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yoniyum t1_iz2y3qd wrote

And then January 6 is Epiphany, which begins Carnival, which leads to Mardi Gras then Ash Wednesday, which begins Lent, then Easter!

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BrokenEye3 t1_iz30oxh wrote

>January 5th (Three Kings Day)

Also known as the 12th Night. You know, like from Shakespeare.

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yoniyum t1_iz31d0k wrote

I think so, too! I've never understood the folks who are go-go-go and thrive on all that celebrating and socializing. I'm sure they don't understand why I sit at home so much, haha.

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Kie723 t1_iz32kao wrote

My mum loves taking the Xmas decs down on 1st Jan. Wait til I tell her it's only the 8th day of Xmas!

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bk15dcx t1_iz32qme wrote

Then there's more stuff after Easter. The feast of something or other, then that runs another month. I forgot all that stuff but it was ridiculous

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sloppyredditor t1_iz32tct wrote

“…and what am I supposed to do with a PARTRIDGE, Todd?”

“I don’t KNOW, Margo!”

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dishonourableaccount t1_iz32w7m wrote

This is my gripe with the current commercialized Christmas season. Not for religious reasons or anything, but I never felt Christmassy until I was actually on vacation from school or off work, usually a couple days before Christmas. That's when I'd want to spend time with family, listen to music, and all that.

But nope, at December 26 at midnight all the radio stations that have been blaring holiday music since mid November go back to pop music. And the commercial calendar pushes New Year's Eve on us immediately.

I would love to see that shift back to celebrating a big holiday break.

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MonkeyPolice t1_iz32zsl wrote

I bet you can find everything on Amazon.

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bk15dcx t1_iz330fw wrote

Seriously. Thanksgiving, then pearl harbor day, the Christmas and new year, then MLK day, then Superbowl, then Valentine's day, then president's day, then st. Patrick's day... You can't go more than 2 weeks without getting totally plastered

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jcosta89 t1_iz33m5b wrote

Yeah, but everyone is impatient. Moved It to 12 days before.

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Traditional-Meat-549 t1_iz34wvi wrote

Glad you know this now and that you told others - the advertisers claimed it for consumerism and now most people think its before.

Christmas is a SEASON - it lasts 12 days.

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MrOopiseDaisy t1_iz35cuw wrote

There's a bloke trying to court his "true love" with 140 birds from his father's aviary. 140 packed into the first seven days. And nobody bats an eye about the "9 ladies dancing".

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hasu424 t1_iz36bum wrote

Yup. Tried to explain this to my boss years ago, when she said she takes down her tree on Dec. 26 every year "because Christmas is over". She kept arguing with me. I said, "you know my Dad's an ordained Episcopalian minister, right?" I am not religious but won't take my tree down until Epiphany.

My old boss' head would have exploded if I told her that Jesus was actually born in the spring, and both the Dec date and Christmas trees were appropriated from Paganism.

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gregglewa t1_iz37096 wrote

The real War on Christmas is tarting it too early and ending it too soon.

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Van_GOOOOOUGH t1_iz38vih wrote

Because winter time can be so dreary and depressing so they put a bunch of festive little holidays in there to keep us busy. We don't need festive holidays when the weather is pleasant and we can play outside in the sunshine.

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drillgorg t1_iz39v5y wrote

Damn they showed them as 5 pieces of jewelry instead of five gold ring pheasants. I mean come on they're smack in the middle of the bird verses.

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HunterGonzo t1_iz3cfms wrote

What are the "Twelve Days of Christmas"? Cause, figure it out, right? Christmas is when? Um, the twenty-fifth... Right. And, what's the twenty-fourth...Christmas Eve, right? So... That's two That's two. And, then what's after that? (pause) Boxing Day Wrestling Day Wrestl.. get out! Boxing Day, yeah, yeah That's three. Then, what's after that? Nothin'! New Year's! Four. And what's... New Year's Eve? That's five. Where do ya get twelve? Uh, there's two Saturdays and Sundays in there; that's four. So, that's nine. And three other days which, I believe, are the "mystery" days

Edit: Ok, not many Bob & Doug McKenzie fans. My bad. Also terrible mobile formatting.

Anyway, this is from the Bob & Doug 12 Days of Christmas which is seriously hilarious and worth a listen if you have a chance (or watch in the case of this cartoon)

https://youtu.be/l2oPio60mK4

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momentimori t1_iz3joal wrote

5th January is 12th night.

It is bad luck to have your christmas tree up beyond 12th night.

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1000Hells1GiftShop t1_iz3ozzy wrote

Why would you share this?

We don't need to give anyone any excuses to expand Christmas any more. It's already like two full months. It needs to stop on New Year's Eve.

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BobBelcher2021 t1_iz3qic2 wrote

I always thought the 12 days were Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, Boxing Day, New Years Eve, New Years Day, 2 Saturdays and 2 Sundays, and 3 mystery days.

(That’s from Bob & Doug Mackenzie)

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KillerApeTheory t1_iz3qneg wrote

My mum’s family is very Catholic and growing up they would get the tree Christmas Eve and have it up until three kings day.

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KillerApeTheory t1_iz3qo1i wrote

My mum’s family is very Catholic and growing up they would get the tree Christmas Eve and have it up until three kings day.

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Olneyville t1_iz3yytk wrote

Three Kings day, also known as the Epiphany, is actually January 6. In Latinamerica, you get your gifts from the Three Kings instead of Santa, the morning of January 6.

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danteheehaw t1_iz40siv wrote

July 2023 people cower in their hastily dug bunkers, families huddled together whispering what may be their final words. When suddenly they hear it, "ALLL I WANT FOR CHRISTMAS IS YOU!". They know it is over. Christmas has won. The new world order will purge all other seasons. Life is now about working in a factory for a wealthy man, so he can give his peasants a single gift a year to remind them of their place.

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usrevenge t1_iz43ixk wrote

Iirc in peasant times all these were paid holidays basically.

The average person who works 40 hours a week works significantly more hours a year than they would have as a peasant.

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Lileowastaken t1_iz4cu48 wrote

For some reason I thought it was from the 21st of December (Winter Solstice) to the 1st of January (New years day). It makes more sense to me that way at least.

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MrBobaFett t1_iz4i7aa wrote

It blows my mind that so many people don't know this, especially other Christians. But Christmas is such a big holiday, how do people miss this? It's Advent, then Christmastide, then Epiphany.

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chesbyiii t1_iz4py7t wrote

Don't let that stop you from enjoying the real 'reason for the season': consumerism.

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fish4096 t1_iz4tgiq wrote

Not according to my local supermarket!

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gerran t1_iz51tpe wrote

This is because Jan 6 was the original date for Christmas. The Armenian Church still observes Christmas on Jan 6.

Why did Christmas move to Dec 25?

> The main reason, however, seems to be as follows: the 25th of December, in the Roman Empire, was a great feast date connected with the “Birth of the Sun” known “Saturnalia,” since just after the Winter Solstice, the days having reached their shortest limit, begin to grow longer and longer. Because of the promise on that day (25th of December) of longer days to follow, there were great rejoicings. So the Church thought to prevent the faithful from attending the “abominable” celebrations of this very popular pagan festival on that particular date.

Source: http://www.stthomasarmenianchurch.com/religious-information/saints-feast-days/why-we-observe-christmas-on-january-6th/

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Spram2 t1_iz52fss wrote

Protestant vs. Catholic work ethic.

Protestant: Worry and prepare for Christmas and once it done, phew! It's finished, put the decorations in the box.

Catholic: Christmas is here! Let's get drunk for the next.. 2 months!

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InappropriateTA t1_iz52xrh wrote

I mean, it literally says “on the first day of Christmas.” Christmas doesn’t start until Christmas…

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LittleGreenSoldier t1_iz53ynv wrote

From a farming family here.

There's really only two periods per year where the work is that hard, even pre-industrial, and that's plowing and harvesting. Each is a sort of two week crunch time. The rest of the year is actually pretty chill, you get into a routine.

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Bekiala t1_iz55d15 wrote

Yes. Advent is a big deal for a lot of Catholics. In my family we put the tree up Christmas eve and took it down on the Epiphany.

Times sure have changed around the Christian seasons. This is natural as far as I can tell. Christmas day used to be Saturnalia before the Romans became Christian so Jesus wasn't really the "Reason for the Season".

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TheConqueror74 t1_iz56lwj wrote

They did, but the nature of work was different than it is now. There’s a reason why the fall and winter are so dense with holidays and you don’t see nearly as many during the warmer months.

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vonvoltage t1_iz56mu7 wrote

I find it wild that people don't know this.

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hasu424 t1_iz56rl3 wrote

I can see how it could appear that way from a certain perspective. The tree thing is a long-ingrained habit. I don't pray, don't go to church, and think most religions are a crock. When you grew up an active member of the church, that = "not religious".

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ElfMage83 t1_iz58rfn wrote

I keep forgetting there are people who don't know this.

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PuckSR t1_iz5cbud wrote

Which, fun fact, there is some questionable evidence that we have classically misunderstood the story that they "followed a star". Rather, it seems to be a reference to astrology. There has been an argument that roughly around the time of Jesus, there were some astrological alignments that could have been interpreted as "a new Judean King has come", which would seem to justify this idea. Also, it never says "3 wise men", the number just got added at some point.

Finally, the entire story of Jesus' birth is a bit convoluted in the bible. The story says that they were attending the census of Quirinus(a Roman ruler of Judea), but then says that they had to flee the murderous zeal of King Herod. Unfortunately, King Herod was long gone when Quirinus was put in charge of the area. The Quirinus census was a real event known from other historical documents, but it occurred specifically because the area had transitioned from a vassal state(where Herod was allowed to be king) to a Roman governorship. The Romans would allow vassal states to simply pay them, but if the Romans were running the area they wanted good records and therefore required a census.

tl;dr: The authors of the biblical narrative of Jesus' birth seemed to have thrown in a lot of popular events in a haphazard order.

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Traditional-Meat-549 t1_iz5htqh wrote

At least in Europe, they were mostly Christian with towns built around the church - so what the church did, they did. Not exactly a day "off" as we know it - most folks knew each other and the work they performed. But they did go to Mass and the after party

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Cayke_Cooky t1_iz5sye8 wrote

I do the same. My Grandparents were very Catholic, the great part about the 12 days is that our family never had the fights about whose side we were going to on Xmas day. Just show up at theirs anytime in those 12 days and they were happy.

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Superstickman87 t1_iz62sgx wrote

My family has always celebrated the 12 days. It makes for a much more enjoyable experience in my opinion

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MTKintsugi t1_iz66cac wrote

Armenia and Eastern Europe go by the Julian calendar, which is 12 days behind the Gregorian Calendar which is what most of the western world goes by.

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JoshSidekick t1_iz67izq wrote

We three kings of orient are...

Trying to light an exploding cigar...

BOOM!

We two kings of orient are...

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Bekiala t1_iz67pvv wrote

Right but most people are already celebrating Christmas during Advent which is the 4 weeks before Christmas . . . . you probably know this. Some us don't start Christmas until the 25th.

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Jumpy-Win5810 t1_iz6fpu6 wrote

It's very true. Peasants had lots of time off. They used this time to complete tasks that we don't have today. Mostly, they went out gathering natural materials needed to produce household items/foods/medicine.

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Jumpy-Win5810 t1_iz6g6qj wrote

People thinking that peasants lived lives of brutal back breaking labor is perhaps on the most common misperceptions I can think of. I was guilty of it myself until I learned that premodern peasants actually had much more time off than modern peasants.

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jizzlevania t1_iz6ghvd wrote

Three Kings Day also marks when I can legally set your house on fire if your christmas decorations are still up.

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Jackleber t1_iz6hf7k wrote

Alls I know it it's a lot of birds.

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Crayshack t1_iz6i559 wrote

Not everyone celebrates Christmas. I'm not Christian, so I've only vaguely heard the term "12 Days of Christmas" and "Advent" before. Never with enough context for me to know anything about it other than them vaguely being associated with Christmas I've never heard the term "Christmastide" before your comment and the term "Epiphany" just sort of vaguely means "having a sudden idea". I've never heard it used in a religious context before.

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MrBobaFett t1_iz6mssz wrote

>Not everyone celebrates Christmas.

Thus "especially other Christians." I mean it's also a major religion so... I'm not Muslim, Jewish, or Hindu, but I'm aware of their major holidays and tenets.
Advent comes from Latin for arrival, it's the season of preparation for the arrival of Christ.

Tide is a suffix that means time of or season of used for many holy festivals, thus Yuletide, Christmastide, Eastertide, Epiphanytide, etc. Christmastide is Dec 25th-Jan 5th.

Epiphany (also called Three Kings Day) comes from Greek to reveal or to appear. This holiday commemorates the arrival of the Three Magi or in the Eastern Church the bastism of Jesus. Either way, the revealing of the Christ to the world. Epiphanytide then runs to Feb 2nd, ending with Candlemas.

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herbw t1_iz6o0sf wrote

Considering that Xmas is in winter, and that NO shepherds take their sheep out in the depths of winter, the whole thing is beyond mad.

Summers, yes. Later summer, possible.

Same with Easter, both of them solar celebrations. X-mas, winter solstice, shortest day of winter, there abouts.

Easter, equinox, and figured on a Paschal, lunar month calendar? More BS. Summer within a month of so, likely. Guess they didn't know that, either so Easter moves around.

Next stars do NOT come to rest over a village, much less a larger city. The whole of the stars, as the earth turns on axis, moves from West to East in a regular way.

Thus if it was over Bethlehem, it would soon NOT be a few hours later. NO stars EVER come to rest, as the earth is in constant motion on its axis and on its elliptical orbit about the sun.

The whole pagan dating of Easter and Xmas are made to pre-empt the older pagan dating systems. The priests rewrote it. Since most of Jeshua's disciples knew him and his family, is it likely there were ignorant of his birthday?

No. but where is that stated in Matt, Mark, Luc and John? EREWHON. and you think that it's not funny?

So Satan took Jeshua up on the highest Mtn. one earth, where they could see all the kingdoms or earth.

Yeah, right. Pliny knew the earth was round. highest mtn. meant needing O2 breathers and very, very warm clothing And how did they get up here, quantum teleportation?

No matter how high we go up, we cannot, on a round earth, see over the horizon. NOR all the kingdoms of the earth.

so, get real, come back to reality and adjust your Holy books before you get in worse trouble, than it took the Holy SEE to apologize to Galileo, 400 years.!!

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herbw t1_iz6pdxc wrote

Xmas trees are not in X-tian Bible. They are ancient Anglo-Saxon, Deutsch pagan customs, taken into X-tianity. Must like the maya today celebrate their Mayan pagan beliefs in Churches. and parades. Today!!

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herbw t1_iz6qcwz wrote

Ah, yes the next load of pagan myths. The 3 wise men. Not to be mistaken for stupid, foolish idiots, who went around lookin for stars in the sky that did not move at all!!!

And the old incenses. Gold, and Myrrh. Again pagan. And where did they get those names? Casper, not the friendly ghost, Balthazar and the other one, Melchior.

So we do a study of those names and it gets all the worse.

The info crimes committed in the name of Politics and religions.

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herbw t1_iz6t8ez wrote

Nothing ever fits very well at all. Nope censuses were not recorded in historical Roman records, or are not now existing records.

Herodian myth was yet another bit of "improving the tale" to make ti conform to a peculiar, not well accepted bit of OT mythologies.

However, Pontius Pilatus condemned Jeshua. And there is NO source at all, including for the above "census" which is likely a bad translation, too.

However in the last 20 yrs .an engraved in marble stone was round No. of Israel. Pontius Pilatus on it. Provenance and time good. So He did exist. perhaps a gov of something. Bit proof that some of the tale was true, however.

Many try to interpret myths in terms of other myths, and that's just Double Trouble, in critical thinking.

Jeshua was 2 when they fled. That had to be a warm time, too. Thus gutting the shepherd tale, again. doesn't sayu when he came back, but as he studied in Yeshive to be a rabbi, had to before age 12. yet again, HUGE miss.

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herbw t1_iz6tz4r wrote

"Mystery days" is the most honest of the lot!!

12 days only proved they could not count!! 12 is an even dozen, used because 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, and 1 1/2 of 8. Easier to fractionize, like 60 secs, 60 mins., and same in secs. minutes, degrees.

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herbw t1_iz6ulng wrote

gotta sort the wheat from the chaff. some is just plain myth, some nonsense, like the Jeshua on the Mtn. with Satan, and others. Star stoppin was too. Magi, the same. Myth to fool the idiots. If yer could believe the earth stopped rotating for a singe star, then yer'd believe anything them silly priests told yer.

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herbw t1_iz6vlbf wrote

6 plus 31 days in Dec. is 37. Minus 12 is 25 Dec.

But on a leap year it's 1 day later, every 4 yrs. Except years ending as 2000, when it's leap year. So Xmas, slowly precesses 1 day every 400 thru the constellations. So eventually Xmas and winter will not be when Orion is in the sky. Peculiar.

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taqeladragn t1_iz6wfxx wrote

Take that hanakuh, we get 12 days

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justlurkingdnd t1_iz73wph wrote

Useless information. For me, it can be forgotten into oblivion

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Sim_Escrevo t1_iz7gla7 wrote

FTS! The tree and all that is coming down January 1st!!

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herbw t1_iz7klm3 wrote

Spanish. People do the posada, which means the walking about to homes for gifts related to X-mas. Sort of like all Hallows Ever , but for Natividad.

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Bekiala t1_iz7la5x wrote

Yeah I knew it was Spanish.

I was in Puerto Rico one advent and Christmas. I don't remember a Posada but I remember how big a deal Three Kings day was.

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herbw t1_iz7m1f6 wrote

Those, sadly are all estimates but not dates known.

Quirinius I see no dates for him either. Pontius pilatus nothing. do you have somethin less than an encyclopedic text which do NOT have the time for to go thru.

We do NOT have any dates from birth of Jeshua at all .Nor do we know Quirinius' because i refuse to go thru centuries of listings.

what is date of Quirinius, please? but far as I could tell, we have NO dates of the censuses, either, because we do NOT have maps for which places in Romans times those would be listed in. was it nazareth, or bethlehem? Those are not shown.

If you can cite specifics instead of encyclopediasl,then we can discuss it.

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herbw t1_iz7q6n3 wrote

So it varies year to year, culture to culture. Am only fam with NO and in Rio. Other than those, it's peripheral to important events.

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LittleGreenSoldier t1_iza20lr wrote

Cotton is a way more labour intensive crop. The bolls had to be picked by hand, and because they're mostly air they take up a huge volume, meaning more trips back and forth to empty your basket/sack/whatever. In addition to that, there was a MASSIVE upswing in demand for cotton because of the industrial revolution, and the mechanization of textile manufacturing. Suddenly machines could card, spin and weave cotton faster than a hundred people could. With that skyrocketing demand came the plantations, just like with sugar in the Caribbean; huge monoculture farms planting on an industrial scale. You can pay workers to do that, but buying a slave is an upfront cost equal to about a year's wages for a free worker, and you have that slave until they die. Buy a woman and you can make more slaves for no additional cost.

It's monstrous, but they considered it solely an economical decision.

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herbw t1_izdxupb wrote

Mardi gras & Carnival are all part of the same celebrations in Catholic systems. No protestant churches celebrate mardi gras nor Carnival. What yer doing is saying that movement 1 of a symphony bears no relationships to the rest of the whole musical piece.

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