Sushmajee
Shishu Sansaar | Interesting to Know
Interesting to Know | |
25-April Fool's Day |
25-April Fool's Day See also April Fool's Day Ancient cultures, including those of the Romans and Hindus, celebrated New Year's Day on or around April 1. It closely follows the vernal equinox (March 20th or March 21st.) In medieval times, much of Europe celebrated March 25, the Feast of Annunciation, as the beginning of the New Year. In 1582, Pope Gregory XIII ordered a new calendar (the Gregorian Calendar) to replace the old Julian Calendar. The new calendar called for New Year's Day to be celebrated on January 1. That year, France adopted the reformed calendar and shifted New Year's day to January 1. According to a popular explanation, many people either refused to accept the new date, or did not learn about it, and continued to celebrate New Year's Day on April 1. Other people began to make fun of these traditionalists, sending them on "fool's errands" or trying to trick them into believing something false. Eventually, the practice spread throughout Europe. There are at least two difficulties with this explanation. The first is that it doesn't fully account for the spread of April Fools' Day to other European countries. The Gregorian calendar was not adopted by England until 1752, for example, but April Fools' Day was already well established there by that point. The second is that we have no direct historical evidence for this explanation, only conjecture, and that conjecture appears to have been made more recently. Another Explanation
This explanation was brought to the public's attention in an Associated Press article printed by many newspapers in 1983. There was only one catch: Boskin made the whole thing up. It took a couple of weeks for the AP to realize that they'd been victims of an April Fools' joke themselves. Yet Another Explanation
When the Christians found the power of the Muslims strength, they started thinking of strategies to break this power. So they started sending alcohols and cigarettes to Spain free of cost. This tactic on the part of the West produced results, and the faith of the Muslims began to weaken, especially among the young generation in Spain. The result of that was that the Western Catholic Christians subdued the whole of Spain bringing an end to the Muslim rule of that land which had lasted for more than eight hundred years. The last fall of the Muslims was the Grenada (Ghornata) fall which was on the 1st of April. From that year until the present, they celebrate this day and consider the Muslims to be fools. They do not regard only the army at Granada to be fools who are easily deceived, rather they apply that to the entire Muslim Ummaah. Spring Fever
At Last Observances Around the World
The French call April 1, Poisson d'Avril, or "April Fish." French children sometimes tape a picture of a fish on the back of their schoolmates, crying "Poisson d'Avril" when the prank is discovered.
|
Created by Sushma Gupta on January 15, 2002
Contact: sushmajee@yahoo.com
Modified on
06/05/13