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Holy Days in a Fantasy World

mythusmage

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I need to put together an article on winter festivals in a fantasy world. One with deities of various kinds play an active role in the lives of their worshippers. I thought I'd ask for your take, for a little feedback. How do you see holidays, holy days, and festivals in a world with active deities? What would be the same? What would be different?

Why do we observe winter festivals? What is their purpose? Rebirth? The passing of the old? A closing of doors, and the opening of new? Are we talking about the reaffirmation of life in a time of death; of the promise this is not endless, that it shall end and life begin anew?

What do you think?

Sources would be nice too. :)
 

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I've always thought that winter festivals were to celebrate the passing of the year, and to give thanks for surviving one more year. In a fantasy setting where gods are (known to be) real and with all the problems inheriant in people's lives, such festivals would have a deeper meaning perhaps.
 

You can also commemorate special occasions that happened to have happened in the winter too. That gives you a lot more flexibility for the purpose of your celebration/holiday.
 


What does the world's Calendar look like?

Whether it's winter festivals and holidays (...or "Holy Days"), the individual world's calendar can play a major role in it. So what is the worlds calendar like?

For example: I run a D&D world with 11 months in the year, 26 hour days, 10 day weeks and each year has 6 seasons. What the Holy days are about could be as important as when in the world's calendar they occur.

Let us not forget the story of Hades and Persephone.

If a winter Festival or Holy Day has significance to a particular religion, then it might (realistically) have significance for the entire world. Maybe it marks the beggining of winter, or the end of it. Maybe there is a myth that goes along with it that the people believe is the reason that winter comes.
 

mythusmage said:
Why do we observe winter festivals? What is their purpose?

Well, consider this - even today, with electronic entertainment, home heating, and electric lights, people living in temperate climes start getting antsy as Winter draws on. Now imagineit without all those advantages. Imagine that you're illiterate, cooped up in a crowded, chill hut with your chickens and horses doing meanial tasks by minimal light, your harvest was back in September or early October. This is what you now have for an entire winter.

It'd be enough to drive a person crazy. Winter festivals are something to look forward to, something to plan for, and something to do and hopefully stay sane for the long haul until March or April thaw.
 

Winter festivals probably got their start when people realized that, yes, the Sun was coming back and the world wasn't going to just continue down into eternal darkness and ice. In a world with active gods that might be a consequence of not doing the winter rituals...

Usually I throw in five or six good holidays to spice things up. There's usually one for the solstices and equinoxes, an important battle, death or birth of an important figure. One or two campaigns, I've had holidays based on the ascencion day of a new God.

For holy days, I usually base those around whatever I've worked out about the God. A god of nature and elements will have the ones mentioned above, plus a 'Good Harvest' holiday where the God is thanked by a tremendous feast. A spring festival will usually include the first wine, and devolve into a whole lot of fornication at the end. There will be a few random feasts and celebrations throughout the year, though not everyone gets involved in those - usually just the wealthier townsfolk have time just to 'take off', though the country folk have some echos of it.

A god of merchants/cities/civilization will usually have some present-giving associated with the rites and rituals.

There will often be 'mystery plays' where people act out important events in the god's mythology. There will be dances and revels. Sometimes, servants of the deity will join in with the revelers if they are doing a particularly good job of pleasing the god. Very rarely, the god himself will join in.

Rural folk will have more 'quiet' holidays, where simple observances of the God's power and bounty are recognized, and some propiation (sp?) occurs, to turn away His or Her wrath and placate the God. They do a lot of things like spill the first drops of drink 'for the Goddess' or put out some milk at night for Her servants (which suspiciously look like the barn cats). A rural innkeeper will sometimes splash the doorway with the first mug of wine drawn that day, to 'make way for the God', or the miller will let a handfull of flour be taken by the wind.

Really advanced countries will have secret holy days where just the clergy gets together to do rituals and rites that make certain things happen (or prevent the God's wrath). If I'm feeling very mystical in a campaign, those rites and rituals become very literal: if they are not done properly, or if they are interrupted, bad luck or worse can happen. I ran a game once where the party interrupted some ritual of that type. Everyone in the country had a -3 to every roll for the next year, the crops didn't come in, fruit withered on the vine, rats ate all the stored grain, etc. Needless to say, everyone was hunted down and crucified for that little debacle.
 
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How bad are your winters? I can see things like the first snow/freeze, the thaw, mid-winter/long night, animal migrations (the coming of the mammoths/elk/bear/frost gaints), and days honoring the gods (could be fear), also could see how feast could be scheduled in a winter to control food rationing and health.
 

Kamikaze Midget said:
I have WAY too many answers to this question to fit in a post....

So let's just say that humans like to party, and leave it at that. :p

So write 'em up and put 'em into a 'zine. I've got art, now I need writing. :)
 

WayneLigon said:
Winter festivals probably got their start when people realized that, yes, the Sun was coming back and the world wasn't going to just continue down into eternal darkness and ice. In a world with active gods that might be a consequence of not doing the winter rituals...
When did they ever not have that figured out, though? Unless people spring full-grown from the ground, they learned that as little children.
 

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