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See also: Christmas in the open air
.
The origin of the word is obscure
.
Diez suggests that the word is derived from See also: chorus
.
Others ally it with corolla, a See also: garland, circle or coronet,' the earliest sense of the word being apparently " a ring " or " circle," " a ring dance." Stonehenge, often called the Giants' Dance, was also frequently known as the See also: Carol; thus Harding, Chron. lxx. x., " Within (the) Giauntes Carole, that so they hight, The (See also: Stone hengles) that nowe so named been." The
See also: Celtic forms, often cited as giving the origin of the word, are derivatives of the See also: English or French
.
The crib set up in the churches at Christmas was the centre of a dance, and some of the most famous of Latin Christmas See also: hymns were written to dance tunes
.
These songs were called Wiegenlieder in See also: German, noels in French, and carols in English
.
They were originally modelled on the songs written to accompany the choric dance, which were probably the starting-point of the lyric See also: poetry of the Germanic peoples
.
Strictly speaking, there-fore, the word should be applied to lyrics ,written to dance See also: measures; in See also: common acceptation it is applied to the songs written for the Christmas festival
.
Carolling, i.e. the combined exercise of dance and See also: song, found its way from See also: pagan ritual into the Christian See also: church, and the
See also: clergy, however averse they might be from See also: heathen survivals, had to content themselves in this, as in many other cases, with limiting the practice
.
The third council of Toledo (580) forbade dancing in the churches on the vigils of See also: saints' days , and secular dances in church were forbidden by the council of See also: Auxerre in the next See also: year
.
Even as See also: late as 1209 it was necessary for the council of See also: Avignon to forbid theatrical dances and secular songs in churches
.
Religious dances persisted longest on Shrove Tuesday. and a castanet dance by the choristers round the lectern is permitted three times a year in the See also: cathedral of Seville
.
The Christmas festival, which synchronized with and i In architecture, theSee also: term " carol " (also wrongly spelled " carrel " or " carrol ") is used, in the sense of an enclosure, of a small See also: chapel or oratory enclosed by screens, and also sometimes of the rails of the screens themselves
.
It is more particularly, applied to the See also: separate seats near the windows of a cloister (q.v.), used by the monks for the purposes of study, &c
.
The term " carol " has, by a See also: mistake, been sometimes used of a See also: scroll bearing an inscription of a text, &c.superseded the Latin and Teutonic feasts of the winter solstice, lent itself especially to gaiety
.
The " crib " of the Saviour was set up in the churches or in private houses, in the traditional setting of the See also: stable, with earthen figures of the See also: Holy See also: Family, the ox and the ass; and carols were sung and danced around it
.
The " rocking of the cradle " was the occasion of See also: dialogue between See also: Joseph and Mary which was not without elements of See also: comedy, and gave rise to lullabies such as the well-known German Dormi fili
.
The adoration of the shepherds and the visit of the Magi also provided See also: matter for dramatic and choral See also: representation
.
The singing of the carol has survived in places where the institution of the "crib," said to have been originated by St See also: Francis of See also: Assisi to inculcate the See also: doctrine of the incarnation, has been long in disuse, but in the West See also: Riding of See also: Yorkshire the See also: children who go round carol-singing still carry " millyboxes " (My Lady boxes) containing figures which represent the Virgin and See also: Child
.
That carol-singing early became a pretext for the asking of See also: alms is obvious from an Anglo-Norman carol preserved in the See also: British Museum (MS
.
Reg
.
16 E. viii.), Seigneurs ore entendey a nus, which is little more than a drinking song
.
Carols were an important See also: element in the mystery plays of the Nativity, and one of these, included in the Marguerites de la See also: Marguerite See also: des princesses, tres-illustre reine de See also: Navarre (See also: Lyons, 1547), incidentally gives evidence of the connexion of dancing and carol-singing, for the shepherds and shepherdesses open their chorus at the manger with "Dansons, chantons, faisons rage." There is a long English carol See also: relating the chief incidents of the See also: life of Christ, which is a curious example of the mixture of the sacred and profane common in this See also: species of composition
.
It begins " To-morrow shall be my dancing See also: day," and has for refrain
" Sing, oh ! my love, oh ! my love, my love, my love ;
This have I done for my true love."
There are extant numerous carols dating from the 15th century which have the characteristic features of folksong
.
The famous See also: Cherry-See also: tree Carol, " Joseph was an old See also: man," is based on an old See also: legend which is related in the See also: Coventry mystery plays
.
" I saw three See also: ships come sailing in," and " The Camel and the See also: Crane," though of more See also: modern date, preserve curious legends
.
Numerous entries in the See also: household accounts of the Tudor sovereigns show that carol-singing was popular throughout the 16th century, and the literature of Christmas was enriched in the next century by poems which are often included in collections of carols, though they were probably written to be read rather than sung
.
See also: Milton, See also: Crashaw, Southwell, See also: Ben See also: Jonson, See also: George See also: Herbert and George See also: Wither all produced Christmas poems, but the richest collection by any one poet is to be found in the poems of See also: Herrick, whose " Come, bring with a noise " is a typical carol of the jovial kind, and may well have been written to a dance tune
.
Among 18th-century religious carols perhaps the most famous is See also: Charles
See also: Wesley's " Hark, how all the welkin rings," better known in the variant, " Hark, the herald angels sing." The artificial modern revival of carol-singing has produced a quantity of new carols, the best of which are perhaps mostly derived from See also: medieval Latin Christmas hymns
.
Among the many modern Christmas poems one of the most striking is Swinburne's " Three Damsels in the See also: Queen's Chamber," which is, however, a ballad rather than a carol
.
The earliest printed collection of carols was issued by Wynkyn de Worde in 1521
.
It contained the famous Boar's See also: Head carol, Caput apri defero, Reddens laudes Domino, which in a slightly altered See also: form is sung at Queen's See also: College, See also: Oxford, on the bringing in of the boar's head
.
Modern collections of See also: ancient carols are derived chiefly from three tracts belonging to the collection of Anthony A
.
See also: Wood, preserved in the Bodleian library, from a 15th-century MS
.
(See also: Sloane 2593), a 16th-century MS. with the See also: music (Add
.
5665), and other See also: MSS. in the British Museum, and from oral tradition
.
In the 18th century T . See also: Bloomer of See also: Birmingham published a number of carols in the form of broad-sides
.
Among the numerous collections of French carols is Noei Borguignon de Gui Bar8zai (1720), giving the words and the music of See also: thirty-four noels, many of them very See also: free in character
.
The term noel passed into the English carol as a favourite refrain, " See also: nowell," and seems to have been in common use in See also: France as an See also: equivalent for See also: Meat
.
Among the more important modern collections of Christmas carols are: Songs and Carols (1847), edited by T
.
See also: Wright for the Percy Society from Sloane MS
.
2593 ; W
.
Sandys, Christmastide, its See also: History, Festivities and Carols (1852); Christmas with the Poets (edited by
V
.
H., 4th ed., 1872) ; T
.
Helmore and J
.
M
.
Neale, Carols for Christmastide (1853-1854), with music; R
.
R . Chope, Carols (new and See also: complete edition, 1894), a tune-See also: book for church use, with an introduction by S
.
See also: Baring-See also: Gould; H
.
R
.
Bramley, Christmas Carols, New and Old, the music by Dr Stainer; A
.
H
.
Bullen, Carols and Poems (1885) ; J
.
A
.
See also: Fuller See also: Maitland and W
.
S
.
Rockstro, Thirteen Carols of the Fifteenth Century, from a Trinity See also: Coll., Cambridge, MS
.
(1891)
.
See also Julian'sSee also: Dictionary of Hymnology, s.v
.
" Carol "; E
.
Cortet, Essai sur See also: les fetes religieuses (1867)
.
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