Wearing Green: Toast
Wearing Green: Toast
Wearing Green: Toast
traditional death date of Saint Patrick (c. AD 385–461), the foremost patron
saint of Ireland.
Tradition holds that he died on 17 March and was buried at Downpatrick. Over the
following centuries, many legends grew up around Patrick and he became Ireland's
foremost saint.
The St Patrick's Day custom of "drowning the shamrock" or "wetting the shamrock" was historically
popular, especially in Ireland. At the end of the celebrations, a shamrock is put into the bottom of a
cup, which is then filled with whiskey, beer, or cider. It is then drunk as a toast to St Patrick, Ireland,
or those present. The shamrock would either be swallowed with the drink or taken out and tossed
over the shoulder for good luck.[15][16][17]
Wearing green[edit]
On St Patrick's Day, it is customary to wear shamrocks, green clothing or green
accessories (the "wearing of the green"), the colour associated with Catholics in
Ireland (orange is the colour associated with Protestant Christians). St Patrick is
said to have used the shamrock, a three-leaved plant, to explain the Holy Trinity to
the pagan Irish.[18][19] This story first appears in writing in 1726, though it may be
older. In pagan Ireland, three was a significant number and the Irish had
many triple deities, a fact that may have aided St Patrick in
his evangelisation efforts.[20][21] Patricia Monaghan says there is no evidence that
the shamrock was sacred to the pagan Irish.[20] However, Jack Santino speculates
that it may have represented the regenerative powers of nature, and was recast in a
Christian context—icons of St Patrick often depict the saint "with a cross in one
hand and a sprig of shamrocks in the other".[22] Roger Homan writes, "We can
perhaps see St Patrick drawing upon the visual concept of the triskele when he uses
the shamrock to explain the Trinity".[23]
The colour green has been associated with Ireland since at least the 1640s, when
the green harp flag was used by the Irish Catholic Confederation. Green ribbons
and shamrocks have been worn on St Patrick's Day since at least the 1680s.[24] The
Friendly Brothers of St Patrick, an Irish fraternityfounded in about
1750,[25] adopted green as its colour.[26] However, when the Order of St. Patrick—
an Anglo-Irish chivalric order—was founded in 1783 it adopted blue as its colour,
which led to blue being associated with St Patrick. During the 1790s, green would
become associated with Irish nationalism, due to its use by the United Irishmen.
This was a republican organisation—led mostly by Protestants but with many
Catholic members—who launched a rebellion in 1798 against British rule. The
phrase "wearing of the green" comes from a song of the same name, which laments
United Irishmen supporters being persecuted for wearing green. Throughout the
19th and 20th centuries, the colour green and its association with St Patrick's Day
grew.[27]
The wearing of the 'St Patrick's Day Cross' was also a popular custom in Ireland
until the early 20th century. These were a Celtic Christian crossmade of paper that
was "covered with silk or ribbon of different colours, and a bunch or rosette of
green silk in the centre".[2