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Weddings!!
Wedding
ceremonies may contain any number of different elements, however
most contain wedding vows of some kind and a proclamation of
marriage, usually by the officiant.
Other elements may include music, poetry, prayer, scripture, or
other traditions. In most societies a number of traditions or
customs have emerged around the wedding ceremony, many of which
have lost their original symbolic meaning in the modern world.
Other wedding traditions are relatively recent. Some elements of
the Western wedding ceremony symbolize the bride's departure from
her father's control and entry into a new family with her husband.
In modern Western weddings, this symbolism is largely vestigial,
since husband and wife are of equal power and status. Recently in
some cultures, same-sex weddings have begun to be celebrated.
The Western custom of the bride wearing a white wedding dress,
came to symbolize purity in the Victorian era (despite popular
misconception and the hackneyed jokes of situation comedies the
white dress did not actually indicate virginity, which was
symbolized by a face veil). Within the "white wedding" tradition,
a white dress and veil would not have been considered appropriate
in the second or third wedding of a widow or divorcee. The
specific conventions of Western weddings largely from a Protestant
and Catholic viewpoint, are discussed at "White wedding."
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Weddings in modern China combine
both traditional elements and elements influenced by the West. The
actual civil ceremony consists of registering the marriage with
the local registrar is brief and done without much ceremony. The
wedding reception, however, is elaborate and complex. The one
prominent element of modern Chinese weddings is the Chinese
wedding album.
A wedding is often followed or accompanied by a wedding reception,
at which an elaborate wedding cake is served. Western traditions
include toasting the bride and groom, the newlyweds having the
first dance, and cutting the cake. The bride throws her bouquet to
the assembled group of all unmarried women in attendance, and the
woman who catches it is supposedly going to be the next to wed. A
fairly recent egalitarian equivalent has the groom throwing the
bride's garter to the assembled unmarried men; the man who catches
it is supposedly the next to wed.
German Wood Wedding FiguresCustoms vary and in multicultural
ceremonies. The customs may be varied, mixed or totally created to
suit the personalities and interests of the couple. Again, such
ceremonies are more common when performed by Civil Celebrants, as
in Australia.
A long-standing modern tradition is for brides to wear or carry
"something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue"
during the service. It is considered good luck to do so. Often
times the bride attempts to have one item that meets all of these
qualifications, such as a borrowed blue handerchief which is "new
to her" but loaned by her grandmother (thus making it old.)
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