Top 10+ Everyday Things That Originated In Pagan Culture

That’s So Pagan

That’s So Pagan, The Days Of The Week, Happy Birthday!, Naming The Months, Wedding Rings, Knock On Wood, Knock on Wood, Kitty Cats, Cross Your Fingers, Cover Your Mouth!

Life moves pretty quickly. We often believe that the past is something that we’ve left behind entirely. However, this couldn’t be more wrong. There are many hangovers from pagan cultures that we still use today—let’s take a look at some of the most popular.

The Days Of The Week

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We’ve been saying Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday for so long that few people have thought about where that started. However, they derive from a long-forgotten time—much to the annoyance of long-forgotten Christian leaders.

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Sunday, unsurprisingly, has to do with worshiping the sun. Tuesday is a Germanic god of war, Friday the goddess of love, and as many people know, Thursday is all about Thor (no, not the Chris Hemsworth one).

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Years and years (try centuries and centuries) ago, leaders in the Church attempted to irradicate these hangovers. However, the popular opinion continued to hang on, and they couldn’t do it. So, we still use these names even today.

Happy Birthday!

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Sure, these days we acknowledge that Christmas is all about the birth of Christ (and Santa, of course). However, early Christians did not celebrate birthdays. That’s a pagan hangover.

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In pagan tradition, birth was considered a major event, and major events in nature were believed to draw out spirits. If you don’t recognize a birthday properly, there could be trouble!

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Evil spirits were a common concern in pagan culture. There were many rituals designed to keep them at bay, particularly from children. Our birthday traditions are one of them.

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It was believed that evil spirits could attack a child during their day of birth each year. To keep them at bay, Germanic cultures would light a candle for each year the child was born on top of a cake. Make a wish!

Naming The Months

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Many months have its roots in a god or goddess that had once been celebrated and likely was around the time of their given festivals. January, for example, derives from “yuletide”—fitting, given it is near to the time of year we still celebrate.

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Finally, June derives from the goddess Juno. Juno was a goddess that was tied to marriage and birth, as well as the sky. She was also associated with the summer solstice which still occurs around this time.

Wedding Rings

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In Western society, even if you are not religious, few things are as strongly tied to Christianity as the wedding. However, one of the most basic wedding practices likely came from a pagan culture instead.

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Many cultures, not just pagans, marked weddings with rings. However, the practice of wearing our wedding rings on the fourth finger of our left hand has ties to ancient Roman and Greek culture.

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The ancient Greeks and Romans saw the fourth finger as the “medicated finger”. It was the finger that had a vein directly to the heart. Wearing a wedding ring on this finger was a vow of love and devotion. However, it wasn’t just the Romans and the Greeks who wore weddings rings.

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There is also evidence of wedding rings being significant in the ancient Egyptian culture as well. During the Third Dynasty of the Old Kingdom, people would exchange rings to represent a binding agreement between two parties. Sounds like a wedding to me.

Knock On Wood

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What is more common than saying “knock on wood” after a statement that you wish to come true, or fear might turn sour just because you spoke it into the universe? This tradition ties back to ancient Celtic culture.

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The Celts had strong ties to the earth and nature. In particular, they believed in wood or tree spirits. Knocking on wood is believed to have been a means of asking these spirits for protection or healing. Though it’s not the only possibility.

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As already discussed, pagan cultures both respected and feared spirits. Therefore, some believe that the opposite was true—knocking on wood was a means to repel the evil spirits, keeping them away and stopping them from meddling in your plans.

Knock on Wood

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Christianity swept many pagan traditions under the rug, or at the very least took their practices and turned them into something different. However, fear of evil spirits hangs over many traditions we practice today, whether we realize it or not.

Jewelry

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Wearing jewelry might seem like the height of modernity. After all, there is something fun about cladding yourself in gold or your gemstone of choice, and modern times are full of luxuries. However, the act of wearing jewelry couldn’t be older.

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Decorating the body with bracelets, amulets, necklaces, and other items was common in pagan times. It was a means to distinguish wealth and status. Though it was also a means to connect themselves to their gods.

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Greek, Roman, and Egyptian cultures were full of spiritual symbols in jewelry. For the Egyptians in particular, they would often bury their lost loved ones with jewelry as part of their journey into the afterlife.

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There was a set of social rules for jewelry in Roman culture. Gold rings, for example, were markers of political importance. They could only be worn by senators and nobles. So, remember that next time you’re shopping for a new bobble.

Kitty Cats

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Obviously, no one invented cats (excluding any deities that belong to your chosen belief system). However, the concept of having “pets”, particularly cats, is something that is left over from pagan culture.

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If you enjoy Wiccan culture or supernatural shows today, then you’re likely already familiar with the term “familiar”. In antiquity, keeping a familiar was a common practice that would heighten a person’s spiritual or supernatural powers.

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Animals such as cats, dogs, toads, and other small creatures were thought to be inhabited by fairies or similar “spirits”. This gave their owners a tie to that spiritual realm themselves.

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Christianity used these practices to run witch hunts, tying them to darker themes of the devil. However, for most pagans, this was a practice that had to do with connecting to nature. Though, as any cat owner can tell you, they all have a little devil in them.

Cross Your Fingers

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If you’ve been keeping track so far, then you’ve likely noticed a trend. A lot of our pagan hangovers are steeped in what we call superstition today. Crossing your fingers is both very pagan and follows that trend.

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Crosses were not just for the Christians, though they have certainly made them famous now. Pagans also used crosses in their culture and believed that they were home to kind and good spirits. Therefore, crossing one’s fingers for good luck was rooted here. However, they did it a little differently.

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Some hundreds and thousands of years ago, if someone told you to “cross your fingers”, then you needed two people to do so. In pagan times, you and a buddy would cross both your index fingers together, hoping to invoke the spirits and have them use their powers to bring good luck your way.

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Some historians do pose an alternative. There was a time when Christianity needed to be hidden, and during this period, supposedly, Christians would cross their fingers (again with two people) to indicate their allegiance to this cause.

Makeup

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Makeup and cosmetics feel very modern, especially given how much time and money the modern industry has spent on developing them. However, they have ties to very ancient cultures.

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Just look at the paintings and drawings that exist today from ancient Egypt. The ancient Egyptians favored heavy eye makeup that would make the most skilled influencer jealous. And they weren’t the only culture to do so.

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The ancient Romans also colored their faces to show their influence and personal style. While both men and women wore makeup in ancient Egypt, it was only the women in Rome that tended to get “dolled up”.

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It would take many years before makeup came back into fashion again. When Christianity began to take over, forcing pagans and their traditions into the background, makeup became something dirty and sinful.

Cover Your Mouth!

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Did your mother or father ever tell you it is rude to yawn without covering your mouth? If so, they were participating in a very old tradition without even realizing it! Though it wasn’t rudeness the ancient Romans feared.

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Covering your mouth when you yawn goes back to ancient Roman times. Why did they do this, you might ask? Well, because they thought that yawning could invite disease, and then, well… loss of life.

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Modern science could support this to a degree—the longer you open your mouth, the higher chance you are to catch germs, and therefore become sick. However, that isn’t what the Romans feared.