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  2. 4 traditions Hispanics embrace every Easter - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/2015-04-03-12-traditions...

    Next to Christmas, Easter is the most widely celebrated and important religious holiday of the year. During the week leading up to Easter, known as Holy Week or Semana Santa, a number of colorful ...

  3. Holy Week in Spain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy_Week_in_Spain

    Holy Week in Spain is the annual tribute of the Passion of Jesus Christ celebrated by Catholic religious brotherhoods (Spanish: confradías) and confraternities that perform penitential processions on the streets of almost every Spanish city and town during Holy Week–the final week of Lent before Easter.

  4. Holy Week in Málaga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy_Week_in_Málaga

    Book of Rules (in Spanish Libro de Reglas) is a book that contains the norms and rules of the Brotherhood. A standard embroidered with a painting of Mary Most Holy of Grace Standard (the so-called Estandarte ) is an insignia, sometimes embroidered in gold thread and luxuriously decorated, with a painting of the Christ or Virgin of each brotherhood.

  5. Names of Easter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_Easter

    In Dutch, Easter is known as Pasen and in the North Germanic languages Easter is known as påske (Danish and Norwegian), påsk , páskar and páskir . The name is derived directly from Hebrew Pesach. [21] The letter å is pronounced /oː/, derived from an older aa, and an alternate spelling is paaske or paask.

  6. Holy Week - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy_Week

    A Confraternity in Procession along Calle Génova, Seville by Alfred Dehodencq (1851). Holy Week in the liturgical year is the week immediately before Easter. The earliest allusion to the custom of marking this week as a whole with special observances is to be found in the Apostolical Constitutions (v. 18, 19), dating from the latter half of the 3rd century and 4th century.

  7. Capirote - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capirote

    According to historian Michael K. Jerryson, the capirote was appropriated by the early 20th-century American Ku Klux Klan, a white supremacist and anti-Catholic group. [4] Alison Kinney of New Republic traces the modern uniform to the popularity of the film The Birth of a Nation , whose costume inspiration was not credited.