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Episode 28 - New Year Traditions
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Episode 28 - New Year Traditions

Ancient Roman, British and Scottish

I hope you all had a wonderful Christmas and are looking forward to the New Year in a couple of days. If you celebrate New Year’s Eve in or are from an English-speaking country you most likely mark New Year’s Eve with a party, a countdown to midnight, maybe a midnight kiss, and probably a loud and drunken rendition of Auld Lang Syne. Where did this tradition come from and why is this time of year considered the New Year? Let’s explore the Western New Year traditions for this final episode of 2024.


Marking the start of the New Year with a celebration or ritual is an ancient tradition common across most societies around the world, dating back thousands of years. The New Year was and is celebrated at different times of the year depending on the region and history of a particular place, but it was commonly linked to astronomical or agricultural cycles. The annual flooding of the Nile River marked the start of the New Year in ancient Egypt. In many cultures, the arrival of Spring and the Spring equinox signified the start of the New Year. Ancient Babylonians and Assyrians, including their modern societies from Iraq and Turkey, celebrate Spring and the New Year with the festival of Akitu. Ancient Persians, and their modern societies from Iran, celebrate the Spring festival of Nowruz. The Chinese have celebrated New Year to mark Spring for centuries.

Ancient Roman Traditions

The ancient Romans also originally celebrated New Year in Spring, on March 1 according to the old Roman Lunar calendar. In 45 BC, Roman Emperor Julius Caesar commissioned the Greek mathematician and astronomer Sosigenes to develop a calendar that could standardise civil and administrative calendars across the Roman Empire. The New Year was shifted to 1 January, aligning it with the ancient Roman celebration of Saturnalia and the month dedicated to Janus, the two-faced god of beginnings. Episode 14 - The Moon and the Wheel of Months has more information about the evolution of calendars from the lunar to the solar Julian then Gregorian calendars.

Janus. Source: The New Yorker

Saturnalia, named after the Roman god Saturnus, was a month-long festival of revelry and gift-giving that began on December 17, reached its climax on December 25 with Sol Invictus, the ‘Birth of the Unconquered Sun’, and culminated with the Kalends on January 1, marking the start of the New Year. It influenced the Western modern-day celebrations of Christmas and New Year. You can learn more about Saturnalia in Episode 3 - Echoes of the Ice Age: Winter Solstice and Mother's Night.

Saturnalia - Wikipedia
Saturnalia (1783) by Antoine-François Callet. Source: Wikimedia Commons

British Traditions

Local religious and agricultural calendars across Europe continued to mark the New Year around the Spring equinox until well into the 16th century. Once the Gregorian calendar was adopted in Europe, the celebration of New Year on 1 January became widely accepted.

England, Wales, Ireland, and Britain's American colonies maintained 25 March as New Year’s Day until 1752, when they formally adopted 1 January as New Year’s Day, as well as replacing the Julian calendar with the Gregorian calendar. Scotland had previously adopted the 1 January date and Gregorian calendar in 1600, to align it with its mainland European allies.

In the Western world, we now celebrate the New Year based on calendars developed by the ancient Romans, with traditions that are heavily influenced by the ancient Roman celebration of Saturnalia, its synthesis with Winter Solstice traditions from the Celtic and Germanic worlds, and more recently by the Scottish Hogmanay.

Scottish Traditions - Hogmanay

Hogmanay is the Scots word for the last day of the year, New Year's Eve. Its exact origin isn't definitively known, but it's believed to have roots in various traditions and languages. Some theories suggest it's derived from the French phrase hoguinané, which means a gift given at New Year's. Others associate it with the Anglo-Saxon phrase haleg monath, referring to Holy Month, designating the Christmas period or the month of December. It is thought to have first been used widely following Mary, Queen of Scots' return to Scotland from France in 1561. Its origins are rooted in the Norse celebration of the winter solstice, known as Yule, which was celebrated in Scotland before Christmas became popular.

Hogmanay often involves a series of customs and festivities that can last for several days. Traditions include night-time parades and raucous parties on New Year’s Eve to ‘greet’ the New Year. They also include midnight fireworks displays.

Edinburgh Hogmanay: everything you need to know | Telegraph Travel
Men dressed as Vikings are part of Hogmanay parades and festivities. Source: Tartanista.co.uk

An old custom that is still practised in parts of Scotland and the Scottish diaspora is known as first-footing, where the first person to enter a home after midnight brings gifts such as coal, shortbread, or whisky, symbolising good luck for the coming year. It is considered good luck for the first footer to have dark hair as blond hair was connected to Vikings who raided Scotland from the late 8th century AD and continued intermittently for several centuries, lasting until around the mid-11th century AD.

Other traditions that are still popular include singing Auld Lang Syne, a traditional Scottish song written by poet Robert Burns in the 1800s from an older Scottish folk song.

At Hogmanay in Scotland, it is common practice that everyone joins hands with the person next to them to form a great circle around the dance floor. At the beginning of the last verse (And there's a hand, my trusty fiere!/and gie's a hand o' thine!), everyone crosses their arms across their breast, so that the right-hand reaches out to the neighbour on the left and vice versa. When the tune ends, everyone rushes to the middle, while still holding hands. When the circle is re-established, everyone turns under the arms to end up facing outwards with hands still joined. Wikipedia

The video (4:25 mins) below provides a good summary of the history and rise in popularity of Auld Lang Syne.

The next video (3 mins) below features a beautiful rendition of Auld Lang Syne by Celtic Woman.

The tradition of singing Auld Lang Syne at midnight spread throughout the English-speaking world with Scottish emigrants along with other traditions such as:

  • cleaning one's house before the New Year to sweep away any bad luck

  • opening of doors and windows to let the old year out and the new year in

  • saining - sprinkling every room with water from a fresh stream then smoking each room with juniper smoke, similar to smudging.

Welsh Traditions

A Welsh New Year’s Day tradition involves drawing the first water from a well on New Year’s morning and sprinkling people with the water using evergreen sprigs. The traditional Welsh New Year carol known as Levy Dew describes this tradition, as well as the custom of opening doors to let the New Year in and out.

Levy Dew

Here we bring new water from the well so clear,
For to worship God with, this happy New Year.

Chorus (after each verse):
Sing levy-dew, sing levy-dew, the water and the wine,
The seven bright gold wires and the bugles that do shine.

Sing reign of Fair Maid, with gold upon her toe;
Open you the West Door and turn the Old Year go.

Sing reign of Fair Maid, with gold upon her chin;
Open you the East Door and let the New Year in.

Traditional Welsh folk song popularised in 1934 by Benjamin Brittan


I will be taking a break over the first two weeks of January, but will be back on the 16th in the new year with Episode 29 – Celebrating Australia’s Midsummer. In the meantime, wherever you are in the world, and however you celebrate, may you have a joyous and prosperous New Year, may you be blessed with peace and abundance, and as the Scottish say… “Lang may ya lum reek wi’ither folks coal” (Long may your chimneys smoke with other people’s coal).

See you in a few week’s time for Episode 29 – Celebrating Australia’s Midsummer

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Wheel & Cross is a digital publication dedicated to exploring the interplay of history, culture, traditions, and the natural rhythm of the seasons.