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  2. Eastertide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastertide

    Eastertide (also known as Eastertime or the Easter season) or Paschaltide (also known as Paschaltime or the Paschal season) is a festal season in the liturgical year ...

  3. Easter traditions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Easter_traditions

    There are a large number of traditional Easter games and customs in the Christian world.Many of these games incorporate Easter eggs, a symbol of the empty tomb. [5] [6] [7] Of these the most well known, widespread and popular until the modern times are the egg rolling, egg hunt, egg tapping, and egg dance.

  4. Egg rolling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egg_rolling

    In Christianity, for the celebration of Eastertide, Easter eggs symbolize the empty tomb of Jesus, from which he was resurrected. [1] [2] [3] Additionally, eggs carry a Trinitarian significance, with shell, yolk, and albumen being three parts of one egg. [4]

  5. Paschal candle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paschal_candle

    It is used throughout the Eastertide and then throughout the year on occasions such as baptisms, funerals and some other special occasions such as the ordination of priests, taking vows or the Consecration of virgins, when the fire from the Paschal candle is carried with a wick to light another liturgical candle, as for example the baptismal ...

  6. Paschal Triduum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paschal_Triduum

    The Paschal Triduum or Easter Triduum (Latin: Triduum Paschale), [1] Holy Triduum (Latin: Triduum Sacrum), or the Three Days, [2] is the period of three days that begins with the liturgy on the evening of Maundy Thursday, [3] reaches its high point in the Easter Vigil, and closes with evening prayer on Easter Sunday. [4]

  7. Egg tapping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egg_tapping

    [6] [7] After the forty-day Lenten season concludes and Eastertide begins, eggs may be consumed again, giving rise to various Christian game traditions such as egg tapping, in which the "hard eggshell represented Christ's sealed tomb, and the cracking represented Christ's resurrection." [8] Egg tapping was practiced in Medieval Europe.

  8. Vidi aquam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vidi_aquam

    [1] [2] It accompanies the Asperges, the ritual at the beginning of Mass where the celebrating priest sprinkles the congregation with baptismal water. It is sung from Easter Sunday throughout the liturgical season of Eastertide until the feast of Pentecost. [3] It replaces the simpler antiphon Asperges me, which is used outside Eastertide.

  9. Triple candlestick (Catholic Church) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triple_candlestick...

    Triple candlestick being lit, in Margaret Agnes Rope's stained glass Lumen Christi.. A triple candlestick, also known as reed, tricereo, arundo, triangulum, or lumen Christi, was a liturgical object prescribed until 1955 in the Roman Rite Easter Vigil service, held on Holy Saturday morning.