Christmas Traditions Around the World
Across
- 3. Ancestor/precursor of eggnog (6).
- 5. A late-night (sometimes all-night) celebration held after Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve in Quebec and other French-speaking regions, which translates to “let’s wake up” (9).
- 7. Popular meal in Japan at Christmas time, thanks to a wildly successful 1970’s advertising campaign (“Kurisumasu ni wa kentakkii!”) (3).
- 9. Icelandic folkloric feline creature said to devour naughty children at Christmas time (4,3).
- 10. The nine-night Christmas time celebration in Spain and other Latin American countries that honours Mary and Joseph’s journey to Bethlehem and translates to “the inns” (3,7).
- 12. Italian folkloric figure who visits children on a broomstick the night before the Epiphany (2,6).
- 14. A popular Christmas decoration in Sweden, typically a goat made of straw and tied with red ribbons (7).
- 15. Baroque-era oratorio, originally offered at Easter, that is now a fixture of the Christmas season (3, 7).
- 16. Traditional Ethiopian Christmas game that is also the name for Christmas in that country (5).
Down
- 1. The (English) name of the oldest known Canadian Christmas carol, which was originally written in the Wyandot (Huron) language around 1643 (3,5,5).
- 2. Holiday stemming from the Victorian era, originally a day off for servants who received a “Christmas box” (6,3).
- 4. “Petit Papa Noël”, a French Christmas carol popular in Francophone Canada, was made famous by which male French vocal star (4,5)?
- 6. The Filipino name for Christmas in the Philippines, the country with the world’s longest Christmas season, stretching from September through January (5).
- 7. Dish made of boiled wheat, poppy seeds and honey, served in the Ukraine as the first of 12 meatless dishes on Christmas Eve (5).
- 8. A Central European celebration held on December 5, the night before the feast of St. Nicholas (12).
- 11. For most Finns, Christmas isn’t complete without time spent here, cleansing both body and mind and marking the season (5).
- 13. Yule log dessert served in Quebec and other French-speaking regions—“_______ de Noël” (5).