The British royal family represents a unique phenomenon where personal and public, family and state are closely intertwined. The traditions of celebrating Christmas and New Year in the Windsor household are not only a private matter but also an important tool for the legitimation of monarchy, demonstrating its stability and continuity. These rituals, on the one hand, reflect national practices, and on the other, set an example for imitation, acting as a "link" between the nation and its symbolic head.
The traditional place for the royal family to celebrate Christmas for over three decades (from 1988 to 2019) was the Sandringham estate in Norfolk. This choice was not coincidental: a private residence, unlike the grand Buckingham Palace, creates an atmosphere of a family celebration rather than an official one.
Key Christmas rituals include:
The Christmas service at St. Mary Magdalene's Church. This public element involves the family walking from their home to the church, allowing the public and press to see them. It is important to note the democratic gesture: family members carry their gifts to the church, where they are later laid out on long tables for public viewing. This custom emphasizes the "common" Christmas, shared with the people.
The "Royal Christmas pudding." An interesting fact: until World War II, for several weeks before Christmas, royal chefs prepared giant puddings, which were then sent to palace staff, military personnel, and charitable organizations. Today, this tradition has transformed into a symbolic gesture — the king and other family members personally help in the kitchens of charitable organizations in preparing festive food for the needy.
The Television Christmas Broadcast (The King's/Queen's Christmas Broadcast). This is perhaps the most significant public ritual. The idea was borrowed by George V in 1932 from the BBC director and initially caused some doubts. The first broadcast, written by Rudyard Kipling, laid down the basic canons: a neutral, non-political tone, emphasis on universal human values, Christian principles, and a summary of the year. The technological evolution of the broadcast (from radio to television, and then to color broadcasting and social media) reflects the evolution of media. Elizabeth II first recorded the broadcast in a television studio in 1957, and in 2012 — in 3D. Content-wise, the speech is always carefully checked to avoid political allusions and serves as a tool for emotional connection with the nation. In 2022, Charles III's first broadcast maintained the traditional formula but added personal notes, including clips of charitable work and family photos.
Unlike Christmas, the royal family traditionally celebrates New Year (Hogmanay) in Scotland, at Balmoral Castle, and previously in Sandringham. This practice was established by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, who loved the Scottish countryside. The private nature of the celebration at Balmoral has always been more closed, emphasizing the personal space of the family.
However, the key public event at the beginning of the year is not New Year's Eve but the "Boxing Day" ceremony. The royal family participates in the traditional fox hunt (in a modern, ceremonial form) or takes a horseback ride, which is widely covered by the press. This gesture demonstrates loyalty to "old England" and rural traditions.
Royal festive rituals perform several key functions:
Legitimization through continuity: Strict adherence to the schedule from year to year (service, broadcast, change of residences) visualizes the immutability of the monarchy institution in a changing world.
Creating a "national family": Participation in common British practices (pudding, service) and personal greetings to the monarch in every home through the television create an illusion of an intimate connection and a common "home hearth" on a national scale.
Balance between private and public: A clear division — Christmas as a conditionally public family event in Sandringham, New Year as private in Balmoral — allows for maintaining the necessary distance and aura of selectivity.
Adaptation and modernization: Despite conservativeness, traditions evolve. For example, the Christmas menu has become less luxurious and more modern, and in Elizabeth II's 2020 broadcast on an empty background (due to the pandemic), words about hope and resilience resonated with the experiences of millions.
The festive traditions of the British royal family are a carefully staged performance where every action (from the choice of residence to the tone in the television broadcast) carries a meaningful load. They serve as a mechanism of soft power, strengthening the emotional connection between the monarchy and the people through the language of common values, history, and family rituals. In the era of social media and changing social norms, these traditions, while preserving the core, continue to adapt, remaining a living, not a fossilized, tool for maintaining authority and relevance of a millennium-old institution in the 21st century.
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