Dressed in pagan folk costumes, Latvians gather on a square in the center of Riga for a ceremony that some historians see as the ancient precursor to the Christmas tree tradition.
But these colorful revelers celebrating the winter solstice have not come to decorate a tree, but to burn one.
After dragging a tree trunk by rope through the streets of the Baltic capital, the wild looking bunch then put it on a bonfire.
In medieval times, people would put the trees in their homes ahead of solstice before dragging them off to their fiery end.
“The tree stump symbolizes everything that went wrong this year,” said Liga Lukashunas, one of the celebrants and head of Riga’s Ritmus cultural centre.
“We gather all our bad thoughts, wrongdoings or health troubles into these logs which then go up in smoke, allowing the upcoming year to have a fresh start.”
First medieval trees
Near to where the ceremony finished, a plaque on the ground claims to be the spot where the world’s first decorated Christmas tree was put on show in 1510.
The Baltic pagan tree-burning tradition was initially picked up by German traders, who developed the Christmas tree into its modern form and helped to spread it through the Hanseatic League ports along the Baltic.
According to historical records, the original tree in 1510 was decorated by the merchants’ guild in Riga with artificial roses.
The merchants then danced around it before setting it on fire.
The first historical record of a Christmas tree in its current form comes from 1476 when one was installed in a house belonging to the city’s Schwarzhaeupter organization of foreign merchants.
The event was described by historian and linguist Guna Pitkevica in “The Great Christmas Book.”
They “embellished an evergreen tree in their Schwarzhaeupter House with decorations and sweets, carrying it out on the street after Christmas was over, to burn it down,” she said.
By ancient custom everyone in Latvia today is entitled to cut down their own fir tree for Christmas in state forests, which cover approximately one third of the country’s territory.
Aida Rancane, founder of the folk band Grodi, said winter solstice ceremonies symbolized “the everlasting rebirth of nature and the world around us, allowing people to renew themselves.”