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  1. New Year's Eve

    New Year's Eve

    PG-132011 · Holiday · 1h 57m

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  1. Every New Year's Eve, the Nos Galan road race (Rasys Nos Galan), a five-kilometre (3.1 mi) running contest, is held in Mountain Ash in the Cynon Valley, Rhondda Cynon Taf, South Wales. The race celebrates the life and achievements of Welsh runner Guto Nyth Brân.

    • Who Were The First to Make Resolutions For The New Year?
    • When Was The First New Year’S Eve Ball Dropped in New York’s Times Square?
    • Who Made January 1 The First of The Year?
    • What Are Some Traditional New Year’S Foods?

    People have been pledging to change their ways in the new year—whether by getting in shape, quitting a bad habit or learning a skill—for an estimated 4,000 years now. The tradition is thought to have first caught on among the ancient Babylonians, who made promises in order to earn the favor of the gods and start the year off on the right foot. (The...

    An estimated 1 billion people around the world watch each year as a brightly lit ball descends down a pole atop the One Times Square building at midnight on New Year’s Eve. The world-famous celebration dates back to 1904, when the New York Timesnewspaper relocated to what was then known as Longacre Square and convinced the city to rename the neighb...

    Throughout antiquity, civilizations around the world developed increasingly sophisticated calendars, typically pinning the first day of the year to an agricultural or astronomical event. In Egypt, for instance, the year began with the annual flooding of the Nile, which coincided with the rising of the star Sirius. The first day of Lunar New Year(al...

    At New Year’s Eve parties and celebrations around the world, revelers enjoy meals and snacks thought to bestow good luck for the coming year. In Spain and several other Spanish-speaking countries, people bolt down a dozen grapes—symbolizing their hopes for the months ahead—right before midnight. In many parts of the world, traditional New Year’s di...

    • 1 min
  2. Feb 16, 2010 · In many countries, New Year’s celebrations begin on the evening of December 31—New Year’s Eve—and continue into the early hours of January 1. Revelers often enjoy meals and snacks thought...

    • 1 min
    • Mallory Moench
    • Times Square ball drop. Some version of the famous ball has been dropped in Times Square in New York City on New Year’s Eve since 1907, although the history of using a ball on a pole to notify ship captains of the time dates back to the 1800s.
    • Jumping waves and wearing white. In Brazil, revelers often wear white and go to the beach to celebrate the new year. At the ocean, some practice the tradition of making offerings to Iemanjá, or Yemanja, an ocean goddess from traditional Afro-Brazilian religions Candomblé and Umbanda.
    • First footing. One tradition in Scotland, where New Year’s Eve is known as Hogmanay, is “first footing”—literally the first foot to enter someone’s home after midnight.
    • Ringing bells 108 times. In Japan, Buddhist temples ring bells 108 times on New Year’s Eve. This is because in Buddhism, it is believed that there are 108 types of earthly desires, and each strike of the bell will remove one desire.
  3. Dec 27, 2023 · Explore New Year's Eve celebrations and festivities in Columbus and ring the new year in with friends and family.

  4. Dec 30, 2023 · These 40 New Year's Eve traditions include certain colors to wear, food to eat and other ways to ring in the new year, having fun with family and friends.

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