxing Day is celebrated in England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, and Commonwealth countries including Canada, Australia and New Zealand, according to National Today and History.com.
Common Boxing Day celebrations reportedly include shopping, visiting friends and family, giving back to charities, and watching sporting events such as football, cricket, swimming and horse racing.
Fox hunting was once a Boxing Day tradition, but the sport was banned in Scotland in 2002 and two years later in England and Wales, according to the New World Encyclopedia, a trademarked online information resource. rice field.
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Countries that have banned fox hunting reportedly allow participants to follow artificially laid trails to track the foxes, but not to kill the furry animals. We are simulating sports by making
At the time of publication, protesters are opposing legal and illegal fox hunting at sanctioned Boxing Day events across the UK, according to multiple national news outlets.