German Christmas Tradition - Der Adventskranz

German Christmas culture

German Christmas culture

Sundays in December are “Adventssonntage”. (1., 2., 3. oder 4. Advent)

Do you know what this means and where the tradition of the Advent wreath comes from?

 

The first “Adventskranz” was placed in an orphanage in Hamburg about two hundred years ago. There were 24 candles on a wooden wreath. Every day, another “Kerze” was “angezündet” until Christmas. Four of them were thicker and were for the Sundays of Advent.

Today it has become a fir wreath with four candles. With the first candle begins the Advent season. Every Sunday until Christmas another candle is lit until all four candles give a cozy “Licht”. The Advent wreath is meant to shorten the time until Christmas and to bring light into the dark season. The increase of light symbolizes the joyful expectation of the arrival of Jesus Christ.
People either make it on their own or buy it.
We often read Christmas stories and sing “Lieder” with children sitting around the Advent wreath, eating “Plätzchen”, “Lebkuchen” and “Mandarinen”.

Also, in the German Bundestag and in most city halls it an “Adventskranz”.

With a diameter of eight meters, the “Adventskranz” in Kaufbeuren, a small city in Allgäu, is advertised as the "largest real Advent wreath in the world". It consists of real fir branches and is equipped with almost 2 meters high candles. It stands at the city's Neptune Fountain from Advent Day to “Dreikönigstag”.

 

Do you have an “Adventskranz” at home? Selfmade or did you buy it? Let us know in the comments!


Did this little culture lesson spark your interest to learn more about the German culture and advance with your language skills?

Do you want to make sure that your time, money, and energy is well invested and want to learn the most effective way and make great progress?

-> Schedule a free consultation call with us to tell us about you situation, your needs, goals, and to see how we could support you the best way possible!

 

Vocabulary:

der Adventskranz (Pl. die Adventskränze) – the Advent wreath

anzünden – to light

die Kerze (Pl. die Kerzen) – the candle

das Licht (Pl. die Lichter) – the light

das Lied (Pl. die Lieder) – the song

das Plätzchen (Pl. -) – special German Christmas cookies –> have a look on the previous blog post

der Lebkuchen (Pl. - ) – the gingerbread

die Madarine (Pl. -n) – the tendrine

der Dreikönigstag; auch: Heilig Drei König – Epiphany

Sabine PfeifferComment