Welcome to GuardiansWorlds.com
 
 

  User Info Box

Anonymous
3.135.207.204
Nickname:

Password:

Security Code:
Security Code
Type Security Code:


User Stats:
Today: 0
Yesterday: 0
This Month: 0
This Year: 0
Total Users: 117
New Members:
Online Now:
  Guests: 216
3.135.xxx.xxx
3.142.xx.xxx
216.244.xx.xxx
18.225.xx.xx
52.14.x.xx

  Total Online: 216
Server Time:
Dec 28, 2024
09:08 am UTC
 

  Modules/Site Links

· Home
· Bible-MM
· Birds-MM
· Car_Show-MM
· Christmas-MM
· Content
· Domaining-MM
· Downloads
· Drugs-MM
· Event Calendar
· FAQ
· Feedback
· Fish-MM
· Gambling_Guide-MM
· Guardians Worlds Chat
· HTML_Manual
· Internet_Traffic_Report
· IP_Tracking Tool
· Journal
· Members List
· Movies-MM
· Music_Sound-MM
· NukeSentinel
· PHP-Nuke_Tools
· PHP_Manual-MM
· PING Tool
· Private Messages
· Recommend Us
· Reptiles-MM
· Search
· SEO_Tools
· Statistics
· Stories Archive
· Submit News
· Surveys
· Top 30
· Topics
· Visitor Mapping System
· Web Links
· Webcams
· Web_Development-MM
· YahooNews
· YahooPool
· Your Account
 

  Categories Menu

· All Categories
· Camaro and Firebird
· FTP Server
· New Camaro
· News
· Online Gaming
 

  Survey

Which is your favorite generation Camaro or Firebird?

1st Gen. 67-69 Camaro
2nd Gen. 70-81 Camaro
3rd Gen. 82-92 Camaro
4th Gen. A 93-97 Camaro
4th Gen. B 98-2002 Camaro
1st Gen. 67-69 Firebird
2nd Gen. 70-81 Firebird
3rd Gen. 82-92 Firebird
4th Gen. A 93-97 Firebird
4th Gen. B 98-2002 Firebird



Results
Polls

Votes: 66
Comments: 0
 

  Cluster Maps

Locations of visitors to this page
 

  Languages

Select Interface Language:

 

 
  Striezelmarkt

Christmas

Striezelmarkt

Back | Home | Up | Next


The Striezelmarkt in 2003

The Striezelmarkt in Dresden is one of Germany's oldest documented Christmas markets. It was first mentioned in 1434, under Friedrich II, an Elector of Saxony, when it was held the Monday before Christmas on the Altmarkt square. Over the centuries it has developed into a huge event with 250 stands, taking up a large part of Dresden city centre and lasting throughout the Advent period. Today the Striezelmarkt attracts 2 million visitors a year from all over the world, and Dresden's twin town Columbus, Ohio has adopted the tradition, too.

The word Striezelmarkt comes from Strüzel or Stroczel, which was the name of a type of cake sold at the market, now famous as Stollen or Christstollen. Stollen is a light airy fruitcake which is quite low in sugar, today available in many parts of the world. The true Dresden Stollen, however, is produced in the city and distinguished by a special seal depicting the city's famous king, August the Strong. The shape of the cake is meant to be reminiscent of the entrance to a mine tunnel (the literal meaning of Stollen) reflecting the area's silver and tin mining history.

At the centre of the Striezelmarkt stands a 20m high spruce, brought from the nearby Tharandt woods and decorated with lights. At the back of the market square there is a painted wooden fairy-tale castle which is also a giant Advent calendar. A door is opened every day by children's entertainers, with a puppet show, and on Fridays there is a visit by Father Christmas himself.

Contents

Features of today's Striezelmarkt

Wooden Ornaments

Many of the stands at the Striezelmarkt sell wooden ornaments of a huge variety of shapes and sizes. This comes from the area's mining history. Dresden is the largest city near the Erzgebirge, or Ore Mountains, where silver and tin were discovered in around 1168. The discovery brought many miners to the area, who then lost their jobs as the German Peasants' War and competition from abroad took their toll. Needing a new way of earning money, the miners took up woodcarving, incorporating mining symbols and religious elements into their designs. These symbols can still be found in the Christmas ornaments sold at the Striezelmarkt.

  • Candle pyramids
In many parts of Germany, the candle pyramid (lightstock) is brought out every year to light up the room at Christmas. Two to five round wooden tiers, gradually smaller towards the top, are built onto a central rod which rotates, driven by the heat of candles rising up into a rotor at the top. On each tier there are figures connected with Christmas. The whole ornament is usually about 50 cm high, but the tallest pyramid in the world takes pride of place at the Striezelmarkt, towering a full 14m in the air. Originally, the pyramid was a much simpler affair, simply a frame to hang sprigs of fir upon; the modern-day pyramid did not evolve until the early 19th century.
  • Schwibbogen
Literally, the word Schwibbogen means an arch "hanging" (schweben) above you, between two walls. This candle-holder is indeed arch-shaped, representing the arched entrance to a mine hung with guiding lights; another connection to the area's mining past. Today the "candles" are often lit with electricity, and the scenes cut out of the wooden centre of the arch are not only on mining themes. At night during Advent, nearly every single window in Dresden is lit with these ornaments, traditionally bought at the Striezelmarkt.
  • Räuchermann (smoking man)
Another ornament always present at Christmas-time in Germany, the smoking man is hollowed out with a hole leading to his mouth, hung with a pipe. An incense candle is placed inside him so that he appears to smoke as it burns. There is a wide variety of variations on the smoking man, including old ladies in rocking chairs, Father Christmases, and figures representing nearly every occupation. Smoking men first appeared on the Striezelmarkt in the 19th century.
  • Nutcrackers
The type of nutcracker traditionally sold at the Striezelmarkt, carved and painted with a red coat like a soldier, probably became popular world-wide thanks to |Tchaikovsky's "Nutcracker Suite". The first wood turner to carve the ornaments in this form, Wilhelm Friedrich Füchtner from the Ore Mountains, is said to have been inspired by the nutcracker in the story book Tchaikovsky's ballet came from.

Food and drink

Apart from the famous Stollen, other specialities originate from Dresden and were originally sold at the Striezelmarkt.

  • Pflaumentoffel
Although they are made of prunes, these little figures are really decorations, although they can be eaten after Christmas. Pflaumentoffel means plum devil; they were also called Feuerrüpel or Fiery Santa, although they are not meant to be devils or Santas, but chimney sweeps, all dressed in black (the prunes) with a top hat and a brush. Until the 20th century, Pflaumentoffel were sold at the Striezelmarkt on trays carried by children trying to earn some Christmas money. The artist Ludwig Richter famously portrayed these Striezelkinder in 1853 in his woodcut "Ausverkauft wegen Geschäftsaufgabe" ("Sold out as giving up business"). In 1910, however, sale by children was banned at the Striezelmarkt.
  • Pulsnitzer Pfefferkuchen (Pulsnitz gingerbread)
The Christmas market at Nuremberg (Christkindlmarkt) is more famous for its gingerbread known as Lebkuchen, but the Striezelmarkt's gingerbread has nearly as long a history. Pfefferkuchen literally means "pepper cake": the word "pepper" was used to mean any new foreign spice. The gingerbread sold at the Striezelmarkt comes from Pulsnitz, a town about 50 km from Dresden; it was first mentioned as a speciality from Pulsnitz in a decree issued in 1558 allowing bakers to produce it there. Pfefferkuchen are usually filled with marmalade or jam and covered with chocolate. Unlike gingerbread from other countries, the dough does not usually contain any fat, or indeed ginger, but instead nutmeg, cinnamon, ground cloves and allspice, which are added after the dough has been left up to 6 months to mature. In 1780 eight master bakers came personally from Pulsnitz to sell their wares at the Striezelmarkt; today there are many more Pfefferkuchen stands, but the gingerbread is usually sold by hired staff.
  • Glühwein (mulled wine)
One very well-loved tradition on a cold December night in Dresden is drinking steaming mugs of mulled wine at the Striezelmarkt. The hot red wine spiced with cloves and cinnamon is served in specially decorated mugs.

External links


Home | Up | Santa Claus | Advent calendar | Advent wreath | American Christmas traditions | Ashen faggot | Christmas Bird Count | Bracebridge dinner | Bubble light | Christmas card | Carols by Candlelight | Christmas cracker | Christmas customs in Poland | Christmas customs in Romania | Christmas customs in the Philippines | Christmas dinner | Christmas tree | Christmas worldwide | Christmastime greetings | Festival of Trees | Garland | German Christmas traditions | Grand Illumination | Hanukkah bush | Holiday Trail of Lights | Hollywood Christmas Parade | Koleda | Koledari | Kūčios | Christmas lights | Christmas Market | National Christmas Tree | Nativity scene | Nutcracker | Christmas ornament | Pagan beliefs surrounding Christmas | Pasterka | Christmas pickle | Pumpkin pie | Rich's Great Tree | Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree | Royal Christmas Message | Santa Claus | Santa Claus parade | Santa's Grotto | Santon | Christmas stamp | Christmas stocking | Striezelmarkt | Toronto Santa Claus Parade | Tree topper | Twelve-dish Christmas Eve supper | Christmas village | Wassailing | Wigilia | Yule Goat | Yule log

Christmas Guide, v. 2.0, by MultiMedia

This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.

 
 


 
  Disipal DesignsAnti-Spam
All logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owner. The comments are property of their posters, all the rest © 2002 by me.
You can syndicate our news using the file backend.php or ultramode.txt This site contains info,links,chat,message board/forum for online games,gaming,other features.Check out my servers and stats for Killing Floor, Quake3 Rocket Arenas & Deathmatch,Trade Wars 2002 & FTP server.Camaro/Firebirds, car info.