I DO !!!
June is the month where many couples set
their weddings and decided to be together. Do you wonder why there are a lot of
ceremonies taking place in a wedding? Here are some funny and interesting facts
about wedding.
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For ancient Greeks and Romans, the bouquet was a pungent
mix of garlic and herbs or grains. The garlic was supposed to ward off evil
spirits and the herbs or grains were to insure a fruitful union. In ancient
Poland, it was believed that sprinkling sugar on the bride's bouquet kept her
temper sweet.
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The wedding cake has always played an important part in
the wedding. Ancient Romans broke a cake over the bride's head to symbolize
fertility or abundance. Many other cultures dropped wheat, flour or cake on the
bride's head, and then ate the crumbs for good luck. The early British baked
baskets of dry cracker, and every guest took one home after the wedding. In
medieval times, guests brought small cakes and piled them on a table. The bride
and groom then attempted to kiss over the cakes. Eventually, a young baker
decided to put all the cakes together and cover them with frosting, thus the
tiered wedding cake was born.
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Traditionally, brides did not wear white wedding gowns.
Through the 18th century, most brides just wore their Sunday best to their
wedding. Red was a favorite during the Middle Ages in Europe. Other colors were
worn for symbolic reasons: blue meant constancy and green meant youth. As years
passed, white was worn as a symbol of purity. Today, white merely symbolizes
the wedding and is worn by any bride, no matter if it is their second marriage.
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The first weddings comprised of a groom taking his bride
by capture. He would take her somewhere hidden away so her relatives and
villagers couldn't find them. There they stayed for one moon phase and drank
mead, a wine make from honey, to make them more amorous. Thus, the word
"honeymoon" was born. Today, the honeymoon is the time when the
couple can get away for awhile
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The first kiss a bride and groom share at the close of
the ceremony has carried special significance through the centuries. Many cultures
believed that the couple exchanged spirits with their breath and part of their
souls were exchanged as well.
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The wedding ring has traditionally been worn on the third
finger of the left hand because it was believed that a vein in this finger ran
directly to the heart. The third finger of the left hand has become the customary
wedding-ring finger for all English-speaking cultures.
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One of the oldest wedding traditions, the custom of
throwing rice, originated with the ancient Hindus and Chinese. In these
cultures, rice is the symbol of fruitfulness and prosperity. Tossing it after
the ceremony was believed to bestow fertility upon the bride and groom. Eating
rice and other grains was thought to guarantee health, wealth and happiness for
the newlyweds. Today, rice tossing is being replaced by the more ecologically
friendly birdseed tossing, because uncooked rice is damaging to birds that eat
it off the church lawn.
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Mystique and romance has surrounded the veil for more
than one thousand years. Originally, the veil is thought to have been used to
hide the bride from abductors, just as the similar dress of her bridesmaids was
meant to do. But a more romantic interpretation evolved later which believed
that concealment (as the bride's face beneath a veil) rendered what was hidden
more valuable. Another early interpretation of the veil was that it symbolized
youth and virginity.
| bouquet |
| wedding cake |
“A
successful marriage requires falling in love many times, always with the same
person.”
~Mignon McLaughlin
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