Christmas as we know it today is actually a fairly modern invention and there are various theories as to how the birth of Jesus became to be associated with December 25th.

The earliest events that can be viewed as world-wide holidays were the celebrations of the winter solstice that typically occurs around December 21st at the moment. Sun worshipping was very common in the period around 200 AD and the date around which the sun stopped its downward retreat and started to move higher in the sky was a very important day. Since those early celebrations, the association with the birth of Jesus and afterwards the different characters known as Father Christmas and Santa Claus have developed. December is not the most significant date in some countries and places like Spain still put more emphasis on January 6th or the Epiphany, which celebrates either the baptism of Jesus or the arrival of the Magi depending on which religion you belong to.

Whatever your religious leanings, the Christmas period is still regarded as one that remains embedded in tradition, however in some countries, and the UK may be one of them, the commercialism associated with the period may be slowly eroding those historical traditions.

When you consider, even just a few decades, at what is typically associated with Christmas in the UK many things have evolved. Of course some things always find their place like Midnight Mass services for church goers, the traditional Christmas Day dinner of Roast Turkey followed by Christmas pudding and the giving of Christmas cards and gifts.

The Queens speech, broadcast on Christmas Day during the afternoon, is a regular event, but may be struggling to remain current in the light of everything else that today's youngsters have to distract them on that day. Even the sending of Christmas cards, which were also a reason for people to write and update seldom-seen friends about the happenings of the past year, are now partly redundant in that role due to the immediacy and ease of email. Some may even regard the mass sending of paper cards as being environmentally unfriendly. You rarely see a nativity scene in many UK homes these days, while new traditions like decorating the outside of houses with thousands of electrical lights, as made famous by Jennings Osborne in the USA, are gaining a foothold. Church attendance numbers fell by over 33% in the 6 year period between 1989 and 2005, so it is obvious that the focus of Christmas is changing rapidly in the UK.

To experience a more traditional Christmas, less affected by the surge of commercial influence, many people are opting to spend the festive period in countries such as Germany and Spain, where the strength of the traditional Christmas still seems to have a strong following.

As an example, the island of Lanzarote is typical of many Spanish areas in the way it celebrates Christmas. Here the primary focus is on Christmas Eve and the January Epiphany as opposed to the usual Christmas Day focus seen in the UK.

On Christmas Eve or Nochebuena, most companies will close early to allow people to travel and get ready to spend the evening with family and friends. Many will attend a Midnight Mass in their local church. Of all the days across the festive period, Christmas Day is a very low key affair. There are no presents, an activity that comes later, and most people just see the day as the start of a period of resting, not working and enjoying the company of family. The next significant date is New Years Eve, when the start of a fresh year is celebrated with big firework displays, with Puerto del Carmen staging the biggest display on the island. However the main day comes on January 6th, when presents are given and people celebrate the Epiphany. On the night before Epiphany the village of Yaiza, in southern Lanzarote and one of the prettiest villages on the island, is typical of many others on the island, seeing many people taking to the streets, with kings in costume giving sweets to the children. Unlike the custom of Father Christmas in the UK and other Northern European countries, it is the kings that deliver the presents that the children will receive the next day.

Of course these traditions seem even more odd to UK visitors when you consider the mild temperatures that are still normal at that time of year in the Canaries and the bright sunshine that still makes spending time on the island's many wonderful beaches perfectly enjoyable.