Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Gift book that traces some, not all, origins of Christmas., 15 Jan 1998
By A Customer
I have an interest in traditional Christian rituals that can be traced back to pagan origins. So I bought this book as a gift for friends. Unfortunately, I was greatly disappointed in one ancient belief that the authors had left out. That is the old belief of the great Goddess and of her son/lover. At the end of each year the son died and was reborn. This theme has been shown in many old religions. How could this missed? Goddess, Mary, son, Jesus, sun? Get it? SEBrooks
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50 of 52 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An explaination of solstice and christmas celebration, 25 Dec 1999
By P. Maki - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: 4000 Years of Christmas: The Curious Beginnings of Our Modern Celebration (Hardcover)
I bought 4000 Years of Christmas because I'm very interested in the history of Christmas and winter solstice celebration and wanted some background on where it all began. Carl and Alice Count's book, 4000 Years of Christmas, answered much for me. It linked the pre-Christian Mesopotamian 12 days of merry-making and their need to have a rebirth of their king each year to fight the old gods who were reclaiming the earth in order to renew the land. The Counts then explained how these celebrations were adopted by the Greeks and Romans, and how separately these early Mesopotamian celebrations moved north via trade routes up the Danube River to an emerging Northern culture. The Counts further reveal that Christ's birth day was not celebrated for nearly 400 years, and that the Roman Saturnalia celebration -- a celebration developed out the Mesopotamian one, was held at the winter solstice to honor the renewing of light and the end of the long nights -- and that 4th Century Christians chose the finale day of Saturnalia (December 25) as the day of Christ's birth in hope of garnering peasant support. The interesting tie they make is that of the change in the perception of Gods -- from ones that are abitrary and sometimes vindictive to one like Jesus Christ who offers love, grace, kindness to all -- including children. After exploring the Christian development, the Counts explore the development of the Germanic god Woden and the Scandinavian god Odin, explaining how they evolved into Santa Claus and mixed with the Christian celebations, and how the history of St. Nickalus was developed. In short, this is good reading and it offers a nice, short synopsis of the development of our familar winter Christmas celebrations and how Christian and early pagan celebrations evolved.
16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Excellent Christmas Gift, 2 Oct 2002
By William Evenson - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: 4000 Years of Christmas: The Curious Beginnings of Our Modern Celebration (Hardcover)
This is a delightful, well-rounded explanation of the development of the holiday we know as Christmas. Readers interested in learning about the origins of our celebration will likely be well pleased with what these authors have to offer. Those who seek reinforcement of their own viewpoints or advocacy of particular religious interpretations of the season might look elsewhere.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The hopes and fears of all the years, 1 Dec 2004
By James A. Altman - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: 4000 Years of Christmas: The Curious Beginnings of Our Modern Celebration (Hardcover)
A quick, fascinating read into the anthropology of religion as seen through the lens of a single holiday. As Joseph Campbell would illustrate in much greater detail in his landmark work,"The Hero with a Thousand Faces," Dr. Count demonstrates the underlying unity in all the divergent historical religious sources of Christmas traditions. Humankind has shared common hopes, fears, and the need for redemption throughout history, which share resolution in remarkably parallel religious practices around the date set for Christmas. Rather than see this as a challenge to Christian primacy, Count sees the parallel hopes and fears behind these divergent practices finding their most complete resolution in the context of the Christian celebration. It is as Phillips Brooks wrote, "The hopes and fears of all the years are met [in Bethlehem]," in the birth of the Christ Child.
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