Mardi Gras
Mardi Gras is a
Christian holiday and popular cultural phenomenon that dates back thousands of
years to pagan spring and fertility rites. Also known as Carnival or Carnaval,
it’s celebrated in many countries around the world—mainly those with large
Roman Catholic populations—on the day before the religious season of Lent
begins. Brazil, Venice and New Orleans play host to some of the holiday’s most
famous public festivities, drawing thousands of tourists and revelers every
year.
When is
Mardi Gras? Mardi Gras is
traditionally celebrated on “Fat Tuesday,” the Tuesday before Ash Wednesday and
the start of Lent. In many areas, however,
Mardi Gras has evolved into a week-long festival. Mardi Gras 2021 will fall on Tuesday,
February 16. The full schedule of Mardi Gras in New Orleans, home of the Mardi
Gras parade, can be found here.
What Is
Mardi Gras? Mardi Gras is a tradition that dates back thousands of years to
pagan celebrations of spring and fertility, including the raucous Roman
festivals of Saturnalia and Lupercalia. When Christianity arrived in
Rome, religious leaders decided to incorporate these popular local traditions
into the new faith, an easier task than abolishing them altogether. As a
result, the excess and debauchery of the Mardi Gras season became a prelude to
Lent, the 40 days of fasting and penance between Ash Wednesday and Easter
Sunday. Along with Christianity, Mardi Gras spread from Rome to other
European countries, including France, Germany, Spain and England.
What Does
Mardi Gras Mean? Mardi is the French word for Tuesday, and gras means
“fat.” In France, the day before Ash Wednesday came to be known as Mardi Gras,
or “Fat Tuesday.” Traditionally, in the days leading up to Lent,
merrymakers would binge on all the rich, fatty foods—meat, eggs, milk, lard and
cheese—that remained in their homes, in anticipation of several weeks of eating
only fish and different types of fasting. The word carnival, another
common name for the pre-Lenten festivities, also derives from this feasting
tradition: in Medieval Latin, carnelevarium means to take away or remove meat,
from the Latin carnem for meat.
New Orleans
Mardi Gras The first American Mardi Gras took place on March 3, 1699, when
French explorers Pierre Le Moyne d’Iberville and Sieur de Bienville landed near
present-day New Orleans, Louisiana. They held a small celebration and dubbed
their landing spot Point du Mardi Gras.. In the decades that followed,
New Orleans and other French settlements began marking the holiday with street
parties, masked balls and lavish dinners. When the Spanish took control of New
Orleans, however, they abolished these rowdy rituals, and the bans remained in force
until Louisiana became a U.S. state in 1812. On Mardi Gras in 1827, a
group of students donned colorful costumes and danced through the streets of
New Orleans, emulating the revelry they’d observed while visiting Paris. Ten
years later, the first recorded New Orleans Mardi Gras parade took place, a
tradition that continues to this day. In 1857, a secret society of New
Orleans businessmen called the Mistick Krewe of Comus organized a torch-lit
Mardi Gras procession with marching bands and rolling floats, setting the tone
for future public celebrations in the city. Since then, krewes have
remained a fixture of the Carnival scene throughout Louisiana. Other lasting
customs include throwing beads and other trinkets, wearing masks, decorating
floats and eating King Cake.
Did you
know? Rex, one of the oldest Mardi Gras krewes, has been participating in
parades since 1872, and established purple, gold and green as the iconic Mardi
Gras colors.
Louisiana is
the only state in which Mardi Gras is a legal holiday. However, elaborate
carnival festivities draw crowds in other parts of the United States during the
Mardi Gras season as well, including Alabama and Mississippi. Each region has
its own events and traditions.
Mardi Gras
Around the World Across the globe, pre-Lenten festivals continue to take
place in many countries with significant Roman Catholic populations. Brazil’s
weeklong Carnival festivities feature a vibrant amalgam of European, African
and native traditions. In Canada, Quebec City hosts the giant Quebec Winter
Carnival. In Italy, tourists flock to Venice’s Carnevale, which dates back to
the 13th century and is famous for its masquerade balls. Known as
Karneval, Fastnacht or Fasching, the German celebration includes parades,
costume balls and a tradition that empowers women to cut off men’s ties. For
Denmark’s Fastevlan, children dress up and gather candy in a similar manner to
Halloween—although the parallel ends when they ritually flog their parents on
Easter Sunday morning.
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