When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: swedish straw goat ornaments near me images

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Yule goat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yule_goat

    A Swedish Gävle goat (Gävlebocken).. The Yule goat in Nordic countries today is best known as a Christmas ornament.This modern version of the Yule goat figure is a decorative goat made out of straw and bound with red ribbons, a popular Christmas ornament often found under or on the Christmas tree.

  3. Gävle goat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gävle_goat

    Gävle goat in 2009. The Gävle Goat (Swedish: Gävlebocken, pronounced [ˈjɛ̌ːvlɛbɔkːɛn]) is a traditional Christmas display erected annually at Slottstorget (Castle Square) in central Gävle, Sweden. The display is a giant version of a traditional Swedish Yule goat figure made of straw.

  4. Julebukking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julebukking

    Christmas Yule Goat ornaments. Julbocken by John Bauer (1912). Julebukking (Gå julebukk) is a Christmas tradition of Scandinavian origin. [1]Between Christmas and New Year's Day, people wearing face masks and costumes (Julebukkers) would go door to door, where neighbors receiving them attempt to identify who is under the disguise.

  5. Joulupukki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joulupukki

    Joulupukki and his wife. Joulupukki (Finnish: [ˈjou̯luˌpukːi]) is a Finnish Christmas figure. The name joulupukki literally means ' Christmas goat ' or ' Yule goat ' in Finnish; the word pukki comes from the Old Swedish word bukker, a cognate of English "buck", meaning ' billy-goat '.

  6. Corn dolly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corn_dolly

    Cambridgeshire handbells in wheat straw. Corn dollies or corn mothers are a form of straw work made as part of harvest customs of Europe before mechanisation.. Scholars of the 18th and 19th centuries theorized that before Christianisation, in traditional pagan European culture it was believed that the spirit of the corn (in American English, "corn" would be "grain") lived amongst the crop, and ...

  7. Swedish festivities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_festivities

    Traditional Christmas decorations include a Christmas tree, Yule Goats of straw (such as the Gävle goat), tomte and angel figurines and nativity scenes. Decoration has been influenced by Anglo-Saxon traditions, though extensive, blinking Christmas lights as common in the United States are considered to be a bit kitschy.

  8. Gävle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gävle

    The history of the Gävle goat began in 1966. Stig Gavlén came up with the idea of placing a giant version of the traditional Swedish Christmas goat of straw in Slottstorget (Castle Square) in central Gävle. On 1 December the 13-metre tall, 7-metre long, 3 tonne goat was erected on the square. At midnight on New Year's Eve, the goat went up ...

  9. Christmas in Finland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_in_Finland

    In Sweden, Estonia and Finland, joulupukki (Christmas goat) was a man who dressed as a fertility rite character, a goat. He put goat horns on his head as in shamanistic tradition to look like a goat. The outfit also included a mask made of birch bark and a sheepskin coat worn inside-out. [9]