Boxing Day in United Kingdom
Boxing
Day in the United Kingdom is the day after Christmas Day and falls on
December 26. Traditionally, it was a day when employers distributed
money, food, cloth (material) or other valuable goods to their
employees. In modern times, it is an important day for sporting
events and the start of the post-Christmas sales.
Boxing
Day is traditionally day for sporting events such as fox hunting with
dogs (which is now outlawed).
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TAPPER
What do people do?
For
many people Boxing Day is a time to recover from the excesses of
Christmas day and an opportunity to spent time with family, friends
and neighbors. Some people choose to go for a walk in the
countryside, while other flock to the post-Christmas sales in large
stores that often begin on Boxing Day. Some people even spend part of
the night and early morning queuing to get into the stores when the
best bargains are still available.
Boxing
Day is also an important day for sports events. Traditionally, using
dogs to hunt for foxes was a popular sport amongst the upper classes.
Pictures of hunters on horseback dressed in red coats and surrounded
by hunting dogs are often seen as symbolic of Boxing Day. Nowadays,
fox hunting is outlawed. Horse racing and football (soccer) are now
popular sports.
Public life
Boxing
Day is a bank holiday. If Boxing Day falls on a Saturday, the
following Monday is a bank holiday. If Christmas Day falls on a
Saturday, the following Monday and Tuesday are bank holidays. All
schools and many organizations are closed in this period. Some may
close for the whole week between Christmas and New Year.
Many
stores are open and now start their post-Christmas sales on Boxing
Day. This makes December 26 a very important day for many retailers.
Many public transport services run on special timetables. Many people
travel to visit family or friends in this period, so bus, plane and
train services can be very busy.
Background and symbols
There
are a number of stories behind the origin of the term 'Boxing Day'.
It used to be customary for employers to give their employees or
servants a gift of money or food in a small box on this day. This is
still customary for people who deliver letters or newspapers,
although the gift may be given before Christmas Day. In feudal times,
the lord of the manor would gather all those who worked on his land
together on this day and distribute boxes of practical goods, such as
agricultural tools, food and cloth. This was payment for the work
that they had done throughout the passed year.
Other
stories relate to servants being allowed to take a portion of the
food left over from the Christmas celebrations in a box to their
families and the distribution of alms from the Church collection box
to poor parishioners. These traditions have evolved into the
Christmas hampers that many large employers distribute, although
these are now often distributed in the week before Christmas.
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