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The jack o' lantern has a long history that originates all the way back to around 800 B.C. when Celtic
society would bring home an ember from the communal bonfire at the end of their Samhain celebration.
They carried these embers in hollowed-out turnips which created a lantern that resembles the modern day jack o' lantern. However, the turnips that they used are not the turnips we know today, rather than being white and purple skinned-
its yellow and purple, they are between half a foot and a foot in diameter big and known in English as a 'swede'.
Such Celtic traditions remained a significant part of the national culture in 18th century
Ireland and the direct predecessor of jack 0' lanterns comes from a very popular character from Irish
folklore. The tale is about a man named Jack, who was notorious for being a drunkard and trickster.
He was said to have tricked Satan into climbing up a tree for some apples and then he carved crosses all
around the trunk so he could not climb down. Jack then made a deal with the devil that if he would never tempt
him again-he'd let him down the tree. When Jack eventually died, he was turned away from Heaven due to his
life of sin and, in keeping with their agreement, the Devil wouldn't take him either. He was cursed to travel
forever as a spirit in limbo with an ember placed inside a hollowed-out turnip to light his way through the
darkness.
Using a turnip became a very popular Halloween decoration in Ireland and Scotland a few hundred
years ago, using them to ward off Jack and other spirits. Jack o' lantern's finally made their way to the states
in the 19th century when Irish families began to immigrate over bringing their traditions with them. They
discovered pumpkins here and began to use them instead since they were much easier to carve.
References to pumpkins date back many centuries. The name pumpkin originated from the Greek word
for "large melon" wich is "pepon." "Pepon" was nasalized by the French into "pompon." The English
changed "pompon" to "Pumpion." American colonists changed "pumpion" into "pumpkin."
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