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Christmas - hristmas or Christmas Day is an annual Christian and secular holiday that celebrates the birth of Jesus with many secular winter festival themes. It is traditionally observed on December 25. Eastern Orthodox Churches celebrate it on January 7, which corresponds to December 25 of the Julian calendar. These dates are merely traditional; the precise chronology of Jesus' birth and death is still debated. Christmas has many popular aspects, some religious and many secular, including the exchange of gifts, Santa Claus, decoration and display of the Christmas tree, and religious ceremonies.  The modern popularity of Christmas can be attributed to the fact that Christianity is the world's largest religion[1], as well the fact that Christmas is a winter festival. Many cultures have historically celebrated their most important holiday in winter because there is less agricultural work to do at this time. Examples of winter festivals that have influenced Christmas include the pre-Christian festivals of Yule[2] and Saturnalia. Many of the traditions associated with the holiday have origins in these pagan winter celebrations.  Various local and regional Christmas traditions are still practiced, despite the widespread influence of American, Australian, and British Christmas motifs disseminated by film, popular literature, television, and other media.
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Christmas - hristmas or Christmas Day is an annual Christian and secular holiday that celebrates the birth of Jesus with many secular winter festival themes. It is traditionally observed on December 25. Eastern Orthodox Churches celebrate it on January 7, which corresponds to December 25 of the Julian calendar. These dates are merely traditional; the precise chronology of Jesus' birth and death is still debated. Christmas has many popular aspects, some religious and many secular, including the exchange of gifts, Santa Claus, decoration and display of the Christmas tree, and religious ceremonies. The modern popularity of Christmas can be attributed to the fact that Christianity is the world's largest religion[1], as well the fact that Christmas is a winter festival. Many cultures have historically celebrated their most important holiday in winter because there is less agricultural work to do at this time. Examples of winter festivals that have influenced Christmas include the pre-Christian festivals of Yule[2] and Saturnalia. Many of the traditions associated with the holiday have origins in these pagan winter celebrations. Various local and regional Christmas traditions are still practiced, despite the widespread influence of American, Australian, and British Christmas motifs disseminated by film, popular literature, television, and other media.