Boxing
Day is December 26, the day after Christmas, and is celebrated in Great Britain
and in most areas settled by the English, including Canada, Australia, and New
Zealand.
Boxing Day
is just one of the British bank
holidays recognized since 1871
that are observed by factories, banks, government offices, and post offices.
The others include Christmas, Good Friday, Easter, Whit-Monday (the day after Pentecost), and the banking holiday on
the last Monday in August.
The exact
origins of the holiday are obscure, it
is probable that Boxing Day began in England during the Middle Ages.
Historians say the holiday developed because
servants were required to work on Christmas
Day, but took the following day off. As servants prepared to leave to visit
their families, their employers would present them with gift boxes.
Another
theory is that the boxes placed in
churches where parishioners deposited coins for the poor were opened and the
contents distributed on December 26, which is also the Feast of St. Stephen.
As time went by, Boxing
Day gift giving expanded to include those who had rendered a service during the
previous year. This tradition survives
today as people give presents to tradesmen, mail carriers, doormen, porters,
and others who have helped them.
Just as Americans watch football on Thanksgiving, the
Brits have Boxing Day soccer matches and horse races. If they're particularly
wealthy or live in the country, they might even participate in a fox hunt.
Boxing Day is also
a traditional sales day in various shops and boutiques. England and Canada's
Boxing Day evolved into a major shopping event in the 1980s — the equivalent of
post-Thanksgiving Black Friday.
For other
European people, Boxing Day is just the second day of Christmas.