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Green on St. Patrick's Day
Posted: 2004-03-13 08:29pm
by jairyn_1
Uhm.. How did this whole "tradition" start out, anyhow..?
Posted: 2004-03-13 08:33pm
by Joe
Green = Irish pride/nationalism, and the day is an Irish holiday. That's about as complex as it gets.
Posted: 2004-03-13 08:35pm
by SecondStorm
Joe wrote:Green = Irish pride/nationalism, and the day is an Irish holiday. That's about as complex as it gets.
Err why is the colour Green associated with Irish pride/nationalism ?
Posted: 2004-03-13 08:36pm
by jairyn_1
Joe wrote:Green = Irish pride/nationalism, and the day is an Irish holiday. That's about as complex as it gets.
Okay, I'm trying to make the connection to the Catholic Saint's day..
Posted: 2004-03-13 08:38pm
by Joe
jairyn_1 wrote:Joe wrote:Green = Irish pride/nationalism, and the day is an Irish holiday. That's about as complex as it gets.
Okay, I'm trying to make the connection to the Catholic Saint's day..
St. Patrick is a Catholic saint, but he is more importantly the patron saint of Ireland. Therefore, green.
Posted: 2004-03-13 08:39pm
by jairyn_1
Joe wrote:jairyn_1 wrote:Joe wrote:Green = Irish pride/nationalism, and the day is an Irish holiday. That's about as complex as it gets.
Okay, I'm trying to make the connection to the Catholic Saint's day..
St. Patrick is a Catholic saint, but he is more importantly the patron saint of Ireland. Therefore, green.
Allrighty. I knew that much.. I wondered if there was any significance to the Catholic Church and the green.
Beyond that.. what's with the pinching?
Posted: 2004-03-13 08:48pm
by Joe
SecondStorm wrote:Joe wrote:Green = Irish pride/nationalism, and the day is an Irish holiday. That's about as complex as it gets.
Err why is the colour Green associated with Irish pride/nationalism ?
It may go back even further than this, but the the late 17th and early 18th centuries wearing a green shamrock became a symbol of defiance to British rule.
Posted: 2004-03-13 08:49pm
by Joe
jairyn_1 wrote:Joe wrote:jairyn_1 wrote:
Okay, I'm trying to make the connection to the Catholic Saint's day..
St. Patrick is a Catholic saint, but he is more importantly the patron saint of Ireland. Therefore, green.
Allrighty. I knew that much.. I wondered if there was any significance to the Catholic Church and the green.
Beyond that.. what's with the pinching?
Just an Irish custom. Nothing particularly significant historically about it, as far as I know.
Posted: 2004-03-13 09:40pm
by The Aliens
Pinching is easy to do when inerbated, so the Irish figured it would be a good thing to adopt. Luckily for us, they didn't realise that a good solid slap around the head is also easy.
Posted: 2004-03-13 09:48pm
by Mr Bean
Pinch? I thought it was a curb stomping for lack of green?
Posted: 2004-03-14 03:56am
by The Yosemite Bear
Because the middle ages/rennassance armies dressed in bright colors so you knew which side the guy next too you was on.
Well Guess which color the Irish Nationalists backing Bonny Prince Charlie, wore against William of Orange.
Posted: 2004-03-14 08:25am
by InnerBrat
Because the Irish are wierd freaky colonials. Just like you.
Posted: 2004-03-14 08:56am
by Dalton
It's not called the Emerald Isle for nothing.
Posted: 2004-03-14 08:59am
by Vympel
How come people give a shit about St Patrick's Day so much anyway?
Posted: 2004-03-14 09:43am
by Andrew J.
Green is the color most closely associated with Ireland (because of its vast fields of green meadows and forests, not to mention green shamrocks) and therefore is most closely associated with its patron saint, Patrick, and therefore to that saint's feast day, March 17th.
Posted: 2004-03-14 10:54am
by Dalton
Vympel wrote:How come people give a shit about St Patrick's Day so much anyway?
Because it's a day to celebrate Ireland, the Irish, and an excuse to get royally shitfaced
Posted: 2004-03-14 10:57am
by Ghost Rider
Vympel wrote:How come people give a shit about St Patrick's Day so much anyway?
A friendly reason to get drunk and see a river turn green
Posted: 2004-03-14 11:32am
by Tsyroc
I usually try to wear
ORANGE on St. Patrick's day.
Posted: 2004-03-14 04:19pm
by RogueIce
Tsyroc wrote:I usually try to wear
ORANGE on St. Patrick's day.
You shall burn, heretic.
Ok, none of those bastard better try anything at PT...not
my fault the Navy foolishly left out green when designing the PT uniforms.
Posted: 2004-03-14 04:22pm
by haas mark
RogueIce wrote:Tsyroc wrote:I usually try to wear
ORANGE on St. Patrick's day.
You shall burn, heretic.
Hey.. I thought I was the Token Heretic (TM)...
Posted: 2004-03-14 06:26pm
by Lord Pounder
Tsyroc wrote:I usually try to wear
ORANGE on St. Patrick's day.
Well it is the 3rd colour on the Irish Tricolour.
Personaly i got really into the whole St Patrick's day thing after i started working. It's a day off work spent in the pub.
Posted: 2004-03-14 06:37pm
by Darth Garden Gnome
I don't know why normal folks celebrate St. Patrick's Day, but I know why bar owners do....
"Now lets all get drunk and play ping-pong!"
Posted: 2004-03-14 07:02pm
by The Yosemite Bear
My cousin james is so proud of the "Noble Highlander" spirit that he wears orange and full tartan (qhich btw does contain green) on St. Patricks day....
Strangely no one want's to get into a fight with a 6 foot 4 inch scotsman.....
Posted: 2004-03-14 07:05pm
by Tsyroc
Lord Pounder wrote:
Well it is the 3rd colour on the Irish Tricolour.
Personaly i got really into the whole St Patrick's day thing after i started working. It's a day off work spent in the pub.
When I wear it I'm trying to be somewhat obnoxious and to see if anyone who's celebrating St. Patrick's day gets it. It's mainly my jab at the obnoxious band wagon green beer swilling boozers who just need another excuse to get tanked. Down here we also get a similar band wagon boozer effect for
Cinco de Mayo even though most real Mexicans don't celebrate it. Although, I don't know why they'd pass up an oportunity to celebrate kicking French ass.
From what I understand the Orange represents the Protestants. I do have some Irish ancestry but for as far back as we can trace my family they've been protestant so that's another reason for going orange.
That's assuming I bother. Most of the time I'm working on St. Patrick's day so that means light blue scrubs. I did sort of color my hair green one year but it was that stuff that washes out so easy so it was more like green mouse.
Posted: 2004-03-14 10:42pm
by Gandalf
In light of my newly discovered [url=http://liberty_chapel_cemetary.homestead.com/files/family/surname.html]heritage[/url] I too will celebrate St P D this year. No drinking, but I'll wear a green shirt around.