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  2. Balthazar (magus) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balthazar_(Magus)

    Since King Balthazar, in traditional pictorial representations from the Late Middle Ages, is often represented as a black person (as an integrating or cosmopolitan graphic symbol, in the tradition that the "wise men" or "magi" who worshipped Jesus in Bethlehem represented the peoples of the whole world), fitting in with this traditional icon ...

  3. Chalking the door - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chalking_the_door

    Epiphany season door chalking on an apartment door in the Midwestern US A Christmas wreath adorning a home, with the top left-hand corner of the front door chalked for Epiphany-tide and the wreath hanger bearing a placard of the archangel Gabriel. Chalking the door is a Christian Epiphanytide tradition used to bless one's home. [1]

  4. Biblical Magi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biblical_Magi

    The King James Version translates "magi" as wise men; the same translation is applied to the wise men led by Daniel of earlier Hebrew Scriptures (Daniel 2:48). The same word is given as sorcerer and sorcery when describing "Elymas the sorcerer" in Acts 13:6–11, and Simon Magus, considered a heretic by the early Church, in Acts 8:9–13.

  5. Category:Non-free Christmas images - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Non-free...

    Media in category "Non-free Christmas images" The following 17 files are in this category, out of 17 total. A. File:A Christmas Carol (1971 film).jpg; B.

  6. Epiphany season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epiphany_season

    The Epiphany season, also known as Epiphanytide or the time of Sundays after Epiphany, is a liturgical period, celebrated by many Christian Churches, which immediately follows the Christmas season. It begins on Epiphany Day , and ends at various points (such as Candlemas ) as defined by those denominations.

  7. Epifania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epifania

    Epifania by Ascanio Condivi, Casa Buonarroti, Florence. Michelangelo's biographer Ascanio Condivi used this cartoon for an unfinished painting. A 19th-century Scottish collector, John Malcolm of Poltalloch, bought it for only £11 0s 6d. and, on John's death in 1893, his son John Wingfield Malcolm gave it to the British Museum. [1]

  8. Caspar (magus) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caspar_(magus)

    Caspar is commemorated on the Feast of Epiphany along with the other members of the Magi but is also commemorated in Catholicism with his feast day, 11 January. Following his return to his own country, avoiding King Herod, it is purported that Caspar celebrated Christmas with the other members of the Magi in Armenia in 54 AD.

  9. Twelfth Night (holiday) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twelfth_Night_(holiday)

    Twelfth Night (also known as Epiphany Eve depending upon the tradition) is a Christian festival on the last night of the Twelve Days of Christmas, marking the coming of the Epiphany. [1] Different traditions mark the date of Twelfth Night as either 5 January or 6 January , depending on whether the counting begins on Christmas Day or 26 December .